Enrique Marroquin

Father
Enrique Marroquín
Orders
Ordination 1964 (Catholic Church)
Personal details
Birth name Enrique Fernando Marroquín Zaleta
Born (1939-01-30)30 January 1939
Mexico City, Mexico
Nationality Mexican
Occupation Priest, theologian, philosopher

Enrique Marroquín (born January 30, 1939 Mexico City, Mexico) is a Mexican liberal Catholic priest, writer and scholar, considered to be one of the key figures of the Mexican counterculture movement of La Onda (The Wave) and a strong supporter of the Liberation theology movement.

Early years and Divinity studies

Born as Enrique Fernando Marroquín Zaleta in Mexico City to a highly educated and cultured family. His aunt, a concert pianist, introduced young Enrique to personalities such as Gabilondo Soler and Manuel Ponce.

In 1955 he enrolled at Toluca's Seminary in the Claretian congregation and in 1964 he was ordained priest in Salamanca, Spain followed by a graduate degree in scholasticism at Rome's Angelicum. He got involved with the counterculture by attending the world premiere of the "Beat Mass", encouraged by Pope Paul VI, by the Italian band "I Barritas" and by organizing contests and debates about rock music, The Beatles, Bob Dylan, the poètes maudits, the Beatniks, etc. His thesis was a comparative between the transcendentals and the works of Heidegger.[1]

Counterculture years and Avandaro

By 1967 he was appointed Professor of Philosophy and to implement a self-designed experimental course called "Man of Today" which included the study of music from blues and The Beatles to Ravi Shankar and Karlheinz Stockhausen at the Seminary of Zinacantepec, Mexico. He soon made contact with Mexico's leading avant-garde personalities such as Juan José Gurrola, José Luis Cuevas, Carlos Monsiváis (who at the time had a jazz radio show) and Alejandro Jodorowsky (Marroquín often attended to his famous avant-garde happenings). At the time of the Tlatelolco massacre, he defended the point of view of the students and praised the response of José Revueltas.[2]

Marroquín named the Mexican hippies as jipitecas (or xipitecas) in order to differentiate them from American hippies. In his view, the jipitecas had a lot of influence from pre-Columbian Indians.[3] In his Parish, he had a rock band performing during Mass service and during his sermons divinity and counterculture issues were often mixed.[4]

He was also hired as Associated Editor of the Mexican edition of the Rolling Stone magazine, named Piedra Rodante, writing about music, politics and social issues. He came in contact with some other leading personalities of La Onda such as José Agustín, Parménides Garcia, Juan Tovar, Mayita Campos and Carlos Baca. As part of the magazine he attended the Avandaro Festival and on the eve of the Avandarazo, Marroquín wrote, in defense of the festival, a memorable article in Piedra Rodante named "Dios quiere que llueva para unirnos" (God wants the rain so we can unite).[5] With the hippie movement waning and as final testimony of those intense years of working inside La Onda, Marroquín wrote the book, La contracultura como protesta (The counterculture as protest)[6] considered one of the few serious works for the study of this particular movement written by a La Onda intellectual.[7]

Liberation theology

From 1973 onwards, Marroquín dedicated most of his time to expand his ties with the Liberation theology movement, further angering traditional clergymen[8] by participating with other like-minded priests and even Marxist collaborators.[9] In the early 1980s he enrolled in the prestigious Puebla University graduating in anthropology.

From 1983 to 1994 he moved to the problematic state of Oaxaca, supporting indigenous peoples' rights and studying their societies, publishing authoritative essays with the Universidad Autónoma Benito Juárez de Oaxaca press from subjects of anthropology of religion to Church-State relationships.[10] He graduated with a Ph.D. at the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana with the thesis "The religious conflict in Oaxaca 1976-1993". Released as a book, it received positive reviews.[11]

He was a strong supporter of bishop Samuel Ruiz during the EZLN uprising.[12]

Recent activities

He currently works in the Parish of San Antonio Claret in Mexico City, where he wrote his memoirs named "Historia y profecia" (History and Prophecy).[13]

Literary works

References

  1. Marroquín, Enrique (2014). Historia y Profecia (1st ed.). Spain: BUBOK. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  2. Marroquín, Enrique (2014). Historia y Profecia. Spain: Bubok.
  3. Agustin, José (2007). La contracultura en México (1st ed.). Debolsillo. ISBN 970780520X.
  4. Marroquin, Enrique (2014). Historia y Profecia. Spain: Bubok.
  5. Marroquin, Enrique (30 October 1971). "Dios quiere que llueva para unirnos". Piedra Rodante I (6): 10–12. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  6. Marroquín, Enrique (1975). La contracultura como protesta (1st ed.). Mexico: Cuadernos de Joaquin Mortiz.
  7. Zolov, Eric (1999). Refried Elvis: The rise of the Mexican counterculture (1st ed.). USA: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520215146. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  8. Muggenburg, Federico. "Amerindia, eficaz caballo de Troya en la última CELAM". CONOZE. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  9. Marroquín, Enrique (June 1978). "Reunion del CELAM en Puebla". Revista UAM. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  10. "Religión, importante para comprender la realidad social: Zaleta". Angulo 7. 22 August 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  11. Alonso, Jorge (July–December 2009). "Reseña de "El conflicto religioso. Oaxaca, 1976-1992" de Enrique Marroquín" (PDF). Nueva Antropologia XXII (71): 181–188. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  12. Marroquín, Enrique (September 1996). "Lo religioso en el conflicto de Chiapas" (PDF). Espiral III (7). Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  13. Marroquin, Enrique. "¿Quién soy yo?". Enrique Marroquin website. Retrieved 12 October 2014.

Further reading

External links

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