Mr. Somebody
Friend Of A Friend
For all my Latin friends, many of you may not know why the world Cholo is used or what it even means for that matter. Many friends assume a cholo is a friend of latin descent who may be part of a gang but the reality is a lot more interesting and may very well be demonic.
From black to slums wow, Its so demonic, friends.
The term's use is first recorded in a Peruvian book published in 1609 and 1616, the Comentarios Reales de los Incas by Inca Garcilaso de la Vega. He writes (in Spanish) "The child of a Black male and an Indian female, or of an Indian male and Black female, they call mulato and mulata. The children of these they call cholo. Cholo is a word from theWindward Islands; it means dog, not of the purebred variety, but of very disreputable origin; and the Spaniards use it for insult and vituperation".[2]
In Colonial Mexico, the terms cholo and coyote co-existed, indicating mixed Mestizo and Amerindian ancestry. Under the casta system of colonial Latin America, cholooriginally applied to the children resulting from the union of a Mestizo and an Amerindian; that is, someone of three quarters Amerindian and one quarter Spanish ancestry. Other terms (mestizo, castizo, etc.) were used to denote other ratios of smaller or greater Spanish-to-Amerindian ancestry.
The word xolotl (pronounced "SHOW-lotl") is an Aztec word which refers to a humanoid creature with dog features. It is from this meaning that the word "cholo" developed its negative connotation, taking on a meaning similar to "mongrel" as applied to humans.[citation needed]
Cholo as an English-language term dates at least to 1851 when it was used by Herman Melville in his novel Moby-dikk, referring to a Spanish speaking sailor, possibly derived from the Windward Islands reference mentioned above. Isela Alexsandra Garcia of the University of California at Berkeley writes that the term can be traced to Mexico, where in the early part of the last century it referred to "culturally marginal" mestizos and Native American origin.[3]
During the War of the Pacific (1879–1883) Peruvians were despectivly referred to as "cholos" by Chilean officers.[4]
An article in the Los Angeles Express of April 2, 1907, headlined "Cleaning Up the Filthy Cholo Courts Has Begun in Earnest," uses the terms cholos and Mexicansinterchangeably.[5] The term cholo courts was defined in The Journal of San Diego History as "sometimes little more than instant slums as shanties were strewn almost randomly around city lots in order to create cheap horizontal tenements."[6]
From black to slums wow, Its so demonic, friends.

