Salvadora Debayle | |
Office: | First Lady of Nicaragua |
Term Start: | 21 May 1950 |
Term End: | 29 September 1956 |
Predecessor: | Sara Mora de Guerrero |
Successor: | Isabel Urcuyo |
President: | Anastasio Somoza Garcia |
Birth Name: | Ana Salvadora Debayle Sacasa Somoza García |
Birth Date: | 27 May 1895 |
Birth Place: | León, Nicaragua |
Death Place: | Washington D.C., U.S. |
Children: | Lillian Somoza Debayle, Luis Somoza Debayle, Anastasio Somoza Debayle |
Ana Salvadora Debayle Sacasa de Somoza García (27 May 1895 – 1 February 1987) was the First Lady of Nicaragua during the presidency of her husband, the dictator Anastasio Somoza Garcia.
She was the mother of Lillian Somoza Debayle, Luis Somoza Debayle and Anastasio Somoza Debayle. She was popularly known as Doña Salvadorita and among her relatives Mama Yoya.[1]
Debayle was born in Leon, Nicaragua, the daughter of Dr. Louis Henry Debayle, who was of French descent, and Casimira Sacasa Sacasa, the daughter of President Roberto Sacasa Sarria and niece of President Juan Bautista Sacasa. By her maternal line, she came from one of the most distinguished and important families at the political level of the country and was also tied with most of the Creole families in Nicaragua.
In 1913, she was studying in Belgium with her sister Margarita; a year later, upon the outbreak of the World War I, they were transferred to London, in the United Kingdom, and later to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the United States, where they studied at Beechwood School in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania. Recently arrived from Europe, she had an attack of appendicitis and on a visit made by her brother Luis Manuel Debayle to the hospital, he arrived accompanied by his friend, Anastasio Somoza García, nicknamed by his American friends as "Sony", who later was the founder of the Somoza dynasty in Nicaragua.
Debayle and Somoza married in a civil ceremony in Philadelphia, in 1919, without the consent of the bride's parents, who did not look favorably on the middle-class young Somoza as husband to their aristocratic daughter; Dr. Debayle and Mrs. Casimira are said to have reluctantly accepted the marriage. The subsequent religious ceremony took place in the cathedral of León, Nicaragua, with great luxury. Salvadora's father-in-law, Senator Anastasio Somoza Reyes, presented her with a diamond necklace, in addition to giving the couple $500 at the time. "Salvadorita" and Anastasio went abroad on their honeymoon for almost a year.
They had three children: Lillian, Luis Anastasio and Anastasio Somoza Debayle.
In 1937, Salvadora became First Lady of Nicaragua, the first in office in this country to become a popularly known figure. Her social and personal life was covered extensively in media, both at home and abroad. Among her acts of philanthropy was an event held on Christmas 1938, where she distributed 25,000 gifts to children of limited resources in Managua, the capital of Nicaragua, and attended matters related to the Women's Wing of the Nationalist Liberal Party (PLN). She shared joys and sorrows with her husband, who was also the president of that party. Of a strong and admirable character, she exerted a great influence on the Somoza government and many of the Nicaraguan Somozas remember her with appreciation.
As first lady, she devoted herself more to social events and philanthropy; however, Salvadora exercised great power not visible, an example of this occurred in the early 40s, when she complained to her husband that her name had been omitted in the social chronicle of the newspaper La Prensa from a list of ladies attending a party. This provoked the fury of Anastasio Somoza, who in revenge closed La Prensa for three days.
She was present at the dance at the Casa del Obrero in León when the young poet Rigoberto López Pérez, a militant of the opposition Independent Liberal Party (PLI), shot her husband on the night of September 21, 1956, and accompanied him in his last moments at the Gorgas Hospital, located in the Panama Canal zone in Panama, where he died in the early morning of September 29 of the same year. Pope Pius XII sent his blessing to Salvadora. New York Cardinal Francis Spellman sent a statement to Luis Somoza Debayle, the president's eldest son, who succeeded him, writing that, "I am sure your father would have been very pleased to know that you will be his successor." U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower also expressed his great sympathy for the deceased and condolences to his family. Rafael Leónidas Trujillo, dictator of the Dominican Republic, was one of those who most presented solidarity for Somoza, alongside Paul Magloire of Haiti, Fulgencio Batista of Cuba, Carlos Ibáñez del Campo of Chile, and Alfredo Stroessner of Paraguay. Among other messages that arrived in Nicaragua was a condolence from the British queen Elizabeth II.
After the death of Salvadora's husband, her son Luis assumed the presidency of the country. At the time when Anastasio Somoza García had been shot and was wounded, Salvadora was the one who ordered from León, Nicaragua, that the National Congress of Nicaragua meet, and that Luis be sworn in as President of the Republic.
When her husband died, Salvadora inherited a large fortune, which caused her to appear among the richest families in Latin America. It was said that she possessed a magnificent collection of jewelry. The Somoza family owned numerous luxury properties inside and outside Nicaragua.
Her life as a widow was spent in the social circles of her native Nicaragua and in the United States, where she lived next to her firstborn Lillian Somoza of Seville-Sacasa. On different occasion, her daughters-in-law granted her a preferential position to theirs as first ladies. Even during the rule of her son "Tachito", Salvadora entered the receptions and galas with her daughter-in-law Hope.
In the spring of 1983, Salvadora Debayle de Somoza set the fate of her fortune. Her will began by saying: "Being in full use of my mental faculties, being free from harshness, threats or undue influence of any person, I make public and declare this my last will and testament [...]". She named universal heir of all her fortune and transferred all her real, personal or mixed properties to her daughter Lillian Somoza Debayle of Seville Sacasa, because she had given her "roof and has taken care of me for more than fifteen years". This was immediately disputed by the family of her eldest son Luis Somoza Debayle.
The family of Doña Salvadora was key to the consolidation of the Somoza dynasty. During her husband's rule, several of her relatives held strategic positions in politics:
Debayle died in February 1987, in Washington, D.C., with her daughter Lillian and her family by her side.