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Women in Revolutionary Movements in Latin America

Author(syf - D Q H 6 - D T X H W W e

Source: Journal of Marriage and the Family, Vol. 35, No. 2, Special Sections: Moving and the

Wife, Women in Latin America, (May, 1973yf S S 4

Published by: National Council on Family Relations

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Women in Revolutionary Movements

in Latin America

JANE S. JAQUETTE

Department of Political Science, Occidental College

The image of the female revolutionary, dressed in fatigues and carrying a gun, stands in stark

contrast to our North American view of the

passive, "oppressed" Latin American woman. For that reason alone it would be interesting to

explore the role of the female guerrillera as a

significant aspect of the Latin American revolu-

tionary experience. Yet the implications of

female participation should be spelled out more

clearly. First, the act of taking up a gun and

entering a guerrilla band implies a new relation-

ship of equality with men and a consequent change in patterns of role differentiation by sex. Second, there is the effect of the inter- national feminist movement today on the

development of new role models and institu- tions. From the example of the Vietnamese women to Bernadette Devlin and Angela Davis, the female revolutionary has become a shared

symbol, one which transcends national differ- ences. As Chris Camarano (1971:48) wrote in her article on Cuban women:

... I have come to feel... the need for inter- nationalism in the women's movement, as in all

revoluntionary movements. Most especially, it is

important for us to try to understand what lessons there are for us in the continuing struggles of women already living in revolutionary society. The changes in the quality of their lives, the

recurring pitfalls, the necessity for a constant offensive against material and attitudinal under-

development-all of these have meaning for us because they speak directly to our own oppres- sion and to the possibilities of our throwing it off.

The international movement provides a forum not merely for debates on revolutionary tactics, but also for the invention and testing of new

patterns of social relationships, and thus be- comes a factor in the speed and direction of social change. It is unfortunate that the information now available on the participation of women in

revolutionary movements in Latin America is

extremely scarce.1 Due to the lack of informa-

1I did not cover Mexico, 1968 and after, current MIR activities in Chile, nor did I consider Eva Peron

tion, this paper is, by necessity, an attempt to draw together what little there is rather than to

provide a thoroughgoing analysis. Nonetheless, I think it is useful to keep the following points in mind:

First, there is a female revolutionary tradi- tion in Latin America. I find this fact suf-

ficiently important to devote the first section of the paper to a discussion of historical antecedents to the role of women in modern

guerrilla movements.

Second, historically, the women who have

participated as guerrilleras have shared certain characteristics: they are young, often in their

early twenties; they often come from upper- middle-class, educated backgrounds; and they are quite often wives or relatives of male

revolutionaries. Within the guerrilla operation itself, certain tasks such as bearing messages, spying, carrying contraband weapons, etc., have been traditionally assigned to women, along with the tasks of nursing and cooking. This kind of role differentiation, as we. shall see

particularly in the case of Uruguay, is increas-

ingly coming under attack.

Third, there appears to be a link between female participation in guerrilla movements and the development of political statements and

platforms directly aimed at feminist. issues.

Historically this was the case in Argentina in 1810 and in Mexico after 1910. In the modern

guerrilla movements, there is also such a link but it seems to be affected by the closeness of the male revolutionary leadership to inter- national revolutionary currents (which increases awareness of feminist issues) as against the

degree to which the movement is aimed at the

peasant (which decreases the likelihood of feminist planks in revolutionary platforms). This question will be taken up again in the

concluding section. With these analytical suggestions in mind, let

sufficiently feminist to include her in the'historical section of the paper. I did check Pensamiento Critico (Cuba), Granma (Cuba), Sucesos (Mexico), Punto Final (Chile), and Politica (Mexico), as well as Le Monde (1968-1971) and the New York Times (1964-1971).

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY May 1973 344 us look at the information available.

GUERRILLERAS IN THE LATIN AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY TRADITION

In Latin American history, particularly dur-

ing the Independence period, we find women

who have organized guerrilla groups, have taken

up arms, both with guerrillas or regular troops, and often have died heroically while upholding their political principles. One of the first

women martyrs was Cecilia Tupac Amaru, sister of Jose Gabriel Tupac Amaru, direct descen- dent of the Inca rulers, who led a final

desperate rebellion of the Indians against Spanish domination in 1780. When the attempt failed, Cecilia, who had been one of the first to

support her brother, was led around, nude, on a burro through the streets of Cuzco while being

whipped on the shoulders (Blomberg, n.d.:49-51). She died later on a ship carrying her to exile in Spain, and her body was thrown into the sea. The most famous female figure of the

Independence period is Juana Azurduy, wife of

Manuel Padilla, a caudillo who continued to

fight the Spanish after the patriot army had

been defeated by the royalists. History reports that "there was no action in which Padilla was

not seen next to his wife, who was accom-

panied by a retinue of Amazons as brave as their leader." And Juana, "jumping from her

spirited battle horse to her pack mule, sleeping with her arms at her side and wearing her boots,

appearing here and disappearing there to harrass

the enemy constantly," inspired Alto Peru

(now Bolivia) to "vibrate with patriotic fervor"

(Sosa de Newton, 1967:54). In 1816 her

husband was killed, and Juana escaped, wounded, and returned to fight the Spaniards dressed in black and holding the rank of

lieutenant colonel. She died in poverty, unable to collect her Army pension, in 1862 (Blom- berg, n.d.: 114). The Argentines claim many heroines of the

Independence, among them Juana Robles, a

slave, who in 1814 penetrated the defenses of the city of Salta to bring word of the surrender of Montevideo. Loreto Sanchez de Peon was also a famous messenger and spy who reported the numbers of royalist troops by a system using grains of corn as she did not know how to count. When the Spaniards realized that women were actively supporting the patriots, there were reprisals. Women were tied to cannons and

beaten, their goods were confiscated, and they were often forced to pay large sums of money. They were jailed and abused and many fled

with the patriot army rather than face the

Spaniards (Sosa de Newton, 1967:48-49). In Nueva Granada (Colombia), two women

were active in revolutionary warfare and were

executed for their principles. Policarpa Salavar-

rieta, who fought in a number of battles, was

imprisoned and condemned to death (Diaz,

1968:363). During her last moments she tried

in vain to convince the native firing squad to

turn their guns against the Spanish. A woman

named Antonia Sanchez organized and supplied the guerrillera of Coromoro before she was

betrayed by a friend (Blomberg, n.d.:66). Much of the writing on women in the

Independence period is of the sentimental, nationalist type. In a few cases, however, an

attempt is made to link female participation with women's rights or the feminist movement. For example, Lily Sosa de Newton (1967:37)

argues that the Revolution of May in Argentina

opened "new possibilities which until then had not been seen nor expected," and that the

Revolution meant a "loosening of the chain"

that bound women "in double subjection to

political power and to their feminine condi-

tion" in an atmosphere of "new ideas, different

attitudes, and improvised values." A similar argument has been made for the

Revolution of 1910 in Mexico by Frederick Turner. It is his position that "the participation of women in the Revolution led, during the

period of violence and after, to an ideological

change favorable to the emancipation of

women" (1967:603). In spite of the fact that women did not obtain the right to vote in

national elections until 1958(!), certain signifi- cant changes began to occur during the Revolu-

tion, including the breakdown of loyalty to the

family and of the isolation of women from

national events and the explicit appeal to

women as a political support group. The result

was a change of status for women which

eventually resulted in the creation of a women's sector within the Partido Revolucionario Insti- tutional (which still governs Mexico), the

increasing participation of women in higher education, the professions, and the labor force in general, and the creation of a new feminist consciousness. In 1911 "hundreds of women"

signed a letter to interim president De la Barra

asking for the vote. The Liga Feminista Cuauhtemoc asked "not only for the political

equality of women but also for complete emancipation in their 'economic, physical, intellectual and moral battle' " (p. 612). For-

eign correspondents commented on the "spec- tacular role" women were playing in the

Revolution, and an Argentine journalist sought

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY 345 May 1973 to explain this unusual fact by pointing out that "technical advances" made weapons both "abundant" and "lighter and easier to carry" (p. 611). A number of women held the ranks of

sergeant and lieutenant and one woman, Mar-

garita Neri, commanded a group of 400 Indians. Elisa Acuna, who began with Flores Magon in

1903, fought with Emiliano Zapata until he was killed (p. 614). As during the Independence period, women were most often active as

messengers and spies and as cooks. Wives and children of revolutionaries often became in- volved by being used as hostages-Huerta's men, for example, placed wives and children of revolutionaries on the front of trains to prevent ambushes (p. 609). It is interesting that in

post-Revolutionary Mexico, as in Cuba under

Fidel, the most powerful women were the

presidents' private secretaries. One of them, Venustiano Carranza's secretary Hermila Galinda de Topete, is said to have had an

important positive influence on divorce legisla- tion (p. 619). A very different revolutionary movement which never gained power but which survived

years of persecution through the creation of a

large, clandestine organization, is the APRA

party. The program of the Alianza Popular Revolucionaria Americana (APRA) emphasized the integration of the Indian, the need for state control of the economy, and resistance to North American imperialism, and reflected an

attempt to apply Marxist thinking to the Latin American reality. As APRA was the archetypi- cal "populist" party in Latin America for many years, it is interesting to note that the party explicitly recognized women as an essential element of the revolutionary struggle and

developed a "feminist platform" which in- cluded demands for female suffrage, election and appointment of women to government posts, equal pay for equal work, maternity benefits, and guarantees of civil rights to married women (p. 5). In 1934 the party published a document, Aprismo Feminino Peruano, (Meneses, 1934) to examine the decline in female participation. In the 1920's, when APRA was a pan-continental movement, women imparted "training, doc-

trine, and revolutionary consciousness" to radical groups in the host countries (p. 7). Yet

prior to APRA's stand, the party noted, women were considered "unfit for activities other than the domestic ones." It pointed out that, for the female aprista, participation had meant a

"singular, evolutionary process toward the

acquisition of a conscience of struggle ....

Insulted, persecuted, jailed, she broke the bonds of repression" and "stimulated the faith and the spirit which never diminished among APRA prisoners" (p.7). The document con- cluded that the decline of support resulted from changes in political "fashion" to which women would naturally be more "sensitive." It noted the failure of the original middle-class women activists to establish closer ties with

working women (pp. 24-34; 39-40).

WOMEN IN GUERRILLA MOVEMENTS: 1953-1971

Cuba

Much has been written about the role of women in the Cuban revolution itself (Franqui, 1965; Sutherland, 1969), on the changing role of women in Cuba as a result of the revolution, and of a conscious attempt by Fidel and other members of the elite to transform the status of women in Cuban society (Camarano, 1971:

Chertov, 1970; Purcell, 1971; Olesen, 1971). Because Cuba has been in so many other ways a model for revolutionary movements elsewhere in Latin America, it is worthwhile to review some of the facts to provide a basis for

comparison. The three most important women in Cuba

today all participated in the 26th of July Movement and fought in the Sierra Maestra.

Haydee Santamaria was taken along as a nurse in the original attack on the Moncada barracks and imprisoned along with the rest of that

group. She fought in the Sierra, then was sent to Miami to organize financial support in the United States. After the revolution she was

appointed by Fidel to the ORI (Integrated Revolutionary Organizations) National Direc- torate (Karol, 1970:247n) and became the director of the Casa de las Americas, Celia Sanchez, Fidel's "inseparable compan- ion and confidant" (Franqui, 1965:10), helped organize the 26th of July Movement in the

cities, fought in the Sierra, and became Fidel's second-in-command. After the revolution she continued to act as Fidel's administrative

secretary and as Secretary of the Council of Ministers (Franqui, 1965:10, 18). Vilma Espin helped plan the 1956 attack on Santiago, fought in the Sierra, and later took the job as head of the Federation of Cuban Women

(FMC) with the task of mobilizing Cuban women into the work force and into the revolution. Yet it is significant that all these women are closely linked to important male leaders-Celia as secretary to Fidel, Vilma as the wife of Rauil Castro, and Haydee as the wife of

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY 346 May 1973 Armando Hart Davalos, party leader.

There is no question that the revolutionary

regime has been dedicated to mobilizing women

and that, as a result, the situation of women in

Cuba has changed drastically from pre-revolu-

tionary days. There is greatly increased partici-

pation of women in the labor force, and this in

turn has led to changes in the institution of the

family. Many women are freed from all-day child care by a network of day care centers that

by 1968 were caring for nearly 41,000 children, Sexual mores and female patterns of depen-

dency are being changed by the fact that

contraceptives are readily available (although not actively promoted by the regime), that

abortion is legalized,2 and divorce is "free on

mutual consent." One of the major targets of

regime criticism has been the traditional hus-

band who tries to control his wife's behavior to

conform to traditional views. In his famous

speech on party militancy (March, 1963), Che

Guevara spoke of the husband who would not let his wife, who was an official at the Ministry of Industries, make trips without accompanying her: "This is a boorish example of discrimina- tion against women. Does a woman, perchance, have to accompany her husband each time he

has to go into the interior or any other place so

she can watch him, lest he succumb to

temptation or something of the sort?" (Gerassi,

1968:241) It is not only the attitudes of husbands

toward their wives which the regime is trying to

change, but also the attitudes of parents toward their children. The mobilization of young women into the 1961 Literacy Campaign and other activities has threatened parents who did

not want their daughters exposed to the

dangers that lurk outside the home. The regime

responded to this concern by having the women live together in groups in the rural areas, rather

than with the peasants as the men did, and by

appealing to youth to recognize the regime's

responsibility to their parents (Olesen,

1971:550-551).

Key to the new mobilization of women is the

Federation of Cuban Women itself, dedicated to preparing women "educationally, politically and socially to participate in the Revolution"

(Espin in Purcell, 1971:10). The FMC, with a

membership of 54 per cent of the adult female

2According to Sutherland (1969) it is legal only when contraceptive methods have failed or when reported within a month of conception. Parents are notified if the girl is unmarried (p. 178). Oleson (1971) reports that the pill, formerly not approved by the regime due to health hazards associated with it, is now being considered for future use.

population by 1970, has been responsible for

setting up the day care centers, organizing a

number of educational programs, including

special courses for domestic workers and

peasant women, and for the management of a

number of agricultural projects. Through its

educational programs and its magazine, Mu-

jeres, the FMC has been a central force in

creating-and directing-female consciousness.

The Federation has consistently taken a strong line, creating new images of women as workers

and revolutionary fighters, for, as Vilma Espin has stated, Cuba "cannot cease to be under-

developed while all women able to work are not

doing so." For the FMC a job liberates women

"from domestic slavery and the heavy burden

of prejudice" (Purcell, 1971:10). On the other

hand, "women are still expected to have

primary or sole responsibility for domestic and child care chores in the home" (pp. 17, 18).

Occupational stereotyping still occurs with no

attempt made to mobilize males into tradition-

ally female-dominated industries such as food, tobacco, and textiles. "Only in those tradition-

ally male occupations where sufficient male labor is unavailable, has the regime made a

special effort to recruit female workers" (pp. 18-19). Women administrators are almost

always placed in jobs that involve supervising other women, not male workers. On questions of sexual mores, the FMC "has been generally silent.. ." (Sutherland, 1969:186). In contrast to the radical early period of the Russian Revolution, the family has never come under direct attack in Cuba. Olesen notes that the regime "encourages common law couples to

marry" in special mass weddings. Legalized unions have greater advantages with regard to

pensions, support, inheritance, and even land titles (1971:551). In spite of these limitations, Cuba is at the forefront in creating new institutions based on

the premise of equality for women. This commitment has penetrated the ideology of the

top elite as well. In his "Santa Clara" speech (Castro and Jenness, 1970), Fidel argued that

women, like the black population of Cuba, had been doubly liberated "as part of the exploited sector of the society" and "not only as workers but also as women, in that society of exploita- tion." Second, he argued that the function of

reproduction, while important to society, has

"enslaved [women] to a series of chores within the home ...." In order to reach the social

goal of liberating women, "we must have thou-

sands of children's day nurseries, thousands

of primary boarding schools, thousands of

school dining halls, thousands of workers' din-

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY May 1973 347 ing halls, [and] thousands of centers of social services..." (pp. 7-8). It should be noted that this view of female emancipation does not rest on the premise that sex role distinctions should be eliminated, but rather on the professionaliza- tion of female household work. In contrast, Che has argued (Gerassi,

1968:241-242) that female participation in the

Revolution is inevitably linked to psychological factors as well; that "the liberation of women

should consist in the achievement of their total

freedom-their inner freedom. It is not a matter of a physical restriction which is placed on

them to hold them back from certain activities.

It is also the weight of previous traditon."

In retrospect, Alistair Hennessey has argued that "it is not accidental that the Cubans should have devoted so much energy to women's organizations.... Without the sup- port of women, especially in traditionally Catholic societies, social revolution would be a chimera." Cuban revolution has been among the least exportable, and least debated, ele- ments of the Cuban example.

Colombia

In the five rural guerrilla movements which

followed in the wake of the Cuban success, those of Guatemala, Venezuela, Peru, Colombia

and Bolivia, I have found evidence in all cases

of some female participation, although it was

very limited except in Peru and in the special case of Bolivia. However, in only one of these, the Colombian, was there any specific political statement about women. This occurs in the

Platform of the United Front, drawn up by the

revolutionary priest, Camilo Torres, and an-

nounced prior to his joining the guerrillas.

Article 10. of the Platform (May-22, 1965) reads as follows: "Women will participate on an

equal footing with men, in the economic,

political and social activities of the country" (Gerassi, 1971:Ch. 39). Apparently Article 10

did not appear in the original draft of the

statement, written in February. According to

John Gerassi, this draft was circulated "to his

friends, to some trusted political comrades, and

to the few Communists he knew well. They discussed it with him, suggested a few changes and one serious addition-a clause on the rights of women" (1971:26). Torres' biographer, German Guzman, has argued that the Platform

was drawn up following studies by committees from "the various progressive groups" in Co- lombia based on research teams which Camilo had organized originally as a seminary student

in France. A number of women were active on those teams.3

While the Platform of the United Front was

an urban, even international, document, it was

apparently consistent with the views of the

guerrilla leadership, as evidenced by Camilo's

meeting with guerrilla leader Fabio Vasquez Castana in early July. At that meeting the two

men "agreed on both strategy and tactics,"

including the buildup of urban support net-

works through the United Front. The published version of the Platform appeared in Frente

Unido, the Front's magazine, in August. In

October the "Message to Women," which

denounced the exploitation of women in

Colombia, was published, just before Camilo

left Bogota to join the armed struggle (Gerassi, 1971:Ch. 39). On February 15, 1966, Camilo was killed at Patio de Cemento along with four guerrillas who tried to come to his aid. One of the less reliable reports of the incident indicated that

among the guerrillas there was a woman "who wore blue jeans and who carried a rifle which she began to fire against the army patrol." She

was wounded in the hand while escaping into the forest (Guzman, 1969:250-251). In Janu-

ary, 1968, the Peking-oriented People's Libera- tion Army, a new guerrilla group, declared:

Countless women from the people could only rely on poverty, slavery and prostitution. Now their path is clear and bright, they can join the ranks of one of the auxiliary units of the EPL, helping with their own hands to build a true

fatherland, and covering themselves with glory. [Gott, 1970:Appendix 9]

Peru

Two groups who were unable to unite their

efforts (Bejar, 1969) opened guerrilla fronts in Peru in 1965, the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR) led by Luis de la Puente and the Ejercito de Liberacion Nacional (ELN) under Hector Bejar. Both drew up revolution-

ary statements, although Bejar writes that in the case of the ELN "not much effort" was put into the task as "most members felt that the Left had already drawn up enough programs without their writing yet another one" (Bejar, 1969:61). Neither platform refers to emancipa- tion of women (Bejar, 1969; Mercado, 1967). However, it appears that there were women

3Gerassi (1971) emphasizes the influence of Camilo's mother, Isabel Restrepo Gaviria, whom he describes as "a feminist who often took to the streets to demonstrate against her sex's inequalities..." (p. 15).

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY 348 May 1973 fighting with at least one MIR unit, and the

imprisonment of the wives of MIR leaders by the government aroused international concern. On October 8, 1965, the Peruvian weekly Oiga reported a clash between the army and 45

guerrillas of the "Tupac Amaru" front. This

group was accompanied by various women, some with their children and others "authentic

guerrilleras who fought shoulder to shoulder with the men." In the skirmish one woman

(Aquila) was killed with nine men, and seven women were captured. Their leader, Guillermo

Lobat6n, was apparently killed on January 7, 1966 (Gott, 1970:272-273). Meanwhile, the government had imprisoned a number of wives of guerrilla leaders in a prison at Chorrillos including the wives of Luis de la Puente and Guillermo Lobaton. Little notice of this was taken in the press.4 In February the women prisoners sent a letter (Caretas, Feb.

1-14, 1966) protesting their imprisonment for over seven months as contrary to "human rights and ethical principles." They further asked for official proof that Lobaton and other members of the "Tupac Amaru" had been killed, and accused the government of holding them

illegally as hostages. The women demanded that

they be informed of the accusations against them, and they announced a hunger strike to

begin on February 13. On February 17 Oiga published a cable from the International Federation of the Rights of Man protesting the "arbitrary detention of seven wives of guerrilla leaders without trial and without informing them of the accusations

against them in more than a half year of

imprisonment." The cable was signed by a number of European intellectuals including Jean Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. The

hunger strike was called off when some of their demands were met; and they were later released

(Oiga, March 4, 1966). An article by Jacqueline Eluau de Lobaton later appeared in the Chilean fidelista journal, Punto Final, recalling Lobaton's ties with the

peasants and questioning whether he could still be alive, as the Peruvian military had never

proven his death. The need of the revolutionary Left to keep its leaders alive is met by the creation of legends. In the creation of such a

legend around the figure of Guillermo Lobaton, Jacqueline has become one of the most well known of the Latin American guerrilla heroines.

4Those named were Mercedes de Fernando Gasco, Nelly Arias Escalante, Hilda Galvez, and Jacqueline Eluau de Lobaton.

Venezuela and Guatemala

Evidence of the participation of women in

guerrilla activities in Venezuela and Guatemala, two countries which were the first to experi- ence the organization of guerrilla fronts in

response to Fidel's success in Cuba, is scarce indeed. In Venezuela there is an account of a

girl who participated in the hijacking of a plane in November, 1963, along with other "teenage" students. The incident, which Richard Gott described as a "publicity stunt," involved the distribution of FALN (Armed Forces of Na- tional Liberation) pamphlets over the town of Ciudad Bolivar followed by an escape to Trinidad. There the authorities were unwilling to grant political asylum, and the students were returned to Venezuela where they were charged with air piracy (Gott, 1970:129).

The most famous of the women involved in

revolutionary activities in Venezuela is Eliza- beth Burgos, who has received attention largely because she is the wife of French Journalist and

revolutionary theoretician, Regis Debray. They were married while Debray was being held

prisoner in Camiri, Bolivia, after he had been

captured and accused of helping Chq's forces there in 1967 (Newsweek, Feb. 23, 1968).

Neither the Venezuelan nor the Guatemalan

revolutionary programs mention the issue of

emancipation, although the FLN (Venezuela) mentions women as one sector in a broad united front. In Guatemala, Yon Sosa and the

"Trotskyite" MR-13 movement explicitly ap- pealed to students who often joined in the battle as "weekend guerrillas." There were women among those who fought. It is interest-

ing that the FALN program (Caracas, 1963) emphasized the need to protect the Venezuelan

family (Gott, 1970:121), a point which also

appears in the MIR program in Peru and in Camilo Torres' "Message to Women."

In Guatemala Kris Yon Cerna, niece of Yon

Sosa, and Eunice Campiran de Aguilar Mora, wife of a Mexican student, were both "beaten to death with clubs" after a police raid on a

high level meeting of Communist leadership and

sympathizers in Guatemala City on March 5, 1966. The meeting had been called to resolve

disputes that had arisen after the Moscow- influenced Guatemalan Workers' Party (PGT) decided to support a moderate presidential candidate for the 1966 elections rather than back the policy of armed struggle to which the

guerrilla group under Luis Turcios Lima (FAR) was committed (Gott, 1970:71). The split between the party and the guerrillas is just one of the many examples of fatal division among

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY May 1973 349 the groups on the Left which undermined the

guerrilla effort in Guatemala and elsewhere. Aside from the two women who were in the automobile accident when Turcios Lima was killed on October 2, 1966,5 there are two women whose names are linked to the Guate- malan guerrilla effort. The first is Rogelia Cruz

Martinez, a former Guatemalan beauty queen, who was killed by a rightist vigilante group because of her well-known "left wing contacts"

(Giniger, 1968; Gott, 1970:86). The second woman is Marian Peter Bradford, a Maryknoll nun, who worked along with radical priests Art and Thomas Melville. While the priests worked on changing conditions and developing political consciousness at the remote rural center of

Huehuetenango,6 she became the center of a student movement at the university in Guate- mala City which "gradually turned to the

underground guerrilla movement" (Common- weal, Feb. 2, 1968). The Melvilles were

expelled from Guatemala in December, 1967, as the cooperation of priests and nuns with the

guerrilla movement threatened the continued existence of the Maryknoll mission in Guate- mala. All of these women were linked to the urban political network rather than the rural

fighting base of the movement.

The Urban Guerrilla Movement:

Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay

Following the death of Che in 1967 and a series of defeats experienced by the rural

guerrilla movements in Peru and elsewhere, the Left began to search for a new revolutionary strategy that would not revolve around the rural foco which was vulnerable to army repression. It is at this time that the urban

guerrilla alternative began to take hold, most

notably in Argentina, Brazil, and above all

Uruguay. The chief theorist- for the urban movement was a Brazilian, Carlos Marighela, a former Communist Party member whose "Handbook of Urban Guerrilla Warfare" and other essays outline the strategy and tactics of the urban struggle (Marighela, 1971). The urban

guerrilla movement in Brazil as elsewhere does not discourage the participation of women, and

Marighela has written that many women who

5The two were an 18-year-old student, Silvia Yvonne Flores Letona, who died, and "Tita," who survived. See Gott (1970:72) and Newsweek, October 17, 1966.

6Huehuetenango was referred to by one Guate- malan official as "the Maryknoll Republic of Huehue- tenango," but it was clearly not a guerrilla base. See Commonweal, August 9, 1968, September 20, 1968, and February 2, 1968.

have joined the guerrillas "have proven them- selves amazingly good and tenacious fighters, especially during raids on banks and barracks, and when in prison" (1971:97). Most of the evidence of female participation in the movement in Brazil comes from the

reports of prisoners who have been released as a result of guerrilla kidnappings and from reports of torture of political prisoners in Brazilian

jails. On January 25, 1970, Le Monde reported the release of a nun, Sister Maurina Borgha de

Silviera, Mother Superior of the convent of Ribeirao-Preto (Sao Paulo state) who was accused of "having authorized terrorists to use the convent as a base of operations" (Gott, 1971:15). Of 70 prisoners who were freed and sent to Chile in January, 1971, 6 were women. Two gave reports of being tortured in prison to the press (New York Times, Jan. 15-16,1971). In March Le Monde reported the trial in Sao Paulo of Yara Spadini, a Brazilian social

worker, who was charged with "carrying sub- versive material." When she replied that the accusations against her had been invented and that she had not been informed even of what the charges were prior to her appearance in the

courtroom, cheers broke out in the audience and the judge ordered the court cleared (Le Monde, March 10, 1971).. On February 26, 1970, two letters appeared in the New York Review of Books describing the tortures being used in the prisons and

signed by prisoners themselves. The first de- scribes specific tortures in detail; the second, from women prisoners being held at Ilha das

Flores, listed the names of 16 women7 who had been tortured by electric shocks and other

methods, stating that the tortures "are known to the commanding officers and all the military personnel" serving at the prison. The letter declared that "threats of reprisals and even death" had kept them from speaking out

before, but that "statements by the President of the Republic and the Minister of Justice, as well as reports by the local and international

press, make us believe that we are more

protected against such reprisals." All of these women except one were in their early twenties

7The women are Zil6a Resnick, Rosanne Resnick, Ina de Souza Madeiros, Maria Candida de Souza Gouveia, Maria Mota de Lima Alvarez, Marijane Viera Lisboa, Marcia Savaget Fiani, Solange Maria Santana, Ilda Brandle Siegl, Maria Elo6dia Alencar, Priscilla Bredariol, Vania Esmanhoto, Victoria Pamplona, Dorma Tereza de Oliveira, Marta Maria Klagsbrunn, and Arlinda . Some biographical material on each is provided in the letter (New York Review of Books, February 26, 1970).

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY 350 May 1973 and many were married to men who were also

being held and tortured. There is hardly any information on women in the Argentine movement. Nonetheless, the New York Times reported that "women fre-

quently participate in guerrilla operations and are often used as decoys." In one case, "an

apparently pregnant woman waiting inside a bank produced a machine gun to take charge of a large robbery" (New York Times, Feb. 19, 1971). In another, a policeman was killed by the guerrillas after he bent down to examine a

splinter in the foot of a "pretty girl" on the beach. The urban guerrilla movement about which the most is known is the Tupamaro movement in Uruguay (the name is taken from the Inca, Tupac Amaru) organized under the leadership of Rauil Sendic. Reports issued by the move- ment indicate that a large number of women have taken part in robberies, kidnappings, and other operations,8 including an assault on the Women's Prison which freed 12 female revolu- tionaries. Among these was Lucia Topolanski, who later was credited with being one of the leaders in the kidnapping of British ambassador

Geoffrey Jackson. The lawyer for the Tupa- maros, Marie Esther Giglio, is also a woman (Le Monde, English Weekly Ed., Feb. 3, 1971). Given the evidence of considerable female

participation, it is significant that the Tupa- maros, alone among guerrilla groups, have

developed a detailed position on "revolutionary women" (Punto Final, November 9, 1971). In this statement the Tupamaros point out that women have been disadvantaged by a "classist" education which avoids physical training and

"limits, over a period of time, their creativity, their initiative, and even their aggressivity."9 As a result, a woman becomes "a spectator to a

history built by men." Given this educational and cultural discrimination against women, the

Tupamaros then argue:

It is essential for the militant woman to find in her own revolutionary comrades the just under- standing of her limitations, in order that her revolutionary role be efficacious and in order that

Q 8A list of women who have participated in these operations includes: Susana Pintos, Maria Teresa Labrocea Rabellino, Corita Devita Decuadra, Silvia Maria Duran Nunez, Alicia Renee Rey Morales, Edith Moraes A. de Rodriguez, Nelly Graciela Jorge Panzera, Ana Maria Tetti Izquierdo, Lucia Topolansky Saavedra, Maria Elena Topolansky de Martinez Platero.

9This is taken directly from the Tupamaro docu- ment, Actas Tupamaros. Buenos Aires: 1971.

the work of the group overcome prejudices so that there will no longer exist "male" jobs and "female" jobs, but rather the necessary com- plementarity which the revolutionary task as a whole requires. Thus, in the most risky and complex politico-military operations of the Tupa- maros, the woman combatant has been inserted at an increasingly higher level.

In a published interview a Tupamaro was asked about the role of women in the move- ment. The reply was: "First let me tell you, a woman is never more equal to a man than behind a .45 pistol" (Costa, 1971:195).

Bolivia

I have left the story of "Tania" who was with Che's group in Bolivia until last, both because it is the most interesting and detailed in terms of available information, and because it can be used to illustrate the way in which

journalists have reported female participation in

guerrilla movements. Since her death in August of 1967, Tania has become a revolutionary heroine in Cuba. Her activities in Che's group and the story of her death appear in most accounts of Che's experiences in Bolivia. A

biography has been drawn together from letters and other documents and has been published in

English (Rojas and Calderon, 1971). Tania was born Tamara Haydee Bunke Bider, daughter of East Germans who had fled from Hitler's Germany to Argentina, on November

19, 1937. She and her family returned to East

Germany after the war, when Tamara was 14, and there she joined a number of Communist

youth organizations. She began to learn to shoot at an early age and later became a

shooting instructor in the GDR Association for

Sports and Skills. In 1958 she requested permission to return to Argentina, her place of

birth, arguing that, as a Marxist-Leninist, "it is natural for me to want to spend my life fighting as well in one country as another ..." (Rojas and Calderon, 1971:15). In 1960 Tamara received a long-awaited invitation to go to Cuba. There she worked first for ICAP (Insti- tuto Cubano de Amistad de los Pueblos), as an

interpreter for the Ministry of Education, and as an "information disseminator" for the Federation of Cuban Women. She joined her local block Committee for the Defense of the Revolution and was allowed to join the militia. In 1969 she joined a discussion group "to

study the Argentine situation" and the possibil- ity of revolution there. One of her friends from that group described her relationship with Tamara: "We'd talk all day long. What about? Armed struggle (constantly), the need for

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY May 1973 351 training, the need for women to participate as

guerrillas in the armed struggle. Both of us were rather obsessed with this. And Tamara, espe- cially, did everything possible to find ways to

participate in the guerrilla struggle" (pp. 100-101). According to her biography, March,

1963, marked the end of a month-long clear-

ance process in which the Cuban revolution-

aries determined that she "was needed in future activities" to support revolutions in the Third World. They explained to her that these

would include "appraising and recruiting per- sons qualified for the performance of diversi- fied work in the revolutionary struggle," and she would "receive mail; deliver messages; collect medicines and food supplies; organize a clandestine network to handle supplies and

communications; study urban or suburban zones for future action; obtain information of

the political, economic and military capacity of

governments to be fought against; find out the

extent of Yankee imperial penetration of those

governments; and be ready to take up arms when the moment for action came" (pp. 100-101). From that moment Tamara-Tania entered a

period of intense training, first in Cuba, then in

Western Europe where she traveled to gain the

background for an effective cover identity. In

November, 1964, she went to Bolivia where she

established an identity as Laura Gutierrez

Bauer, an ethnologist. For two years she

worked to gain access to the highest levels of

Bolivian society and government officials and to establish a communications network which would provide urban contacts for the projected rural foco. She was successful at both tasks

(Rojas and Calderon, 1971; Harris, 1970). Interior Minister Antonio Arguedas, who was

responsible for turning Che's diary over to Fidel and for exposing the CIA operation in Bolivia,

reported after Tania's death that she had spent a "long time working in the most exclusive circles of Bolivian 'high society' and politics without anyone's suspecting her revolutionary role" (Rojas and Calderon, 1971:196).10 For two months before the guerrillas began assemb-

ling in rural Bolivia, she was able to gather and

report political and military information, and she later communicated with them in part by means of an "advice to the lovelorn" radio

10See also Harris (1970), p. 74. At one point she married (and later divorced) a Bolivian student in order to obtain Bolivian citizenship. Her diary notes that "such an eventuality had been considered before she left, and she had been given permission to take that extreme measure, should it be necessary" (Rojas and Calder6n, 1971:153).

program, broadcast in code out of Cocha-

bamba. Tania made two visits to the guerrilla camp prior to the one in which, due to unforseen

circumstances, she was forced to stay with the

guerrillas permanently. On that occasion she

was escorting Carlos Bustos, an Agrentine contact of Che's, and Regis Debray to the main

camp at Nancahuazu ranch. This was against Che's explicit instructions that she not do

anything to endanger her cover. To complicate matters, Che was not in camp but away on a

long training march. By the time he returned, on March 10, 1967, the visitors had already been there two weeks, and on March 27 Che

reported in his diary that the presence of Tania in the camp had become known to the army

through the reports of deserters (1971:198). Tania had no choice but to remain. A

guerrilla comrade, Pombo, described her as

"stoic" and said that "she refused any special treatment" (p. 200). Nonetheless, she and two

other members of the group became sick and

developed high fevers. For that reason they were left in the rear guard group, led by

Joaquin, when Che split his forces. Joaquin's entire group was killed in an ambush on August 30, after being betrayed to the army by a

peasant. 1

The National Liberation Army operating out

of Nancahuazui never issued a program, but its

proclamation of April, 1967, contained a

statement that appealed to the tradition of

revolutionary heroes and heroines in Bolivia,

mentioning among others, the name of Juana

Azurduy (Mercier Vega, 1968:14). It has been said that Che's group failed in part because it was isolated from the peasants. The appeal to feminine heroines, and other elements of the

statement, are clear indications that the guer- rilla group viewed itself, as Tania did in 1958, as part of a self-conscious, world-wide revolu-

tionary movement, not as a force arising out of, or even directed toward, immediate local concerns of the peasants.

Conclusions

At the beginning of the paper I offered a cautious generalization: that the presence of feminist planks in revolutionary platforms could be linked to the participation of female

guerrilla fighters, but that this relationship was modified to some degree by the relationship between the guerrilla leadership and the inter-

11Another woman, Loyola Guzman, a university student in La Paz, was also part of the urban support network for Che's group (See the Nation, November 20, 1971).

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY May 1973 352 national Left, on the one hand, and its

closeness to the peasants on the other. Let us review the evidence. The strongest feminist

political orientation occurs in Cuba after the

revolution, in Colombia and in Uruguay. In

Cuba and Uruguay, there was also a high level

of female participation; this was not true in

Colombia in the sense of guerrilla participation. What inspired Camilo Torres was clearly the

international milieu, although women were

identified in his study groups and among his

intellectual contacts. In Colombia there is

evidence also that feminist planks may be

becoming more popular in rural guerrilla plat- forms, which may be due to imitation. Uru-

guay's guerrillas are unique among urban groups in the development of a full revolutionary

program; thus statements about Brazil and

Argentina, both having international links and some female participation, would be premature. Guatemala and Venezuela represent peasant- oriented platforms with no specific references to women and with minor female participation. Feminist issues do not appear to have been salient to peasants. Bolivia has already been discussed as a case of an internationally derived

platform, appealing to a "female revolutionary tradition" which has some relevance in Cuba but not, I would suggest, in Bolivia. The real

anomaly is Peru where, despite evidence of considerable female participation, the platform of the MIR limited itself to a statement on the

family, a theme which suggests a traditional orientation toward male and female roles.

Epilogue

There remain certain unsolved questions about Tania's role in Bolivia which are not dealt with in her biography but which are raised by the following articles which appeared in News- week (July 29, 1968):

For months Tania and Che were hounded by the Bolivian Army, and finally, in two separate battles, Che and Tania (who was reported to be five months pregnant) were killed. According to one theory, Tania was loyal to Moscow (estab- lished while she was still living in the GDR)-and not to Che-until her death, and might even have intended to betray him. But some more generous U.S. officials wondered whether Tania's cold heart might not have been warmed by Che at the end.

To be correct, this story would have to have Tania become pregnant just after her arrival in the guerrilla camp, a very well-timed bit of

fertility; and Che's rule against guerrillas taking mistresses would have had to be broken by Che himself (Rojas and Calderon, 1971:198-199).

Further, its plausibility rests on the notion of female dependence: either Tania is a slave to

Moscow or a slave to Che, and in neither case is

there room for the view that she might have a

revolutionary commitment of her own, as the

years of lonely work from 1963 to 1966 surely

suggest. Richard Gott writes of the "stories about

Tania" that:

It has frequently been maintained that Tania was a Russian spy. Some stories go so far as to suggest that she was Guevara's lover and that she was

responsible for the betrayal of the guerrilla force. There is not a shadow of evidence for these

charges, and there seems little doubt that the

story was invented by the CIA. [Gott, 1970:314]

How fitting that U.S. officials should be

credited for "generosity" to Tania in a story

they themselves invented! The CIA source Gott

cites is supported by Richard Harris who

reported that former Interior Minister Arguedas "recounted how he had planted an article for

the CIA in the Bolivian press which falsely reported that Tania had been a Soviet spy operating under orders to sabotage Che's

guerrilla operation" (Harris, 1970:193). Gott has traced the report that Tania was Che's mistress to a "highly sensational and inaccurate

piece" by Daniel James who "apparently invented" the story (Gott, 1970:314). Tania once complained about how difficult it

was to be a woman alone in a capitalist country where, if you were out on the streets at night, you would be taken for a prostitute (Rogas and

Calder6n, 1971:173). It is ironic that, even after her death, she received the same treatment from the "capitalist"-one is tempted to add

"sexist"-press.

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