Manuel Palafox
Manuel Palafox Ibarrola, known as El Ave Negra, was a Mexican military who participated in the Mexican Revolution with the title of general, as well as being the trusted emissary, personal secretary and one of the most close revolutionaries to Emiliano Zapata.
Early years
He was born in Puebla de Zaragoza, state of Puebla, approximately in 1887, the son of Ismael Palafox and Antonia Ibarrola. He was an engineering student in his hometown and worked as a salesman and administrator for various companies in various parts of the Republic, from Oaxaca to Sinaloa. He is described as a short, thin, pockmarked man. He met Emiliano Zapata in October 1911, when he was a trusted employee at the Tenango and Santa Clara haciendas, owned by Luis García Pimentel, in whose name he made Zapata an offer.Mexican revolution
He was taken prisoner but little by little he gained Zapata's trust. In the middle of 1912 he was commissioned to speak with Emilio Vázquez Gómez who at that time was in exile in San Antonio, U.S. Upon his return, his administrative and political talents were recognized, thus consolidating his position as secretary at the headquarters and his influence over Emiliano Zapata; by 1913 he already exercised considerable control of the affairs of the movement.Convention
When the Zapatistas entered Mexico City, Palafox maneuvered to appear within the conventionist government. In December 1914 he was appointed Secretary of Agriculture and Colonization, a position he held in the cabinets of Eulalio Gutiérrez Ortiz, Roque González Garza and Francisco Lagos Cházaro and where he proposed put into practice the agrarian cause of the Zapatista movement. As of January 1915 he organized his secretariat, founded the National Rural Credit Bank, ordered the establishment of regional agricultural schools and a national factory of agricultural implements. Likewise, it created a special office for land distribution, appointed young agronomists from the National School of Agriculture to form part of the commissions in charge of demarcation and land distribution in the states of Morelos, Puebla, State of Mexico and even in Mexico City. He also confiscated all the mills and distilleries of Morelos, which worked as public companies managed by revolutionary bosses. On 28 October 1915 he promulgated the Agrarian Law, of which he was the creator.In addition to being an agrarian activist, Palafox was a very active politician within Zapatismo and in its relationship with other factions. The Zapatistas nicknamed him "El Ave Negra", for his ability to intrigue. He acted in the council of war of General Luis G. Cartón, in 1914, and in that of Otilio Montaño Sánchez in 1917.