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Mike RobinsonIt’s hard not to like Mexico. First of all it’s easy to fly there from here, and the cost of airfares has fallen over the past decade. Once you arrive, visitor clearance is pretty straight forward, especially at the major airports like Mexico City. There are convenient car rentals and hotels nearby, and limousine services with bilingual drivers to smaller centres that cater almost exclusively to certain types of tourists.

San Miguel de Allende is such a place. Nestled in the Mexican central highlands at an elevation of 1,900 metres, it is famous for its baroque Spanish architecture, mountain fresh air, and cultural festivals. It is simultaneously home to poets, painters, jazz musicians and a thriving arts community that draws its talent internationally. San Miguel’s population is just over 150,000 people. Its hillside location and defining architectural features make sprawl and expansion difficult. Densification with condo towers and complexes is just beginning to happen.

In the cobblestoned centre of the city is the neo-Gothic church Parroquia de San Miguel Arcangel, with pink stone towers that rise high above the El Jardin main plaza. Encircling the centre are neighbourhoods of refurbished villas that reveal the Spanish roots of Mexican architecture. Typical to the larger homes are inner courtyards, rooftop patios and walls that provide privacy from the street. Many of the finer examples of these old colonial haciendas are owned by foreign nationals who fly in for vacation breaks, and rent their homes out to tourists for the balance of the year. The finer ones typically come with staff, including gardeners, maids and cooks.

Over the years, more and more expats have arrived in what they inclusively refer to as SMA, as in, “We’re spending this winter in SMA.” While it’s difficult to get hard figures on the size of the expat community, it is generally held to be in the neighbourhood of 15,000 people (including a dominant population of perhaps 12,000 Americans), or about 10 percent of the population. There are blogs devoted to their interests, and some strong critiques of their behaviour:

“Americans living in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico either do not understand, do not want to understand, or are in simple denial regarding the effect they’ve had on this Central Mexican Colonial Town. I find their constant shock and surprise at the observations made by the rest of the world about the effect they have on the city too incredible to believe . . . the arrogant condescension with which these rich, country club, we-are-better-than-you-because-of-our-money Americans treated them (Mexican craft vendors) . . . is behaviour we have grown accustomed to in the San Miguel de Allende American expat community (Doug Bower, Expat Focus).”

To be fair, and only anecdotally, the Canadian parties in which I have travelled to San Miguel de Allende made efforts to learn and speak Spanish, shopped in the local food markets, and made significant efforts to blend in – to be what I think of as ‘anthropologically sensitive.’ These efforts, even minimally observed, go a long way to building rapport with the actual citizens of the host community. Nevertheless, it’s a good idea to remind yourself, on a daily basis, that you are a privileged guest with the ability to relocate at will, to buy or rent high-end local real estate, to retain servants, and perhaps most important – to spend your days consuming, conspicuously not producing. All of these behaviours are obvious to local citizens, and contribute to the creation of national stereotypes.

I love Mexico, and especially San Miguel de Allende. It is not lost on me that very few Mexicans come to Vancouver for parallel vacation experiences in my country. Very few citizens of SMA could afford the trip, especially the ones who are so essential to creating the cultural vivacity and alegria de vivir. It is a tribute to their cultural strength and integrity that we want to spend our time with them.

But underneath all of this self-serving sensitivity is the fact that I can and they can’t.

Mike Robinson has been CEO of three Canadian NGOs: the Arctic Institute of North America, the Glenbow Museum and the Bill Reid Gallery. Mike has chaired the national boards of Friends of the Earth, the David Suzuki Foundation, and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society. In 2004, he became a Member of the Order of Canada.

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