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Nicragua notes
Nicaragua notes
63
Political Studies
Undergraduate 3
03/12/2012

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Term
p23-24
Definition
Somoza Garcia twenty year rule (1936-56) saw uninterrupted effort at social and political alliance formation with some success. power sharing between conservatives and liberals
Term
p 28
Definition
enters only public secondary school in Matagalpa, the National Institute of the North (INN)
Term
p 29
Definition
early 1950s, attended several meetings at Conservative youth group and worked with the National Union of Popular Action (UNAP)- a movement led by anti-Somoza intellectuals who led demonstrations in 1940s
Term
p 29
Definition
1957- "UNAP and its national leaders were too well off economically, they were too perfumed, too bourgeosified, and that turned me off. Growing interest in Marxism and Nicaragua's Communist Party (PSN)
Term
p 30
Definition
1953-54, told UNAP he could no longer support the organization because he had become a Marxist
Term
p30
Definition
couldn't find many Marxist books in librarys at Matagalpa; teacher at inn, Rafael Antonio Diaz, secretly lent radical books from his personal library
Term
p30
Definition
Joined PSN in July 1955 after leaving Matagalpa for Managua. 1956- organized first student cell of PSN in Leon; delivered party newspaper, Unidad which he sold everywhere
Term
p 31
Definition
Fonseca's mature political writings extremely critical of PSN condemning them as class collaborationist and bureaucratic, unable and unwilling to lead a revolution in Nicaragua
Term
p31
Definition
Why he joined? in Matagalpa the PSN cell included fifteen young workers; this was opposed to the Managua Communists who were middle class and professionals
Term
p 31
Definition
PSN banned and some of its leaders arrested as Cold War began and Somoza moved out of his "pro-labor" populist stage of 1944-46 and into mending fences with elite opposition.
Term
31
Definition
Matagalpa PSN cell; Fonseca convinced them to pass a resolution calling for armed workers and peasants revolution; PSn chief Man9uel Prerez Estrada rediculed resolution calling it "adventurist," threatening to invoke "party discipline" and complaining about the backwardness of the peasantry.
Term
31
Definition
discription of Fonseca at gatherings in the home of Marxist intellectual Manolo Cuadra in mid 1950s as restless, questioning teenager, lacking in social graces; skinny, reserved, serious youth, who spoke only to his host
Term
32
Definition
Fifth/final year of high school worked with two young friends: Ramon Gutierrez had been involved in opposition activities half a decade earlier; lived in Guatemala during Jacobo Arbenz presidency, obtained copy of The Communist Manifesto in French and some Mao Zedong writings in spanish; brought back to Matagalpa with him in 1954; sometimes called "Moncho"
Term
33
Definition
Francisco Chico Buitrago moved to Matagalpa from northern village to finish high school. seminary student (priest) but he and two others no longer accepted the teachings of the church
Term
33
Definition
Fonseca, Gutierrez and Buitrago organized student group at the INN called the Centro Cultural; August 1954, Fonseca published a cultural journal called Segovia
Term
33 segovia
Definition
Segovia did not take on Somoza government directly and avoided overtly political subjects; After only a few issues, the influential opposition daily La Prensa published a short article entitled "The Red Seeds of Matagalpa"; poetry, editorials on student life, analytical pieces on female suffrage and 19th century independence wars
Term
34
Definition
Segovia: key role of youth and the close relationship between education and the nation or : PATRIA. most important role students could play was to bring literacy and therefore civilization to poor workers and peasants: 80% of rural population illterate at time
Term
36
Definition
Fonseca and Buitragos writings: concept of progress and modernization as nearly inevitiable, the automatic result of the spread of education; believed modern nationhood would come through industrialization and economic progress like US. Cuban Revolution changed this view
Term
37 segovia
Definition
represented something new in its rejection of framework of traditional Conservative and Liberal party politics. INN youth had little interest in elections; had fiery youthful enthusiasm and regional character.
Term
37
Definition
Augusto Cesar Sandino never appears in eleven issues
Term
38
Definition
After graduation, moved to Managua. hired as organizer of the school's library at El Goyena (Instituto Ramirez Goyena); leading secular high school in Nicaragua with close links to Somocista Liberal Party. Fonseca did work with archiving what the real histories are and political contact with students
Term
40
Definition
abstinence from drinking, smoking and sexual activity
Term
40
Definition
Fonseca, Buitrago, and Rothschuh organized march in which students from three public high schools converged on San Jacinto hacienda. on September 1955, in celebration of Nicraguan national holiday. beginning to try to reach out to students at private Catholic high schools, his contacts in mid 1950s were all public institutions
Term
40 March 1956
Definition
Fonseca left Instituto Goyena and moved to Leon, where he enrolled in the National University of Nicaragua as a law student. Leon: traditional stronghold of Liberal wing of Nicaraguan oligarchy and since 18th century, the rival of Conservative Granada.
Term
41
Definition
Leon: huge support for Somoza's Nationalist Liberal Party with own Liberal newspapers. Two other wings of Liberalism based in Leon: Liberal obrerismo (concerns of artisans and other urban workers) and the Independent Liberal Party, or PLI, formed in Leon in 1944 by middle class bourgeois opponents of Somoza
Term
42
Definition
Leon spring 1956: The Student Center (CUN, later CUUN) named him editor in chief of its newspaper, El Universitario; in 1957, still believed change could be won through a civil peaceful campaign
Term
42
Definition
Leon: put together first all student cell of PSn in Nicaragua: included Tomas Borge, fellow Matagalpan AND Silvio Mayorga
Term
43
Definition
Initiative for all student cell came from Fonseca rather than from the PSn national leadership. Fonseca complaigned that his party paid little attention to campus organizing. dissonance between wanting to follow PSN's orders and the student movement itself
Term
43
Definition
Nicaraguan president Anastasio Somoza Garcia was assassinated in Leon in September 1956. His older son, Luis Somoza Debayle, was immediately named president; his second son, Anastasio Somoza Debayle (Tachito) educated from West Point was already head of the National Guard
Term
44
Definition
President Luis Somoza intense, especially in Leon, roundup of suspected conspirators. Area outside university turned into an armed camp. Fonseca arrested from 27Septebmer to 14November and released without charges probably due to his connection with father. Tomas Borge remained in jail more than two years, winning release only after sustained student protests. confiscated 80 books leaflets and newspapers.
Term
45
Definition
1957: PSN sent Fonseca to Soviet Union for Sixth World Congress of Studetns and Youth for Peace and Friendship. 35,000 young people attended Moscow festival. Fonseca best known student PSN
Term
45
Definition
Un Nicaraguense en Moscu: written early 1958. Described Soviet Union as a workers paradise, its five year plans accomplished in full, social evils like prostitution abolished completly, unemployment and discrimination eliminated for all time. claimed Soviet officials led humble lifestyle and that the newspapers are one of the main means of criticism. Only criticism on United States was that it refused to recognized USSR's peaceful intentions. He probably was swept away by the technological and social achievements of the Soviet Union; tours hid bad parts.
Term
48
Definition
1958- him and PSN organized support for Somoza's new labor legislation, which provided increased social security while raising taxes on workers' wages
Term
48
Definition
UNAN won autonomy in March 1958
Term
50
Definition
Cuban Revolution Jan 1, 1959. celebrations nationwide. Many armed actions against Somoza dictatorship during 1958-1959: these were all coup atempts that included former emmbers of National Guard and Air Force. Most coups surrendered without seeing any real combat. Fonseca's uprising in 1959 was commanded by former National Guard officer. Armed movements only sought to replace Somoza with their own party leaders.
Term
53
Definition
Chamorro-Selva group went on to organize ineffective Olama y Mollejones operation, which entered Nicaragua from Costa Rica at end of May 1959
Term
53
Definition
Convinced Che Guevara that PSN was immobile and the only solution is armed struggle. Che organized military operation with commander Rafael Somarriba, a former member of the Nicaraguan National Guard
Term
53
Definition
Fonseca left Cuba, only to be arrested in Managua on 8April and deported to Guatemala City at first for law school. But then he went to Honduras and began training for the anti-Somoza expedition
Term
54
Definition
May 29, President Luis Somoza said a Honduras invasion of communist style is being cooked up which will be have to be exterminated
Term
55
Definition
Column marched, ambushed by Honduran army troops and Nicaraguan National Guard at El Chaparral, Honduras on 24 June 1959. Nine rebels killed and 15 wounded including Fonseca
Term
55
Definition
Main lesson learned from EL chaparral was the leadership required for a successful revolution. Last straw for relationship with PSN. After El Chaprral, abandoned any idea of an armed struggle.
Term
57
Definition
direct result of El Chaparral: 23 July 1959, National Guard attacked unarmed protesters, killing four students and wounding nearly a hundred people. This created "Generation of '59"
Term
59
Definition
During this period in Cuba Fonseca began serious study of Sandino thanks to Cuban revolution.
Term
61
Definition
Cubans had national hero and antiimperialist symbol in Jose Marti, who was killed fighting Spanish colonialism in 1895. Sandino used in Nicaragua in same manner
Term
63
Definition
Fonseca organized demonstrations in Managua and Leon on first anniversay of 23 July student massacre. protests attacked by police and acquired two more martyrs.
Term
63
Definition
CUUN in Leon published a manifesto called 23 July 1960. commemorate student matyrs, condemnations of the democratic farce of Somoza government, need for radical social revolution, identification of student interests with those of the worker and peasant majority, call for revolutionary land reform, the responsibility of Us imperialism for imposing dictatorial regimes in Central America, inspiration of the cuban revolution, example of Sandino, and historical role of youth as the agent of change
Term
64
Definition
sporadic armed actions, combined with student protests led President Luis Somoza to declare his second state of siega in November 1960. Young Conservatives responded with violent attacks in several cities that gave them a certain authority among the urban petit bourgeoisie.
Term
64
Definition
Conservative Party was most influential group talking about armed struggle. Conse3rvative candidate for president 1963 threatened to launch an armed revolution if he lost the election
Term
66
Definition
split with PSN issues of revolutionary violence but also different goals, an orientation to different social classes, and even a different concept of internationalism. He tok issue with view of pro-Moscow parties such as PSN that internationalism meant subordinating local struggles to the diplomatic needs of the Soviet government.
Term
67
Definition
FSLN founded to provide an instrument of struggle
Term
71
Definition
Most of activists in short lived student groups of early 1960s did not go on to become members of FSLN, but groups were important precursors of the FSLN in their emphasis on militant street actions, solidarity with Cuban revolution, indpendence from both the traditional bourgeois parties and the Communist Party
Term
National Liberation Front began late 1961 or early 1962
Definition
Term
74
Definition
FSLN: what came first was action, not theory. Action had to come with organization
Term
75
Definition
FSLN took several years to form and involved many meetings in at least four countries. Jan 1963, its politics were heterogeneous
Term
77
Definition
FSLN did not publish programmatic document until 1969. Consensus on some things: example of Cuba; Independecne from Conservative, Liberal and Communist parties, the need for a clandestine organiztion, commitment to armed struggle, and identification with the struggle of Augusto Cesar Sandino
Term
77
Definition
FSLN formed while working class mobilizations in Cuba during 1960-61, increasing nationalization of economy, sharp polarization of society along class lines, and Castro's 1961 declaration of the socialist character of the revolution
Term
78
Definition
FSLN concluded that following Cuban road meant not just overthrowing the US backed Somoza dictatorship but also beginning the socialist transformation of Nicaragua. FSLN: revolutionary goals of wiping out imperialist domination and domination of exploiting classes
Term
78
Definition
Foco strategy: it was a mistake hindsight. Guerrilla army shrank through death and desertion faster than it could be built up by student recruits from the city; the FSLn never established control over any territory until 1979
Term
79
Definition
1963- still hope to reproduce Cuban experience
Term
80
Definition
Fonseca concerned about prepardness of FSLN to launch armed struggle; did not hold the optimism of many
Term
81
Definition
FSLN virtually unknown inside Nicaragua. In area where many didn't know how to speak Spanish (Sumo or Miskito languages)
Term
83
Definition
June 1964- arrested inside Nicaragua for eighth and final time
Term
84
Definition
Declaration of 9 July- spirited defense of the history and program of FSLN. La Prensa provided voice for SAndinista defendents
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