Germán Arciniegas Explained

Germán Arciniegas
Predecessor:José Joaquín Gori
Successor:Raimundo Emiliani Román
Party:Colombian Liberal Party
Successor3:Jorge Zalamea Borda
Predecessor3:Juan Lozano y Lozano
Term Start:1976
Term Start3:13 of January of 1942
Predecessor2:Antonio Rocha Alvira
Escudo2:Ministerio de Educación de Colombia.svg
Successor2:Mario Carvajal Borrero
Term End2:7 of August of 1946
Term End:1979
Term Start2:9 of September of 1945
Office2:Secretary of Education of Colombia
Office:Ambassador of Colombia for the Holy See in the Vatican
Term End3:7 of August of 1942
Birth Date:1900 12, mf=yes
Birth Place:Bogotá, Colombia
Death Place:Bogotá, Colombia
Resting Place:Central Cemetery of Bogotá
Nationality:Colombian
Occupation:Writer, politician, ambassador and professor
Spouse:Gabriela Vieira
Parents:Rafael Arciniegas Tavera,
Aurora Angueyra Figueredo
Relatives:Joaquín Arciniegas Tavera
Ricardo Armando Novoa Arciniegas
Alma Mater:National University of Colombia

Germán Arciniegas Angueyra (December 6, 1900 - November 29, 1999) was a Colombian historian, writer and journalist who was known for his advocacy of educational and cultural issues, as well as his outspoken opposition to dictatorship. He also served as a college professor and held positions in the government, including Minister of Education and several ambassadorships.[1]

Family

Arciniegas was the son of Rafael Arciniegas Tavera, a farmer, and his wife Aurora Angueyra Figueredo. He had three brothers and four sisters. His father died young, leaving his mother struggling to support the family, his sister Maria Mercedes and his younger brother Joaquín Arciniegas Tavera migrated to El Salvador. His maternal great-grandfather was Perucho Figueredo, an early Cuban freedom fighter who wrote La Bayamesa, Cuba's national anthem. Both of Perucho's daughters fled the country when he was executed. Luz, the younger daughter, was married to a Cuban engineer who went to Colombia to help build a railroad line. It was there, amid the dangers of the jungle, that Germán's mother was born.[2]

Early years

At the age of eighteen, he began studying law at the National University of Colombia. At that time he had already created two journals: Año Quinto (1916) and Voz de la Juventud (1917). While a student he founded and managed the magazine Universidad (1921). He collaborated with many well-known figures at all three periodicals, including Luis López de Mesa, José Vasconcelos, León de Greiff and José Juan Tablada, who introduced the haiku into Spanish literature via Universidad. His love of journalism led him to establish and manage numerous cultural magazines throughout his life. In 1928, he joined El Tiempo, a daily newspaper in Bogotá, where he managed the editorial section, put together the Sunday Literary Supplement and wrote a weekly column, becoming the general manager in 1937. He would continue to contribute articles and opinion pieces to El Tiempo for the rest of his life,[1] speaking out against drug trafficking, Marxist guerrillas and restrictive immigration policies.

With the assistance of Carlos Pellicer, he established the Federation of Colombian Students. The group opposed Jesuit influence in the nation's universities and held student carnivals which verged on riots. He narrowly missed being killed when a bullet grazed his head at one student rally. Their activism eventually helped to end the Conservative Party's grip on the government and, in 1933, led to the passage of university reforms, which gave students the right to elect their own rectors and have a representative in the legislature to act as their advocate; a position Arciniegas held for a time.[3] For him, students were the axis around which all political and intellectual movements had turned throughout history. This gave rise to his first book El Estudiante de la Mesa Redonda (The Student of the Round Table, 1932), in which he speaks of history as a "tavern" with the students sitting at a single table, drinking, recounting their deeds and laughing at everybody else.

Later career

He continued his fight for students' rights during his brief tenures as Minister of Education in 1942 and 1945-46. During this time, he founded the Caro and Cuervo Institute and moved the Colombian National Museum to its current home in a former prison building.

During World War II, he supported giving aid and asylum to refugees. This was in opposition to Luis López de Mesa, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, who prohibited the entry of Jews into Colombia. Due to this resurgence of Conservative ideology in the 1940s, Arciniegas felt that he and his family were in danger and moved to the United States, taking advantage of an offer to teach at Columbia University. He lived in New York for ten years (1947–57).[4] At this time, he wrote his most important and most often banned book, Entre la Libertad y el Miedo (Between Freedom and Fear, 1952). The work analyzes a critical period in Latin-America, when seven dictators were in power at the same time. He also criticized the U.S. State Department for its conciliatory behavior towards these regimes and, as a result, was detained for questioning several times after returning from trips abroad. The publication and translation of the book was prohibited in at least ten countries. General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, the President of Colombia, accused Arciniegas of being a Communist and ordered all of his books to be burnt. Rafael Trujillo, the dictator of the Dominican Republic, put Arciniegas on his hit list.[4]

In terms of culture, Arciniegas strove to achieve and maintain a synthesis between the indigenous and the European. This approach was the driving force behind all of his diplomatic and political activities. He served as vice consul in London (1929), chancellor at the Colombian embassy in Argentina (1940) and as Ambassador to Italy (1959), Israel (1962), Venezuela (1966) and the Holy See (1976).[1] In all of these positions, he acted as an advocate for the art and culture of America, which he perceived as extending from Alaska to Patagonia. From 1960 to 1965 Arciniegas edited the Spanish language magazine of the Congress for Cultural Freedom, Cuadernos.[5]

In 1992, he was appointed President of the National Commission for the Celebration of the Five-Hundredth Anniversary of the Discovery of America. He was summarily dismissed by then First-Lady Ana Milena Muñoz de Gaviria, who took over the commission herself; an action that generated much controversy.

Honors and awards

Selected works

English

Spanish

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/33083/German-Arciniegas Encyclopædia Britannica: Germán Arciniegas
  2. Web site: Germán Arciniegas. Por Rafael Grillo. En El Caimán Barbudo . 2013-09-10 . 2014-02-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140222032229/http://www.caimanbarbudo.cu/literatura/los-raros/2011/05/german-arciniegas/ . dead .
  3. http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/ayudadetareas/poli/poli40.htm La Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango del Banco de la República: Germán Arciniegas
  4. Web site: The Perucho Figueredo Page: Biography of Arciniegas. 10 September 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20080509125955/http://figueredo.freeservers.com/German%20Arciniegas%20Angueyra.htm . 9 May 2008. dead.
  5. Russell H. Bartley. The Piper Played to Us All: Orchestrating the Cultural Cold War in the USA, Europe, and Latin America. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. Spring 2001. 14. 3. 587–588. 20020095.
  6. Web site: Boletín Oficial del Estado. Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado. 5 Jan 1981. 7 February 2024. es.
  7. http://www.quirinale.it/elementi/Onorificenze.aspx?pag=0&qIdOnorificenza=&cognome=Arciniegas&nome=&daAnno=1800&aAnno=2013&luogoNascita=&testo=&ordinamento=2 President of the Italian Republic: Honorees
  8. http://www.unphu.edu.do/sitio/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=131&Itemid=84 UNPHU: Dr. Honoris Causa V