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Costa
Rica: Historically 'tranquilo' Why doesn't it have an army? Why are
there more teachers than policemen? Is it really the Switzerland of
Central America?
There are some key events in Costa Rican history that you should know
about if you are to have a basic understanding of the country. Some
are extended periods of time and others are brief flashes that had
a profound affect on the way Ticos think about themselves and others.
- Pre-Colombian
Costa Rica
- Colonial
Costa Rica
- Independence
- William
Walker and the Costa Rican Military
- The
United Fruit Company and The Atlantic Railroad
- Liberalism
in Costa Rica
- The
1948 Civil War
- History
Since 1948
Pre-Colombian
Costa Rica
The most
developed pre-Colombian population in Costa Rica was that of the Chorotegas
whose ancestors were from Mexico and migrated to the Nicoya Peninsula.
They left Mexico fleeing pursuers and their name actually translates
to "fleeing people." The Chorotegas lived in cities of as many as
20,000 people which had central plazas with marketplaces and religious
centers. They were excellent farmers and actually used seeds as currency.
Women worked in ceramics while men farmed or fought in wars, a perpetual
reality in this time. Military organizations fought to obtain land
and slaves, who were sometimes used as sacrifices, some even thrown
into the volcanoes of the surrounding area. Thank goodness they believed
in life after death. The Chorotegas are also probably the people who
created the enigmatic granite spheres that are still seen in many
parts of Costa Rica. The artistic artifacts of these people are many
and often beautiful with ceramics, carved jade figurines, and other
exquisite pieces made of gold. Today, many examples of their art can
be seen in the Jade and Gold Museums.
Colonial
Costa Rica
Christopher
Columbus actually landed in Costa Rica on his fourth and final voyage.
He did not investigate the country thoroughly but brought back positive
news to Spain about gold and the friendliness of the indigenous people
which encouraged other adventurers to come.
The first
attempt to colonize Costa Rica, (Veragua as Columbus called it), was
made by Diego De Nicuesa. His mission failed miserably as indigenous
peoples along the Atlantic coast burned the land and crops in front
of the advancing invaders and eventually tropical diseases and starvation
reduced the group by half. Nicuesa gave up. The second attempt was
made by Juan Vásquez de Coronado who decided that the central highlands
were a more hospitable location to settle. He founded Cartago, the
first Costa Rican capital, in 1563 and thus began the first real Spanish
settlement in Costa Rica.
In contrast
to other colonies, there was no large exploitable workforce in Costa
Rica, as the indigenous population had early on been decimated by
war and diseases brought by the Europeans, and those who were still
in the country lived scattered apart. Therefore, not a lot of Costa
Ricans could gather a quantity of slaves. The lack of gold and things
to be exploited quickly made the mother country forget Costa Rican
colonists and Spain also refused to invest much money in their future.
Costa Ricans, then, had to work the land themselves in order to survive
and were forced against their dreams to become a hardworking colony.
The self sufficiency that resulted played a huge part in the making
of the Costa Rican people.
Costa
Rica's population grew slowly on its own with little outside influence.
Over time three new cities were founded in the Central Valley: Cubujuquí
(Heredia) in 1706, Villanueva de la Boca del Monte (San José) in 1737,
and Villa Hermosa (Alajuela) in 1782.
Independence
In
October 1821, word came that Spain had granted independence to its
American colonies on September 15th. It had taken news one month to
cross the mountains from Guatemala, the central point of the Spanish
empire in Central America. After a brief period of internal strife,
Costa Rica declared itself a state and the capital was moved from
Cartago to San José.
Juan
Mora Fernández was an important man in Costa Rica, not only because
he was the country's first president, but also because he set a standard
for the country by concentrating on building roads and schools and
most importantly giving land grants to anyone who would plant coffee.
Small farmers were encouraged to grow coffee and sell the beans to
wealthier farmers, who would prepare the beans for export. The relationship
thus was not one sided and mutual respect was needed and cultivated
between rich and poor, ideals that have generally been held through
Costa Rican history.
Coffee
soon became Costa Rica's principal export. Because coffee is a product
best grown in the highlands around the central valley, more and better
quality roads had to be built that led to the coast in order that
the coffee could be sent to the overseas markets. The wealth generated
by coffee also began to bring in investment money from outside the
country. Also, European immigrants trying to earn money, began to
arrive. By the mid-1800's, therefore, Costa Rica had evolved from
a self-sufficient and remote colony into a cosmopolitan state influenced
by many European liberal ideologies.
William
Walker and the Costa Rican Military
William
Walker was basically a butcher who wanted to exploit the possibilities
of slavery for his mother country, the United States. His second expedition
into Latin America was to Nicaragua. He had two main goals. First,
convert Central America into a slave territory and annex it to the
southern United States. Second, conquer Nicaragua and ready it for
the construction of a trans-isthmic canal; Walker failed miserably
in his participation in the California Gold Rush of 1849, but it taught
him the difficulty of crossing the U.S. frontier and the potential
value of a sea route; using the San Juan River to travel up from the
Atlantic to Lake Nicaragua and then crossing the lake left only 18
miles to the Pacific ocean. Walker invaded Nicaragua with 58 men and
held his position until 100's of reinforcements could arrive. It was
the Costa Rican people who rose up and overthrew Walker. Eventually
a force of 2,000 men defeated Walker at Rivas, Nicaragua. In the action,
Walker held out in a building. A young boy named Juan Santamaría volunteered
to set fire to the building and succeeded in driving out Walker and
his men. In the action, the boy was killed and became both Costa Rica's
and Nicaragua's national hero by helping to defeat one of the more
hated figures in Central American history.
The
United Fruit Company and The Atlantic Railroad
Minor
C. Keith took over the project to build the Atlantic Railroad, originally
started to connect the coffee plantation to the large Atlantic port
of Limón. His idea was not to exploit coffee, but instead to use his
power with investors to complete the railroad in exchange for land
in which to grow bananas. During the building of the railroad, a workforce
of thousands of Jamaican, Italian, and Chinese workers were recruited,
a fact that would change the face of the Costa Rican population permanently.
The railroad was completed in 1890 and until 1970 was the only route
from the central valley to Limón.
The Jamaicans
that Keith and others brought in stayed on the Atlantic Coast and
began to work on the banana plantations that Keith established on
his newly gained lands. Keith and a partner founded the United Fruit
Company, which quickly became a legendary social, economic, political
and agricultural force in Costa Rica and in many other Latin American
Countries. Costa Rica quickly became the world's leading banana producer.
Not only
did the company forever change the Costa Rican economy, but it also
changed the face of social relations. Keith and his company were less
than humane in the treatment of their workers, and San José communists
organized the workers to strike against the company. They demanded
regular payment of salaries, free housing, medical clinics and accident
insurance and eventually forced the company to comply. Socialist strains
have never left the country since this action took place.
Liberalism
in Costa Rica
The birth
of liberalism in Costa Rica came from the battle between the conservative
church and the liberalizing state. The bishop of Costa Rica criticized
the European ideas that were becoming popular with the elite and the
politicians. The bishop was promptly expelled from the country in
1884 and there was an official denouncement of an earlier church-state
agreement that had declared Catholicism the state religion. The public
outcry against these actions was minimal.
The new
liberal power was realized when for the first time in the history
of Costa Rica real public elections were held in Costa Rica. The liberals
were surprised when the opposition gained overwhelming support, and
they became victims of the very reforms they had implemented. When
the liberals tried to stop the new president from being recognized,
10,000 people flooded the streets. The people of Costa Rica obviously
enjoyed their new found political power. Since then Costa Rica's democratic
tradition has endured nearly unabated until today.
The
1948 Civil War
Rafael
Angel Calderón was the legally elected president between 1940 and
1944. He was a social reformer and many of his policies had a positive
affect on Costa Rica. He established the University of Costa Rica,
and initiated many social reforms including social security, workers'
rights to organize, land reform, guaranteed minimum wage, and collective
bargaining. The problems started though when, after his term as president,
Calderón ran a puppet candidate (Teodoro Picado) in an election that
was widely criticized as fraudulent. With this political maneuver,
Calderón had made enemies with the poor who originally had supported
him.
In the
next election Calderón himself ran against Otilio Ulate, who represented
the unified opposition. Ulate won the election but it was close, and
was contested by the government. Government forces refused to yield
to Ulate, and Teodoro Picado remained in power.
José
María Figueres led the opposition forces against the government. After
40 days of civil war, during which more than 2000 people died, a negotiated
treaty was signed. Figueres took over as provisional president. He
governed for 18 months and executed some of the most important changes
in Costa Rican history including the prohibition of presidential reelection,
banning of communist labor unions and parties, abolition of the army,
the right to vote for women and blacks, and the establishment of a
neutral body that would oversee elections. All of Calderón's social
reforms were maintained. In 1949, Figueres turned the country over
to Ulate, the rightful president.
Figueres
was elected president two times. This was possible because of a law
allowing presidents to be reelected if not in consecutive terms. He
is the only person in Costa Rican history to have done it. Figueres
is recognized as one of Costa Rica's greatest political figures and
has achieved the status of a national hero.
History
Since 1948
Costa Rica continued its progressive social policies through the three
decades after 1948 and enjoyed a gradual upward economic trend. The
basic policy of the government in the decades after the 1970's was
to become more independent agriculturally, but this actually caused
a heavy dependence on imported goods needed for farming. Other problems
were the continuing drop in the prices of coffee, bananas, and sugar.
Costa Rica had also taken out loans to improve its infrastructure
and when these loans came due, Costa Rica could not pay and soon its
economy was in shambles. Magnifying the country's problems was the
instability of Nicaragua and Panama, which did nothing else but hurt
Costa Rica. The reputation of Central America as a place of violence
and poverty stopped much potential investment. Also, Costa Rica's
status as one of the wealthiest third world countries brought a flood
of immigrants from its two neighboring countries, taking jobs and
money out of the country.
Oscar
Arias was elected president in 1986. One of his primary goals was
to work for peace in Central America. As is well known by now, Arias'
efforts gained him the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize. Many Costa Rican's
have varying opinions about Arias' job as president of Costa Rica,
but his efforts in Central America have certainly had a profound effect
on the region's outlook. Many Latin Americans feel that the wars that
have shredded apart the region have finally ended, and that this gives
them the opportunity to unite their futures in a new and profitable
direction.
José
María Figueres was one of the youngest Presidents in history. He worked
with a group of elite, mostly foreign-educated experts who occupy
governmental posts. He promised to remedy the problems facing the
poor, but the same forces that have frustrated Costa Rica's economic
programs for years are undermining his. For years administrations
have tried to implement the "structural adjustment programs" recommended
for Latin America by international institutions . Though maintaining
a relatively low level of unemployment, the privatization of much
of Costa Rica's public sector, and the slashing of government jobs
have recently caused some of the bitterest strikes in Costa Rican
history.
The public
infrastructure is deteriorating, from schools to roads, and the rural
and urban poor feel that they are being ignored. Small farmers are
feeling the pain of monocrop plantations owned by wealthy corporations,
and what was once the heart of the Tico economy and lifestyle is disappearing.
The current president, Miguel Angel Rodríguez took office in mid-1998
and currently faces the same challenges as his predecessor. It is
clear that change is necessary, but of course, the transition is painful.
Costa Rica is seen as an interesting test site for a Latin American
economy that is trying to make the transition to a globalized world.
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