Luis Félix López Explained

Luis Félix López
Birth Name:Luis Ramón Félix López
Alma Mater:National Autonomous University of Mexico
Genre:Novels, Short stories and poetry
Movement:Latin American Boom
Magic realism
Notableworks:Los Designios, La Noche del Rebaño, El Talisman
Awards:International prize for the novel, Mexico 1973
Political Career
Office:Ministry of Government (E)
President:Rodrigo Borja Cevallos
Term Start:January 15, 1990
Term End:July 28, 1990
Predecessor:Andrés Vallejo
Successor:César Verduga
Office5:National Deputy
Term Start5:1962
Term End5:1963
Office6:Provincial Deputy for Guayas
Term Start6:1960
Term End6:1962
Office2:Governor of Manabí
Term Start2:1970
Term End2:1972
Predecessor2:Ángel Cedeño
Successor2:Medardo Salazar
Office3:Mayor of El Carmen
Term Start3:1967
Term End3:1970
Successor3:Colón Ortega Mendieta
Office4:President of the House of Ecuadorian Culture Core Guayas
Term Start4:2003
Term End4:2007
Predecessor4:Jorge Sweet
Successor4:Rosa Amelia Alvarado Roca
Birth Date:1932 8, mf=yes
Birth Place:Calceta, Ecuador
Death Place:Guayaquil, Ecuador
Party:Concentration of People's Forces, Democratic Left
Parents:Quinche Félix
Jacinta López
Children:Luis Enrique, Fernando, Diego Ricardo and Sandra Lorena.

Luis Ramón Félix López (Calceta, August 25, 1932 - Guayaquil, December 17, 2008) was an Ecuadorian doctor, politician and renowned writer who held many senior public positions in his country during his lifetime.

Early life

Luis Felix Lopez was the eldest of the 13 children of Quinche Felix Rezabala y Jacinta Maria Lopez Loor.

He received his basic education from the teacher Santa Rezabala, who was prepared him to finish primary school. At the age 12 he entered in the Eloy Alfaro College in Bahía de Caráquez. In 1947 he traveled to Quito, to enter the College "San Gabriel" of the Jesuits, as an intern, where he graduated from high school.

Already his youth, denoted his passion for poetry and writing small poems that reads to the class.

Profession

He studied medicine at the Central University of Ecuador. In 1956, he entered as an intern at IESS Hospital, where he met his future wife, Sara Beatriz Grijalva.

As a physician, studied two specialties in the National Autonomous University of Mexico, gastroenterology and endoscopy. In the Aztec country was director of the endoscopy service of the Netzahualcóyotl General Hospital and Medical Director of several magazines and scientific publications.

Political career

Luis Felix Lopez enters political life, while still a college student, supporting the candidacy of Carlos Guevara Moreno, founder of the Concentration of People's Forces. In 1960, despite the new triumph of José María Velasco Ibarra in the presidential elections, Luis Felix Lopez became deputy to run in third place in the CFP list.

In 1962 he was reelected as a legislator with Jose Hanna Musse, Eliecer Pérez Jurado y Jaime Aspiazu Seminario. Felix was designated for State Representative to the Board of Special Economic Zones, and in these functions, involved in a political trial, proposed to the Vice President, Reinaldo Varea Donoso, the Minister of Defense and to the General Commander of Ecuadorian Armed Forces for the purchase of so-called "junk" weapons obsolete and overpriced.The First Military Joint took power, deposing Carlos Julio Arosemena Monroy from the Presidency in 1963 and dissolved the congress. In these circumstances, Luis Felix Lopez is named Supreme Director of the CFP.

For 1966 returned to live in his home province of Manabi, settling on El Carmen, who was in the middle of a bordering problem between the provinces of Manabi and Pichincha. Luis fought tirelessly and achieved a declaration to El Carmen, as canton and jurisdiction of the province of Manabi and became the first mayor of the canton winning the first elections.[1]

In 1968, he became Director of the Consortium of Municipalities of Manabi, who was in charge of the construction of highways and roads in this province. Then he was Director of the extinct Manabi Rehabilitation Center (CRM) and in 1970 he was appointed governor of the province. In the exercise of this office, the dam "Poza Honda," was built, Regional Water System in La Estancilla, Tosagua; and began the study of the Carrizal River basin, where later the dam "La Esperanza" was built.

With the return to democracy in the 1980s, he entered as an active element of the political party Democratic Left, which would lead in 1988 to Rodrigo Borja to the Presidency of the Republic. During this government, Luis Felix Lopez was Undersecretary and Minister Responsible Government on several occasions.

During his management, he played part in the historic process in which the group "Alfaro Vive Carajo!" decided to give up their weapons, for insertion into civil society.

Literary works

During different periods of his life, Luis Felix Lopez is writing literary works that were worthy of national and international recognition:

His pass in the culture

During his last years, he assumed the presidency of the House of Ecuadorian Culture, Guayas core, in 2003, beginning a process of reconstruction and modernization of the institution, visible both in its physical structure, as in the multiple cultural activities that were developed and in the rebuilding of the museum. He was reelected in 2007.[4] [5] The House of Ecuadorian Culture’s National Short Story Competition was then named in his honor.

Legacy

The ecuadorian national literature contest, category "Tale"; is inspired in his honor.[6]

See also

References

  1. Web site: El Carmen que no conoces. December 10, 2009.
  2. Web site: Opinión. Luis Félix López. https://web.archive.org/web/20100919215600/http://diario-expreso.com/ediciones/2010/09/10/opini%C3%B3n/columnas/luis-felix-lopez/. usurped. September 19, 2010. December 29, 2008.
  3. Web site: Opinión. El Paisaje de Los Designios. January 2, 2009.
  4. Web site: Falleció Luis Félix López. December 19, 2007.
  5. Web site: Luis Félix López, nuevo presidente de la CCE Guayas. December 19, 2008.
  6. Web site: Mujeres analizan temas referentes a la literatura. . 2018-02-17 . 2018-02-18.

External links