When word arrived that a smallpox outbreak threatened the Audiencia of Guatemala in the early spring of 1794, Ignacio Beteta worked feverishly at his publishing house in the capital Nueva Guatemala to print copies of José Flores’ new smallpox treatment manual.Footnote 1 Flores was professor of medicine at the University of San Carlos and chief medical officer for the Audiencia, an area that stretched from modern-day southern Mexico through Central America. He was well known as the architect of the controversial programme that successfully introduced smallpox inoculation to residents in the capital back in 1780. His newly updated guide, Instruction for the Technique Used to Administer Smallpox Inoculation, and the Method to Cure This Disease, Adapted to the Nature and Way of Life of the Indians of the Kingdom of Guatemala, built on those experiences to provide a blueprint for the ambitious next stage: state-directed public health campaigns against smallpox that sought to extend inoculation programmes from the capital to its predominant, culturally diverse Maya communities.Footnote 2 Audiencia officials sent printed copies of this manual to provincial capitals and important cities across colonial Central America. Public health doctors and their staff carried extra copies with them into the field that spring and summer as they fanned out into the northern and western highlands that bordered Chiapas to introduce smallpox inoculation to K’iche’, Mam, Kaqchikel, Ixil, and other Maya ethnic groups.
Smallpox is, to date, the only disease eliminated as a public health threat, a process that took centuries of painstaking work until the World Health Organization declared it eradicated in 1980.Footnote 3 This remarkable achievement, however exceptional, depended on both the failures and success of early campaigns against smallpox like those in colonial Guatemala. Over time, these campaigns joined with other efforts over the next two centuries and more, and bridged major changes in the understanding of medicine, disease, and the human body, including the shift from Galenic-Hippocratic medicine to modern biomedicine, together forging the global history of the disease’s ultimate elimination.
As the medical community, in collaboration with political leaders and others, work to identify the symptoms of COVID-19, separate out effective versus ‘quack’ treatments, and rush to develop a vaccine, history offers us a valuable perspective. The archival record describes individual, familial, community, and state responses to smallpox outbreaks from other places and time periods that resonate with our own experiences. This article explores how, then and now, we see comparable public debates at the intersection of epidemics, poverty, and ethnicity: on the measurably higher mortality rates from disease outbreaks for indigenous people, people of African descent, the poor, and other marginalized groups; about the extent of the state’s responsibility for the health of its peoples; and about whether or not coercion and violence should be used on local populations to ensure compliance with quarantines, inoculation campaigns, and other public health mandates. Guatemala provides a compelling historical case study because of its large indigenous Maya population, and because José Flores, central to anti-smallpox campaigns there in the 1780s and 1790s, later travelled to Europe, where he drew on this accumulated knowledge to help design Spain’s first empire-wide smallpox vaccination campaign, known as the Royal Maritime Vaccination Expedition (1803–06), a key turning point in the eventual elimination of smallpox.Footnote 4
Smallpox and ‘the Great Dying’
European participants in the wars of conquest and early colonization in the Americas, along with indigenous peoples who survived the waves of new infectious diseases that arrived in their wake, considered the mortality rates catastrophic. These events have led some scholars to argue that ‘the Americas in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were in all likelihood the scene of the greatest destruction of lives in human history’, while others have labelled these collective events as ‘the Great Dying’.Footnote 5 Alfred Crosby identified infectious disease as a key component of the ‘Colombian exchange’, arguing that the intentional and unintentional exchanges of biological agents – plants, animals, and especially epidemic diseases – had profound environmental consequences for the Americas.Footnote 6 Among the most devastating were the so-called ‘virgin soil’ epidemics that included bubonic plague, smallpox, measles, influenza, and typhus, diseases to which indigenous peoples had no previous exposure. These brought death on a massive scale: 50–90% mortality rate of native peoples in Mesoamerica, along with the almost complete destruction of the Taíno, Arawak, and other indigenous peoples of the Caribbean during the first century after Columbus’ arrival in 1492.Footnote 7 The Maya population of colonial Central America saw a decline of almost 94%, from roughly 2 million persons at European contact to a low of approximately 128,000 by the 1620s.Footnote 8 Smallpox appeared at least as early as 1518 in Hispaniola, modern-day Haiti and the Dominican Republic, and the site of the first European settlement in the Americas; in 1520 in the Aztec capital city, Tenochtitlan; and in 1525 in the Inca empire Tawantinsuyu, where an estimated 50–75% of the population perished there even before the arrival of the military expedition led by Francisco Pizarro.Footnote 9 Wars, forced displacement, and violence were thus crucial additional elements that magnified the impact of epidemics.
Waves of diseases such as smallpox continued throughout the colonial period, exacerbated by poverty, periodic food shortages, and the systemic violence of slavery and forced labour systems that structured the lives of Maya, African-descended, and multi-ethnic colonial subjects. Accounts found in the archive, usually written by elite men working in politics or religion during disease outbreaks, show a widespread acknowledgement that higher mortality rates continued to afflict the Maya in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. During a 1607–08 outbreak of peste (plague) in the capital city, Santiago de Guatemala, an eyewitness remarked on the noticeably higher mortality rates for Maya residents:
[The] widespread illness that the Indians of this land have [suffered from] during this past year has been a plague that kills these wretched Indians very quickly in two or three days, and in some cases suddenly, before they can be helped and before we can administer a treatment or cure, because as one returns to health, many others die.Footnote 10
Food shortages exacerbated smallpox outbreaks for vulnerable populations, as in 1761, when members of the city council reported that the capital’s Maya population and the multi-ethnic poor had higher death rates because they could not purchase the food and medicine they needed to sustain themselves and their families. In response, city officials gathered funds to distribute directly to the city’s poor, two-thirds of which went to the residents of Sagrario and San Sebastián, the parishes deemed most in need.Footnote 11
While Flores and other political and medical elites in favour of using inoculation (inoculación) represented it as a new, modern tool in the public health fight against smallpox, the practice had existed for centuries in other parts of the world, including parts of China, the Middle East, and Africa.Footnote 12 The technique was not systematically used as part of public health campaigns, however, until 1720 in Spain and the second half of the eighteenth century in Spanish America.Footnote 13 Inoculation involved the removal of smallpox matter from someone who had a mild form of the disease and its placement into the body of an uninfected person using a lancet or other cutting instrument. The inoculated person would then come down with a mild form of the disease, and then hopefully survive to gain lifetime immunity.Footnote 14 Vaccination (vacuna), which used the much safer cowpox to confer immunity to humans, came later to the fight against smallpox, in a method developed in 1796 and credited to the English physician Edward Jenner.Footnote 15
Colonialism and medical humanitarianism
In the eighteenth century, the first public health campaigns to fight epidemics among indigenous and multi-ethnic populations in Latin America, and protect them from future outbreaks of these diseases, show changes in how the colonial state began to prioritize the health of its peoples. In colonial Guatemala, this came to include, at least in principle, the health of the Maya. The Audiencia’s shift was accompanied by the development of medical humanitarianism, which combined the compassionate language of helping the sick, the poor, and indigenous peoples with advocating for the application of new Enlightenment advances in medicine to anti-epidemic campaigns against typhus, measles, and smallpox. Guatemala’s humanitarianism in part had its origins in long-standing religious traditions of Christian responsibility towards the poor, the sick, and other marginalized populations, especially as they related to healthcare and hospitals.Footnote 16 Over the course of the eighteenth century, colonial medical, political, and religious elites collaborated with these traditions, integrating them with the new medical sciences of the global Enlightenment as they argued in favour of state-directed public health campaigns.Footnote 17
The themes of medical humanitarianism emerged even before doctors had the tools needed to successfully treat or cure smallpox. In 1769, a decade before the targeted use of smallpox inoculation in the capital for the first time, the physicians Manuel Ávalos y Porras and Francisco Desplanquez published Guatemala’s first Audiencia-sanctioned treatment guide to tackle a concurrent outbreak of smallpox and measles that year. As in earlier epidemics, these men noted significant disparities in survival rates among various sectors of the city’s population, reporting higher death rates among indigenous residents and the poor.Footnote 18 This led the physicians to make the following recommendation:
In this matter … Christian charity obliges us to care for these poor unhappy ones when they do not understand [the disease]. And for justice’s sake (justicia) the Ministers are entrusted [with] the protection of these minors, and of the prelates and parish priests who watch over them for their benefit as if they were sheep in a flock. The Fiscal judges [that this] must be done in the current situation as these sicknesses have struck again, and because of the ruin to these poor ones, and the injury that the loss of so many tributary vassals would cause to the Crown.Footnote 19
This quote shows the ways in which humanitarianism deployed in medical contexts combined paternalistic and colonial rhetorics that reinforced racial/ethnic hierarches even as it extended needed medical treatment to the multi-ethnic urban poor. The medical doctors who authored the instructions described the city’s Maya residents as sheep in a flock and as minors, deserving of the help of Christian charity. In addition to parish priests, colonial secular elites such as medical doctors and government ministers now had the responsibility for ensuring that ‘these poor ones’ received material and monetary assistance. This language also lays bare the economic motivations for this help: that is, to ensure secure Maya populations whose labour and taxes provided the basis for the continued stability of the colonial state.
State-sanctioned use of smallpox inoculation in the capital in 1780 was controversial. Colonial elites in Guatemala and Spanish America read through materials written about this technique in works published in Europe and the Americas, and in inoculation-focused articles in newspapers that circulated in colonial society, including the gazettes of Mexico and Spain, which were available to interested readers in the capital. Pro- and anti-inoculation debates played out in in city council and university politics. Flores took the lead when smallpox again threatened in July that year, receiving permission from the president of the Audiencia to implement a centralized plan in the city, with the compromise stipulation that inoculation must be voluntary and not forced on anyone.Footnote 20
Nueva Guatemala experienced relatively unique circumstances that made this smallpox epidemic more threatening than usual. In 1780, the capital had only existed for about seven years. The previous capital, Santiago de Guatemala, was heavily damaged by earthquakes in 1773, and colonial elites decided to create the new capital in a nearby valley. This meant that, as the region faced smallpox in 1780, Nueva Guatemala was still under construction, with critical infrastructure problems that officials knew would exacerbate death rates for Maya and multi-ethnic poor residents. As yet there were no formal hospitals or pharmacies; high food costs plagued the city’s new markets; and the lack of public fountains, which were still under construction, forced residents to obtain water for drinking, cooking, and washing from springs in the surrounding ravines.Footnote 21
Inoculation organizers used the language of medical humanitarianism and compassion for families already struggling to meet their basic needs to frame their efforts and gain support and resources:
We are asking to receive the funds necessary to aid in the survival of families, and many live in poverty here even in a state of perfect health [non-epidemic times], and that the people have perished from losses suffered in the ruin of Santiago de Guatemala, [and because] of the costs of moving [to the new capital], the shortage and high price of food, and even the high cost of clothing.Footnote 22
The city council worked with wealthy elite men, members of the clergy, and Flores and other medical specialists in a strategy typical of other urban areas facing an epidemic outbreak in the eighteenth century. By August, they had divided the city into four sectors and placed three to four elite men in charge of each. Audiencia officials provided some of the funding, and also solicited donations from Guatemala’s prominent families to help offset the costs of the programme.
Sector leaders inspected homes and coordinated inoculations, distributed food, clothing, and bedding to the sick and their families, and kept meticulous records of their progress. Nueva Guatemala’s city council then compiled these records in a way that provides a bleak picture of levels of poverty in the capital, revealing significantly higher rates of infection among the multi-ethnic and indigenous urban poor. By the end of August 1780, officials counted 8,667 residents sick with smallpox. Of those, they judged that roughly one-third, some 3,000 persons, were ‘in extreme need of daily food’, while another 3,000 had access to sufficient food but still required monetary support from the government to cover the costs of blankets, medicines, clothing, and other items.Footnote 23 Thus, this acknowledgement by colonial officials that poverty exacerbated smallpox survival rates led to concrete actions to mitigate hunger and lack of resources, at least in a limited way during epidemics, expanding the responsibility for social assistance from the religious realm to include secular society as well.
While the surviving archival record does not contain evidence of inoculation’s reception among city residents, it does provide basic statistics gathered by sector leaders that show its successes, and its limits. Towards the end of August 1780, the leaders of one of the city’s sectors conducted a census to assess rates of infection and inoculation progress. They counted 20 residents successfully inoculated, all of whom recovered well from a mild form of the illness. Another 200 suffered from natural smallpox, people who either refused inoculation or did not receive it in time.Footnote 24 Flores reported that by late August he had inoculated 200 persons ‘of every kind’, with only one death, a teenage girl who appeared to survive inoculation smallpox, only to die shortly after from a fever.Footnote 25
Extending inoculation campaigns to the Maya highlands
The use of smallpox inoculation for the first time in the capital, combined with other treatment efforts that included quarantines and attention to food supplies and diet, dramatically improved survival rates there. Much of the rest of the Audiencia, however, did not have the benefit of inoculation, making contrasts with those regions compelling for those who advocated medical humanitarianism. We can see this in the words of Friar Juan Ramón Solis, who described the work that he performed during the epidemic ministering to sick and dying Ixil Maya in the highland town of Nebaj:
The work that I have had to do has been enormous, and there is no sick person that I have not visited, administering the sacraments to the adults, and praying evangelios over the children. I have ordered them [Nebaj residents] to leave the dead where they died in their sleeping rooms and not to bring them to the living areas as they usually do [for the wake]. This has more than doubled my work, and often I have to [kneel] on the floor so that I can confess them, five or six to a room.Footnote 26
The successes with the 1780 anti-smallpox efforts and their contrasts with heart-wrenching scenes like those described by Friar Solis led an influential sector of colonial society that included Audiencia officials, members of the city council, and professors of medicine at the university to argue that inoculation had the potential to save Guatemala’s Maya population and extend anti-smallpox efforts to rural areas and regional towns.Footnote 27
As the next outbreak loomed in 1794, Audiencia officials advocated for the expansion of inoculation programmes to the Maya highlands north and west of the capital, and looked to the chief medical officer, along with faculty in the medical school at the University of San Carlos, to develop a detailed plan. Flores and others who participated in the introduction of smallpox inoculation in the capital gained insights from that experience which they then used to improve methods for subsequent outbreaks. Collectively, they made a key observation that colonial populations were more receptive to smallpox treatments when doctors and members of anti-smallpox campaigns used persuasion rather than force. Another insight gained from the 1780 inoculation efforts was the importance of strategic co-optation of Maya elders, medical specialists, and individuals, and of adapting medical instructions to Maya cultural practices where possible in revised epidemic treatment manuals. Evidence for adaptation and collaboration among practitioners of colonial and Maya medicine appears in Flores’ 1794 inoculation manual. His choice of title makes this explicit by including the phrase ‘Adapted to the Nature and Way of Life of the Indians of the Kingdom of Guatemala’.Footnote 28 These strategies included not only rethinking how anti-smallpox campaigns practised inoculation in Maya communities, but also more fine-grained adaptations of guidelines for healthful foods and medicinal plants based on Central America’s ecology of the cold mountainous highlands, hot and humid tropical lowlands, and temperate zones.Footnote 29
Adaptation additionally involved active innovation and collaboration between various stakeholders, including colonial medical doctors, botanists, and others interested in natural history, and Maya medical specialists, community elders, and political office holders, in order to learn each others’ medical knowledge and practices. Cross-cultural knowledge exchanges, and adaptation to the needs of local and Maya populations, began even earlier, during the 1780 epidemic, when Flores proposed a ‘local method’ of inoculation. In August, amid the first inoculation campaign, one of Guatemala’s printing houses published a translation of a French Royal Academy of Sciences inoculation manual for distribution to officials involved in the city’s anti-smallpox campaigns. The book included additional pages of instructions written by Flores, who called for integrating the Maya practice of using poultices made from cantárides, locally available medicinal beetles.Footnote 30 We know today that this insect contains the chemical cantharidin, which irritates skin tissues. When prepared and applied to human skin, the insect substance causes blisters to rise that can then be exploited for medicinal purposes. The poultice proved effective at raising blisters that the inoculator could then easily cut open, facilitating the transfer of smallpox material from one body to another.
The extraction of indigenous knowledge is a well-documented aspect of colonial exploitation, with the information circulated after it had been vetted, experimented with, and legitimized by colonial doctors and scientists. Printers published the work of Guatemalan intellectuals that drew on this knowledge, as well as key works of important foreign authors in translation, such as the French inoculation instructions. A number of scientific and medical works published by Guatemalan authors were reprinted in places including Mexico City, Madrid, Turin, London, and Paris.Footnote 31 Maya medical knowledge circulated globally in the process, as when Flores published his influential work New Medicine Discovered in the Kingdom of Guatemala, for the Absolute Cure for the Horrible Illness Cancer, in which he introduced the cancer-curing powers of lizards native to a specific lake in Guatemala, a knowledge he gained from unnamed Maya men.Footnote 32
Flores was not exceptional in this regard. Even those who did not speak a Maya language, or did not venture outside the capital, could still act as brokers of Maya medical knowledge, gained from formal and informal ties, and circulate it to interested readers in the Americas and Europe. This is what Mariano José Herrarte, a Recollect friar and self-trained medical botanist, did in response to the royal order circulated in the Americas by the Spanish crown in 1783 requesting samples of useful plants and information on their use.Footnote 33 Herrarte described the medicinal properties of some thirty-six plants used in Maya medicine in seven manuscript notebooks. He also made it clear that he had never visited a tributary Maya town (pueblo de indios), nor did he speak any of the more than twenty Maya languages. Instead, he had acquired this knowledge simply by living and interacting with people in the capital. Despite these limits, Herrarte assured readers that he had indeed obtained authentic indigenous knowledge: ‘they [the Maya] have confirmed to me the various [medicinal] virtues of herbs and trees’.Footnote 34 These included botanical ingredients used in treatments of infectious diseases such as yellow fever (known in the colonial period as vómito prieto, or black vomit) and syphilis.
Moreover, Flores’ experience from the 1780 inoculation experiments solidified his conviction that inoculation should not be forced on anyone, and no violence should be used in the anti-epidemic campaigns, placing the rhetoric of medical humanitarianism into practice through official treatment manuals. As he explained in the 1794 manual: ‘The principal requisite for a successful [inoculation] procedure is that the military officer, the Spanish, and the [Maya] elites of the [Maya] towns follow these instructions and [inoculate] carefully and gently, and take extreme care not to use violence and not to terrify the Indians.’Footnote 35 This perspective worked in concert with his adaptation of inoculation to Maya populations. Flores then elaborated on the use of medicinal beetles to prep the recipient’s body for smallpox transfer. When reports filtered back that European-style lancets used to cut open smallpox blisters to remove infected materials as part of inoculation terrified children and their parents, and that ‘they shuddered to see the lancet, saying that we were going to kill their children with this procedure’, Flores proposed that inoculators simply substitute the chay (pl. chayes), a Mesoamerican-style cutting blade made from obsidian or flint.Footnote 36
In this way, help came to Maya communities, but it would be a mistake to consider the Maya as victims waiting to be saved by colonial medicine. Female and male Maya specialists called curanderos sangradores were widely recognized in colonial society for their skills using chayes for medicinal bloodletting and wet cupping.Footnote 37 In fact, even some Spaniards preferred to be bled with chayes over the lancet, as did the chronicler Francisco Ximénez, writing earlier in the eighteenth century: ‘Here I advise counsel from twenty-five years of experience that I have, and that others have had, of not being bled with anything other than the chay.’Footnote 38 Indigenous peoples of Mesoamerica, including the Maya, had sophisticated medical cultures throughout the colonial period, cultures which exist to the present day. Flores’ instruction that ‘the Indians can easily substitute their obsidian blades that they use for medicinal bleeding’ acknowledged the sophistication of Maya medicine.Footnote 39
This statement also indicates that Flores intended for Maya healers to practise inoculation in their own communities, and thus aid in its spread by integrating Maya themselves into anti-smallpox campaigns.Footnote 40 Parish priests helped medical teams to identify ‘the most capable ladinos and Indians to inoculate and care for the sick’ (ladino referred to a Maya person who spoke Spanish or was bilingual, and who dressed in European clothing rather than Maya traje).Footnote 41 Reports from regional political officials such as Francisco Chamorro record successfully teaching Maya healers to use inoculation: ‘Despite the Indians’ opposition to the lancet procedure and the fear they had, I taught them the practice of inoculation, and in this way prevented hundreds of deaths.’Footnote 42 Even though Chamorro credits himself with preventing ‘hundreds of deaths’, what is clear here is that some among the Maya quickly saw the benefits of smallpox inoculation, learned the procedure, practised it in their own communities, and taught it to others.
Reports such as Chamorro’s, however, only approximate what the Maya individually and collectively thought about inoculations and other tools used in the fight against smallpox because they were produced by, and mediated through, colonial public health doctors, political officials, and priests. Nevertheless, eyewitness accounts of mass inoculations sometimes capture, perhaps unintentionally, Maya medical specialists participating in mass inoculations alongside colonial medical doctors.Footnote 43 Reports from Maya communities in the province of Totonicapán show the key role of Maya women healers, who added a layer of Mesoamerican ritual practice to the procedure: after the inoculation, ‘the mother took the child in her arms and presented him to the mountains, burning much copal, asking the hills for the health of her child. Then she returned to the church, asking that the patron saint of the town save him from death.’Footnote 44 The mother in this source may have been the child’s actual mother, or she may have been a medical-ritual specialist who combined Maya healing strategies, including burning copal incense and invoking the animate power of the landscape, with prayers to the town’s patron saint as the protector of the community and its residents. Interestingly, Chamorro, the regional political leader who wrote this report, did not characterize the woman’s participation as anything out of the ordinary, a strategic concession to Maya medical-ritual cultures to ease the inoculations that took place in public in the town square, with the entire community assembled, and with military men, medical entourages, and local priests all present.
Smallpox inoculation worked, bringing with it significant declines in mortality rates among all racial and ethnic groups. Audiencia governors such as Agustín de las Quentas Zayas of Ciudad Real de Chiapas, argued for the successes of the 1796 campaigns by compiling censuses that compared mortality rates with the 1780 epidemic. In the heavily Maya districts of Zendales, San Bartolomé, and Comitán that de las Quentas governed, he reported only 218 deaths among the 8,915 persons inoculated. He contrasted this with the 1780 epidemic, where 9,943 perished.Footnote 45 The circulation of information, cures, and inoculation guidelines in colonial Central America during outbreaks and their aftermath shows that, to succeed, colonial medicine needed to recommend therapies based on local conditions and adapt to the medical cultures of its large majority Maya population. Yet for the Maya, the extension of anti-epidemic campaigns also came at the cost of direct colonial interventions into their culture, medicine, living practices, diet, and even dress. Centralized efforts that provided medical assistance and material help to afflicted families and communities simultaneously functioned as another avenue for colonial power to intervene in the daily lives of the Maya and the poor, now through public health medicine, characterized by colonial actors as necessary for their own good, and for the broader public good.
Violence and coercion in colonial public health campaigns
While colonial anti-smallpox campaigns in Guatemala could, in theory, be flexible and allow for the integration of Maya medical chayes and blister beetle poultices, anti-smallpox campaigns characterized other Maya medical practices as causing the disease to spread. This was the case in particular for the temascal, a ritual-medical steam bath that has formed a cornerstone of Mesoamerican medical cultures since ancient times. Maya healers treated epidemic diseases using temascales, including typhus, measles, and smallpox. They had broader applications past epidemic care and were widely used to maintain health, mediate pregnancy and childbirth, and treat general illnesses in individuals and families. Curanderos sangradores also used temascales to treat patients with medical bloodletting and cupping, the room filled with heated water vapours mixed with burning medicinal materials from plants, animals, and other ingredients from the local environment.Footnote 46
Those who led anti-epidemic campaigns, however, frequently complained about temascales and periodically sought to destroy the buildings and outlaw their use, especially during outbreaks. Reports from Maya areas during the 1780 smallpox epidemic claimed that their use in highland communities had facilitated the spread of smallpox, so much so that subsequent anti-epidemic campaigns explicitly outlawed their use. Friar Solis, who had compellingly described his work in Nebaj among the Ixil Maya ministering to smallpox patients, also reported to Audiencia officials that temascales facilitated disease spread and increased mortality rates. He repeatedly warned his parishioners from the pulpit not to treat the sick in temascales. Medicinal temascal use continued, however, despite the fact that the town’s Maya alcaldes (political office holders) walked through the streets warning against the dangers of their use.Footnote 47
Beginning in the 1790s, Audiencia-sanctioned treatment manuals for smallpox, typhus, and measles explicitly outlawed temascal use. Flores himself warned of their dangers: ‘Do not let them use temascales, because the way that they Indians use them is very bad for those sick with typhus. The Indian justices need to monitor this.’Footnote 48 Others remarked on the ubiquitous presence of temascales across the highlands, where many of even the most modest dwellings in tributary Maya towns had one for family use: ‘[The Maya] have such a passion for temascal use, that it is the only and general treatment used for every sickness.’Footnote 49 Members of anti-epidemic campaigns saw Maya medical specialists who healed in temascales as subverting the state-mandated guidelines, and largely agreed that ‘frequent temascal steam baths, nudity, hunger, and lack of care’ exacerbated epidemic outbreaks.Footnote 50
In fact, medical doctors and regional political officials considered temascal use so intractable that they brought in military men to systematically destroy these buildings in highland Maya towns. Local leaders argued that they had to resort to violence and threat of violence to ensure that Maya residents adhered to state-sanctioned smallpox treatment guidelines. Soloma parish in the Cuchumatán mountains was one of these areas. The province’s political leader, Francisco Chamorro, who led the medical campaigns to the five parish towns there, complained that the Maya’s ‘barbarous customs’ (sus bárbaras costumbres) of temascal use and widespread resistance prevented them from inoculating the residents. He reckoned that the medical team had only managed to inoculate two-thirds of the town of Santa Eulalia. The rest of the residents suffered from natural smallpox, with a 25% mortality rate. In cases like Santa Eulalia, frustrated colonial authorities revitalized well-worn racialized colonial tropes of ‘barbarous Indians’ to justify the inclusion of soldiers as members of highland medical campaigns and use them to threaten violence, including the destruction of temascales. Chamorro also complained that, because residents of the nearby town of San Mateo Ixtatán so stubbornly resisted inoculation, he ordered the soldiers to destroy the town’s temascales.Footnote 51 The destruction of temascales in Maya communities and the forced removal of the sick to quarantine in temporary smallpox hospitals guarded by armed men were linked strategies to ensure the compliance of Maya towns.Footnote 52
Thus, despite the acknowledgement among influential sectors of colonial elites in the capital that persuasion and co-optation worked much more effectively than force, regional officials working on the ground often resorted to fear-based tactics. This came to include armed militia soldiers and local men hired to enforce quarantines and act as guards for inoculators and other members of the medical team as they treated Maya who rejected the Audiencia’s anti-smallpox guidelines.Footnote 53 The soldiers also worked with the medical teams to identify and destroy the homes and belongings of people who perished from smallpox, typhus, and measles, extremely contentious acts that left survivors destitute.Footnote 54 Violence and threat of violence to enforce state-mandated anti-epidemic measures did not always achieve their goals. When the medical team working in Nebaj became frustrated that Ixil residents refused to present themselves for mandated bleeding therapies, they resorted to going house to house to force them to submit to the procedure. Even with direct intervention into homes, the parish priest and the doctor who led the medical team reported widespread ‘resistance and evasion’ when household members refused treatment, hid the sick, or simply fled the town.Footnote 55
The use of violence extended to quarantine enforcement. The towns of Soloma parish such as Santa Eulalia and San Mateo Ixtatán, as well as those in neighbouring Jacaltenango parish, all located along the busy Camino Real and other trade routes that connected southern Mexico to Guatemala’s capital, experienced outbreaks first, as smallpox spread south-east from Chiapas along those same routes. The president considered it critical to stop the epidemic there, before it spread south to the capital and the rest of the Audiencia. He sent instructions to regional political leaders and provided funding for militarized quarantine lines along the moving borders between infected and uninfected towns.Footnote 56
In Totonicapán, one of these leaders was Francisco Chamorro, a former militia captain.Footnote 57 He applied his military experience and knowledge of the region’s mountainous geography to set up four strategic quarantine guard posts. Each post employed at least two soldiers and one ‘Indian’, a local man who knew the area and was bilingual in Spanish and at least one of the regional Maya languages.Footnote 58 Roving, armed mounted guards conducted periodic sweeps along the lesser-known mountain paths. Local residents, however, desperate to take their goods and animals to market, or to escape the epidemic, attempted to make their way through the mountainous terrain where the soldiers could not follow, or along routes unknown to them.Footnote 59
Prudencio Cozar blamed a Maya man and his infected young nephew for bringing smallpox from Tuxtla in Chiapas to the highland town of Tajumulco in the district that he governed. They managed to evade the quarantine lines by walking ‘through unknown ravines and cliffs located far from the guards’.Footnote 60 Cozar wrote that, as soon as he heard of the outbreak, ‘I went there at once, and I removed him [the Maya boy] to a milpa [likely a small farm] seven leagues from the town, far from other houses in that area.’ He and the armed guards who accompanied him also forcibly removed and quarantined three other children from the same home who had been exposed to the boy’s smallpox.Footnote 61
Such heavy-handed use of threat and coercion that linked militia soldiers with public health campaigns, and the forced removal of infected children from their parents, had some success in the short term in preventing further outbreak. In the medium term, however, and especially over the next decade as multi-year, concurrent outbreaks of measles and typhus repeatedly burned through the region, the use of force and coercion served to increase mistrust of the medical campaigns in Maya communities. Doctors, inoculators, and regional political officials filed reports that Maya towns outright refused medical treatments, or its residents fled to disperse into the highland montes (forests) as soon as word arrived that a medical campaign was on its way. Oher Maya towns used violence themselves, or threatened it, against medical campaign workers.Footnote 62
The reach of medicine through state-directed public health campaigns extended the symbolism and practice of colonial rule in Guatemala, including its majority Maya populations, in new and intimate ways and on a massive scale not seen since the conquest and early colonization period. Medical interventions into Maya communities as part of inoculation efforts and other anti-epidemic campaigns were part of a broader historical pattern that structured colonial governance over its subjects. The methods and personnel used for medical campaigns bear similarities to earlier religious conversion efforts that sought to intervene and reshape Maya worldviews, as well as to the forced resettlement of subject populations into tributary towns (pueblos de indios), where residents could be monitored by priests and political officials to ensure that they met their tribute and labour requirements. What made medical interventions particularly intrusive were the ways that the violence and racial/ethnic hierarchies that characterized colonial rule in Guatemala came to be re-enforced through state-directed public health campaigns.
Parallels for the COVID-19 era
Despite vastly different political systems, conceptions of race and ethnicity, and frameworks for understanding how inoculations and disease worked, themes emerge from colonial anti-smallpox campaigns in Guatemala that resonate with today’s COVID-19 pandemic. Epidemic outbreaks across diverse historical contexts allow us to see humankind at its best and worst. At their best, state, religious, and grassroots humanitarian efforts, despite their potentially coercive aspects, help communities and individuals in need. In Guatemala, the NGO Wuqu’ Kawoq/Maya Health Alliance works to spread information on COVID-19 in rural Guatemala, where still today more than 50% of the population speak one of more than twenty Maya languages.Footnote 63 Among other efforts, they have created radio programmes in Kaqchikel, K’iche’ and Tz’utujil Maya languages to make COVID-19 information accessible to remote rural areas where people are sheltering in place and have little to no internet access.Footnote 64
Indigenous communities have been proactive in creating their own anti-epidemic measures locally when state or federal measures are non-existent or fall short. In March 2020, the Haida Nation in British Columbia, alarmed at COVID-19’s spread, outlawed visitors and leisure travel to Haida Gwaii to protect its residents.Footnote 65 In the same month, the Navajo Nation, which spans parts of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, declared a public health emergency and ordered a stay-at-home/shelter-in-place order for residents to quarantine and isolate themselves. Leaders also began a water and food distribution programme to residents living in remote areas.Footnote 66
COVID-19 also reminds us of the enduring and more troubling patterns around epidemics and health. The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, recently argued that ‘rising disparities in how COVID-19 is affecting communities, and the major disproportionate impact it is having on racial and ethnic minorities, including people of African descent, have exposed alarming inequalities within our societies’, especially in Brazil, the United Kingdom, the United States, and France.Footnote 67 In Brazil, a global epicentre of COVID-19, African-descended residents of the state of São Paulo are 62% more likely to die from the virus than whites.Footnote 68 Indigenous peoples living in the Amazon region fear that the pandemic’s toll on their village elders, political leaders, and traditional healers ‘may inflict irreparable damage on tribal knowledge of history, culture and natural medicine’.Footnote 69 The use of racial/ethnic profiling during outbreaks can lead to decades of mistrust or resistance towards the government and public health efforts. ProPublica reported in June 2020 that Lovelace Women’s Hospital in Albuquerque, New Mexico had implemented a secret testing protocol for pregnant women asymptomatic for COVID-19 if they ‘appeared’ to be Native American. This led to the pre-emptive separation of Native American newborns from their mothers for women who gave birth before receiving the results of COVID-19 testing.Footnote 70 Such actions, compounded by the racial/ethnic stereotyping of Asians, immigrants, and other groups as amplifying the pandemic’s spread, and the politicization of mask-wearing and stay-at-home orders in the absence of a vaccine, also warns that we should not consider vaccines as a quick solution, especially in the context of current anti-vaxxer movements across the globe, and instead to recognize the long, contested history of their creation and use.Footnote 71
Martha Few is Professor of Latin American History and Gender, Women’s, and Sexuality Studies at Pennsylvania State University. She is Senior Editor of the Hispanic American Historical Review. Her research concentrates on the histories of Maya peoples during Spanish colonial rule in Guatemala, Central America, and southern Mexico through the lenses of medicine and public health, gender and sexuality, environmental history, and human–animal studies. Her recent books include For All of Humanity: Mesoamerican and Colonial Medicine in Enlightenment Guatemala (2015) and Baptism Through Incision: The Postmortem Cesarean Operation in the Spanish Empire (2020).