Rosa Smester Marrero Explained

Rosa Smester
Birth Name:Rosa Smester Marrero
Birth Date:30 August 1874
Birth Place:Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic
Death Place:Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic
Known For:Feminist and anti-occupation writings
Spouse:Juan Grullón

Rosa Smester Marrero (August 30, 1874 – February 15, 1945) was an educator and writer from the Dominican Republic. She became prominent for her feminist writings and opposition to the United States' occupation of the Dominican Republic. Her career as a teacher rendered her a prominent figure in her home city of Santiago de los Caballeros, where she founded a school and the St Vincent de Paul Hospice.

Early life

Smester was born in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic on August 30, 1874.[1] She was the daughter of Paul Emmanuel "Pablo" Smester and Dolores Trinidad "Dada" Marrero.[2] Her father was born in Pointe-à-Pitre in Guadeloupe, and moved from Haiti to Santiago in 1870 to work as a German, English, and Italian translator.[3]

Smester was self-taught and educated at home by her mother. She recalled that her mother taught her the tenths of Juan Antonio Alix and reading from her favorite book, La Historia Sagrada.

Teaching career

In 1897, Smester began teaching French to children at home, which she credited with the discovery of her vocation. By 1902, she had become a syntax, literature, history, and French teacher at the ladies' high school of Santiago.[4] She resigned in 1908 and founded a school in Santiago in 1913.

In 1913, Smester moved to Monte Cristi. Her son, Federico Máximo Smester, was born in Monte Cristi from her marriage to Juan Grullón. As a teacher at the Higher Normal School of Montecristi, a teacher training college, she prepared the first group of Normal Teachers. She directed the Higher School of Ladies of Montecristi.

She was a member of the Amantes de la Luz society, a library and archive.[5]

Writings

Smester's writings are scattered across magazines and journals. She never fulfilled her ambition to write a book, though she published a short story entitled Juan de Dios. Her prose conveys a deep religiosity and Christian conviction.

Opposition to the American occupation

With the Junta Patriótica de Damas,[6] led by Floripez Mieses, Abigail Mejía, Luisa Ozema Pellerano and Ercilia Pepín, Smester was one of many women who publicly agitated against the United States occupation of the Dominican Republic, which took place between 1916 and 1924.[7] Smester expressed her opposition in the national press, publishing in literary magazines in Santiago. One of Smester's appeals for the removal of American forces read:[8]

Smester refused to speak English as a form of civil resistance. In May 1920, Smester donated a month's salary to a nationalist cause, writing to Francisco Henríquez y Carvajal, the President of the Nationalist Board, that “whenever necessary, I will give gladly”.[9]

Feminism

In 1926, Smester wrote to Petronila Angélica Gómez, founder of Fémina, the first feminist Dominican journal, that "your magazine is the only genuine feminine, genuinely Dominican, and therefore deserving of the greatest help." In the same year, Smester requested to publish in the magazine, and so recorded her first two contributions to feminist journalism, publishing a further article in 1929. She became one of the magazine's main contributors.[10]

Of the three articles written by Smester for Fémina, two concerned the masculine condition. Smester contributed to a broader feminist position that pacifist strategies disqualify androcentric warmongering, thereby including female voices in war discourses, such that "honoring and glorifying enlightened men is a form of patriotic love". In her 1929 article Así Es, Smester praised Francisco Henríquez y Carvajal's intellectual attributes, which lent him to be an "enlightened" feminist man.

In her Escrito Pro-Feminismo, Smester wrote that feminism has proven to be "essentially constructive", tending "to widen the sphere of action of the woman, to bring into play the activity of her spirit, to develop all her capacity", all without harming "the home and family".

In a conference speech to the cultural society Renovación of Puerto Plata, Smester explained her view that feminism "tries to intensify the femininity in women". By campaigning for women to be as cultured as men, feminism allows women to "be the best collaborator of man to attenuate human miseries and achieve world peace".

Smester praised women "as the greatest spiritual force in the world". Tracing the role of women through the Bible, she situated Eve's act of offering Adam the knowledge of good and evil as "the first act that takes place in paradise [that] marks the eternal and indisputable influence of women". Smester claimed that men would be "born as a turnip" without women and live in a world with neither pleasure nor suffering. Finally, women "are essentially and potently equal to men", and while men have historically dominated humanity's cultural output, a woman's self-denial and "her ability to love and suffer and to shape man in her bosom" brings women "to the same level [as men] if not higher".

In her Elogio a la Madre, Smester wrote that while a woman can be unsurpassable as a teacher or pharmacist, her "highest glory and most certain triumph" is as a mother. In her speech in Puerto Plata, she called motherhood a woman's "true mission, her highest prerogative" and a woman's life devoid of maternal work "useless". For Smester, supporting feminism and emancipation "do nothing against the mysterious instinct of motherhood".

Smester pitied "masculine women", calling the case of tomboys a "natural aberration [that] deserves compassion".[11] She advocated complementary gender roles:

Teaching

In Una Educacionista Notable, Smester praised the work of Josefa Goméz, an "enlightened and self-sacrificing" teacher who directed the graduate school at Salcedo, whom Smester credited for increasing the city's level of education. She noted the increasing stature of the profession of teaching, and viewed a teacher's primary duty as instilling a moral education into their students:[12]

Later life and death

Smester chaired a chapter of the charitable Society of Saint Vincent de Paul.[13] At her urging, in 1923, the La Caridad society, which had founded the first hospital in Santiago in 1891,[14] established the 'St Vincent de Paul Branch' under her leadership, for the foundation of a nursing home in Santiago. Smester thus became the first director of the city's St Vincent de Paul Hospice. During this time, she lived in a Victorian house in the Calle del Sol, in front of the Parque Duarte.[15]

From 1927 to 1937, Smester lived in Paris, accompanying her son at the beginning of his career as a doctor at the Sorbonne. She offered private classes while in Paris. Smester lectured at the University of Barcelona and spoke to the newly-founded, a women's group that called on her help as a cultural figure and influence.[16]

Smester died on February 15, 1945.

Legacy

During her life, the El Regional newspaper of Monte Cristi asked Smester to be honored as the 'Illustrious Daughter' of the city "as a teacher, mother, and fighter". While she was in Paris, an editorial of the Santiago newspaper La Información, which cited Smester as a founding intellectual influence,[17] said she had "one of the most outstanding intellectual capacities" and was "one of the best literary pens the Republic has".

A street in Santo Domingo bears Smester's name. In Santiago, a housing development was named after her.[18] In Monte Cristi, an educational establishment was named the Rosa Smester Basic School.[19]

Smester educated former Dominican President Joaquín Balaguer.[20] [21] Balaguer recalled Smester's great influence on his intellectual formation in his memoirs. Smester also taught Dominican artist Federico Izquierdo,[22] a fellow member and later President of the Amantes de la Luz society, who was greatly pained by her death.[23]

A 1982 poem by Dominican poet Armando Oscar paid tribute to Smester: "[She] went towards the conquest of ethical values [...] On her heart, she carried a crucifix [...] She was a woman, a believer above all else \ And God crowned her with the pain of a son!"[24]

In its 2016 International Women's Day celebrations, the Constitutional Court of the Dominican Republic named Smester among sixty-three "outstanding Dominican women in the struggles for peace and democracy".[25]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Espinal Hernández . Edwin Rafael . October 23, 2010 . Un establón encontrado en los Smester . A link found in the Smesters . February 10, 2023 . Instituto Dominicano de Genealogía, Inc. . es.
  2. Web site: Rosa Smester (Maestra de Maestras) . February 9, 2023 . Instituto Montecristeño de Antropología e Historia.
  3. News: October 31, 2010 . Cápsulas genealógicas: El derrotero encontrado por vía de Internet . es . Genealogical Capsules: The Course Found via the Internet . Hoy . February 18, 2023.
  4. Book: Paulino Ramos, Alejandro . Vida y obra de Ercilia Pepín . Archivo General de la Nación . 2007 . 978-9945-020-23-6 . Ortiz . Dantes . es . The Life and Works of Ercilia Pepín . February 18, 2023.
  5. Web site: Alejo . Leidi . October 13, 2017 . Un tesoro patrimonial: Ateneo Amantes de la Luz . A patrimonial treasure: Ateneo Amantes de la Luz . March 10, 2023 . . ES.
  6. Book: Peguero, Valentina . Contemporary Caribbean Cultures and Societies in a Global Context . The University of North Carolina Press . 2005 . 0-8078-5634-7 . Knight . Franklin W. . Chapel Hill . 163–4 . Women’s Grass-Roots Organizations in the Dominican Republic: Real and Imagined Female Figures . February 11, 2023 . Martínez-Vergne . Teresita.
  7. Book: Rosa Smester: Maestra de Maestras . Impresora El Siglo . 2001 . Jaime Julia . Julio . Santo Domingo . es.
  8. Durán Jourdain . Carmen . 2017 . Las mujeres dominicanas en el marco de la primera intervención norteamericana 1916-1924: una mirada desde la historia . Órgano del Instituto de Historia de la UASD . 1 . 14 . 23–4.
  9. PhD . Rodriguez Collado . Aralis Mercedes . 2015 . Images of invasions and resistance in the literature of the Dominican Republic . February 9, 2023 . University of Birmingham eTheses Repository.
  10. Hernández Núñez . Ángela . 2017 . El Club Nosotras, su influencia en la cultura dominicana . The influence of the Club Nosotras on Dominican culture . Órgano del Instituto de Historia de la UASD . 1 . 14 . 103 . 10.51274/ecos.v24i14.pp97-143. free .
  11. Book: Smester Marrero, Rosa . Cien Años de Feminismos Dominicanos . Archivio General de la Nación . 2016 . 978-9945-586-66-4 . Candelario . Elizabeth S. . 1: El Fuego Tras Las Ruinas, 1865-1931 . Santo Domingo . 117–121 . es . 100 Years of Dominican Feminisms . Conferencia de la Sociedad Cultural "Renovación" de Puerto Plata . Conference of the Cultural Society "Renovation" of Puerto Plata . Mayes . April J..
  12. Book: Smester Marrero, Rosa . Cien Años de Feminismos Dominicanos . Archivio General de la Nación . 2016 . 978-9945-586-66-4 . Candelario . Elizabeth S. . 1: El Fuego Tras Las Ruinas, 1865-1931 . Santo Domingo . 116–117 . es . 100 Years of Dominican Feminisms . Una educacionista notable . A notable educator . Mayes.
  13. Web site: Espinal Hernández . Edwin . Historia del Hospicio San Vicente de Paúl . History of the St Vincent de Paul Hospice . February 10, 2023 . Sociedad San Vicente de Paúl . es.
  14. Web site: Mercader . José . July 4, 2020 . El hospicio de Santiago en tiempo de epidemia . Santiago's hospice in time of epidemic . February 10, 2023 . elCaribe . es.
  15. News: Mercader . José . March 31, 2017 . Palacio Consistorial de Santiago . es . Santiago's Town Hall . El Caribe . February 17, 2023.
  16. Book: Real Mercadal, Neus . Dona i literatura a la Catalunya de preguerra . Abadia de Montserrat . 2006 . 84-8415-779-2 . Barcelona . 230 . ca . Women and literature in pre-war Catalonia.
  17. Web site: Luisa Estévez . María . Concepción . Claudio . November 13, 2022 . 107 aniversario de La Información, ¡Felicitaciones! . 107th anniversary of La Información. Congratulations! . February 11, 2023 . lainformacion.com.do . es.
  18. News: January 20, 1997 . El Santiago histórico . es . Historic Santiago . 45–47 . Rumbo . February 17, 2023.
  19. News: Rodríguez . Marcos . March 26, 2020 . Distrito 10-03 es ejemplo de gerencia en educación . es . District 10-03 is exemplary of management in education . el Caribe . February 10, 2023.
  20. Web site: Albaine Pons . J. R. . February 7, 2011 . Cerebro, lectura y escritura . February 9, 2023 . Acento . es-ES.
  21. Web site: Dr. Joaquín Balaguer . February 10, 2023 . Partido Reformista Social Cristiano PRSC . es.
  22. News: Mercader . José . November 25, 2022 . La izquierda de Federico Izquierdo . es . The left of Federico Izquierdo . el Caribe . February 11, 2023.
  23. News: Medina . Grisel . July 15, 2002 . Izquierdo resalta la obra del expresidente Balaguer . es . Izquierdo highlights the work of former president Balaguer . Listin Diario . February 11, 2023.
  24. Book: Oscar, Armando . Cabezas de estudio: Retratos Desdibujados . Universidad Nacional Pedro Henríquez Ureña and Ateneo Dominicano . 1982 . 195 . es . Heads of Study: Blurred Portraits . February 18, 2023.
  25. Web site: July 3, 2016 . Tribunal Constitucional reconoce 63 mujeres dominicanas destacadas en las luchas por la paz y la democracia . Constitutional Court recognizes 63 outstanding Dominican women in the struggles for peace and democracy . February 17, 2023 . Tribunal Constitucional de la República Dominicana . es.