Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Felipe Neri

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Years of service
  
1911–1914

Battles/wars
  
Mexican Revolution

Rank
  
Divisional General

Name
  
Felipe Neri

Felipe Neri
Born
  
August 23, 1884 Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico (
1884-08-23
)

Died
  
January 1914 (1914-02) (aged 29) Tepoztlan, Morelos, Mexico

Allegiance
  
Liberation Army of the South

Preferisco il paradiso san felipe neri


Felipe Neri (sometimes known as Felipe Neri Jimenez, born August 23, 1884 - died January, 1914) was a soldier and general in the Mexican Revolution.

Contents

A vida de s o felipe neri


Early life

He was born in the neighborhood of Gualupita, in Cuernavaca, Morelos, on August 23, 1884, to Pedro Neri and Faustina Jimenez. Before the Mexican revolution Felipe Neri worked as a kiln operator at a Chinameca hacienda.

The Revolution

He joined the rebellion in March 1911 and took part in the Battle of Cuautla. A bomb which he mis-threw exploded nearby and left him completely deaf. Subsequently he served with Zapata as an explosives expert and divisional general. He constructed bombs for the revolutionaries out of salmon cans. According to some sources the incident that took away his hearing made Neri particularly ruthless in how he treated captive prisoners; he either had them executed or he would cut off one of their ears as a "mark of Cain". He also applied the same punishment to deserters who left the Zapatista army in order to go back to work on the haciendas. His injury and this practice earned him the nickname of mochaorejas - "clipper of ears".

On the Zapatista Revolutionary Junta

He became part of the Zapatista's ruling Revolutionary Junta, headed by Emiliano Zapata, in May 1913, together with Eufemio Zapata, Genovevo de la O, Amador Salazar, Otilio Montano Sanchez, and Manuel Palafox (who acted as the secretary).

Conflicts with other Zapatista chiefs

On several occasions Neri and his men would come into confrontation with other Zapatistas, notably with the troops of Genovevo de la O, and at one time almost with Zapata himself. In November 1913 Neri had appropriated some guns from the other Zapatista commanders which earned him a rebuke from Zapata. Neri answered with a bold letter in which he refused to return the guns, accused Zapata of favoritism and not giving him enough credit, and threatened that if Zapata tried to collect the guns again, he would break off and fight Huerta on his own.

He was killed in January 1914, while returning from a campaign in Tepoztlan, by the Zapatista forces of Antonio Barona Rojas. According to some authors, there is strong circumstantial evidence that the killing was done on the orders of Zapata himself, although an explicit order to that effect has not been found. Barona was never held accountable for the killing.

References

Felipe Neri Wikipedia