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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mexican couples get vows for new era

Kara Andrade Associated Press

MEXICO CITY – For 147 years, marriage vows in Mexico portrayed women as delicate, weak and potentially annoying.

These days, judges across Mexico are switching to versions that stress equality and mutual support, reflecting the growing power of women in a country still struggling with macho attitudes.

“As a father, I wouldn’t want a judge to tell to my daughter that she was the weakest part of a human being and that she is subject to her husband’s rule,” said Salvador Mendoza, a civil court judge in Mexico City who stopped reading the old vows in 2001.

The old vows, a 537-word ode to marriage, were considered open-minded and ahead of their time when they were penned 147 years ago by Melchor Ocampo, a Mexican lawyer, scientist and liberal politician.

They were meant to replace religious vows at a time when Mexican liberals were stripping away the Roman Catholic Church’s control over much of the country’s political, social and economic life.

Conservative foes summarily executed Ocampo by firing squad for promoting the separation of church and state, but kept the amended vows in the new civil marriage law.

They dictate that a husband should treat his wife with “generous benevolence that the strong should give to the weak” and that a wife should “avoid awakening the most brusque, irritable and hard part of (her husband’s) character.”

Vianey Lozano, a Mexico City government employee who tied the knot three years ago in Guanajuato, said the language reflects a machismo that Mexico has left behind.

“We’re not in those times anymore, and my girlfriends see it more as a joke when they hear it,” she said.

Teresa Ulloa is president of Defensoras Populares, a women’s rights organization that challenged the old vows.

“Even though the Mexican constitution says we are equal, the vows put the woman in a very disadvantaged position, where the man can make it her obligation to reproduce, take care of the home,” she said.

The vows had already fallen out of favor with many couples before activists in March persuaded the lower house of Mexico’s Congress to adopt a resolution urging judges to skip the Ocampo wording.

Mendoza said that during his three years as a judge, no couple had asked him to read the old vows.

While some of Mexico’s 31 states stick to Ocampo’s vows, others, including Guanajuato and Veracruz, have held contests to seek public input in writing modern alternatives.

In the northern state of Nuevo Leon, for example, judges tell the bride and groom that while men and women are “different biologically and psychologically, both possess integrity, dignity, strength and intellectual capacity. And neither should consider themselves superior than the other.”