From 1653 to 1656, Posada was stationed at the isolated
Hopi pueblo of
Awatovi, more than west of the principal Spanish settlements in the
Rio Grande valley of New Mexico. In the words of historian
France V. Scholes, "the [16]50's were characterized by an increasing restlessness among the
Pueblos and a growing hostility on the part of the
Apache tribes." The Spanish, including the Franciscan missionaries, required tribute and labor from the Indians and attempted to destroy their customs and religions in order to impose Christianity. Two incidents among the Hopi while Posada was there illustrate the tension between the Hopi and the missionaries.
The Guerra affair In 1655, Hopi leaders accused missionary
Salvador de Guerra of brutally beating and torturing a Hopi man who died soon thereafter. Guerra was tried by the Franciscans and sentenced to be confined to a convent and denied his rights to perform religious services. Guerra reappeared in 1661 as the notary and close associate of Posada when Posada took leadership (commissary) as the highest ranking Franciscan in New Mexico.
Mocking Posada In 1656, while Posada was absent from Awatovi, a young man named Juan Suñi entered the church, donned the priestly vestments, and mocked the priest and the Catholic ceremony. On his return, Posada had Suñi arrested and sent him to Santa Fe to be confined by the Franciscans and to work as a servant. Three years later Suñi was tried for an incident of petty thievery in the home of the Governor of New Mexico, sentenced to 200 lashes, and sold to the highest bidder for 10 years of enslavement. A scholar said that the incident "reflect(s) broad-based tensions between Hopis and Spaniards that are often underplayed in the literature on that period." ==Posada versus the governors==