This book is the first full-length biography of Margarito Bautista (1878-1961) a celebrated Latino Mormon leader in the U.S. and Mexico in the early twentieth century who was a Mexican cultural nationalist visionary founder of a utopian commune and Mormon dissident. Surprisingly little is known about Bautista's remarkable life the scope of his work or the development of his vision. Elisa Eastwood Pulido draws on his letters books pamphlets and unpublished diaries to provide a lens through which to view the convergence of Mormon evangelization Mexican nationalism and religious improvisation in the U.S. Mexico borderlands. <p/>A successful proselytizer of Mexicans for years from 1922 onward Bautista came to view the paternalism of the Euro-American leadership of the Church as a barrier to ecclesiastical self-governance by indigenous Latter-day Saints . In 1924 he began his journey away from mainstream Mormonism. By 1946 he had established a completely Mexican-led polygamist utopia in Mexico on the slopes of the volcano Popocateptl twenty-two kilometers southeast of Mexico City. Here he preached an alternative Mormonism rooted in Mesoamerican history and culture. Based on his indigenous hermeneutic of Mormon scripture Bautista proclaimed that the indigenous peoples of the Americas were a chosen race destined to wrest both political and spiritual authority from the descendants of Euro-American colonists. This book provides an in-depth look at a man still regarded with cultural pride by those Mexican and Mexican American Mormons who remember him as an iconic and revolutionary figure.<br>
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