New Mexico Celebrates a 'Terrorist'

Columbus celebrates Pancho Villa, who once sacked the town
By Kevin Spak,  Newser Staff
Posted Mar 9, 2011 2:17 PM CST
Pancho Villa, a Man Once as Reviled as bin Laden, Now Celebrated
This cartoon from March 10, 1916 depicts Uncle Sam jumping over the Mexican border to hunt down Pancho Villa.   (National Archive)

Think New York City will ever name a park after Osama bin Laden or hold a parade in his honor? Before you answer, consider Columbus, New Mexico, which today celebrates “Raid Day,” a festival commemorating the day in 1916 when Pancho Villa raided the town with 500 soldiers, in what would be the worst foreign attack on the continental US until 9/11, USA Today reports. The attack so angered the US that it sent a sophisticated military force to track Villa down.

But these days Villa’s mostly honored as a hero, plastered on cantinas across the nation. Today Mexican horseback riders will ride into Columbus along Villa’s route, with a Villa re-enactor leading the charge. Richard Dean, whose great-grandfather was killed in Villa’s raid, calls it “mind-boggling,” says Villa is a “terrorist,” and has tried, unsuccessfully, to get Pancho Villa Park re-named. But supporters say the event is a treasured tradition. “This was our big historical moment,” says one organizer. “What better opportunity for a party?” (More Pancho Villa stories.)

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