By
M. Sabeheddin
"Evita
is untouchable....Children are born today saying Peron! Evita! Not even the
military governments were able to erase that."
- Mayor Manolo Quindimil (1996)
Evita, the name by which Argentina’s
beloved first lady Eva Duarte Peron (1919-1952) was known to the world, is
again back in the international media spotlight. Her legendary life now the
basis of the film Evita. But the Hollywood production met with national
controversy in the land of her birth. "The script by this Englishman
attacks our history, offends our dignity and is an insult to the Peronist
people," said Peronist legislator Marta Rivadera. "I am in favour of
freedom of expression but am against this lie which will distort the figure of
our saint."
"Evita holds a place in Argentine
history equivalent to that of Abraham Lincoln in the United States,"
explains Enrique Pavon Pereyra, who knew Evita personally.
During her short life the Argentine
working people revered Evita, while the wealthy oligarchs despised her and
spread all manner of hateful slanders. Today, some circles still fear the
memory of a woman who died forty-five years ago.

Who really was Evita? The message,
some say, is important, not the messenger. Today, the life of the
messenger Evita Peron is shrouded in myth and legend. What we can know for
certain are her thoughts and words recorded for posterity in books and
published speeches. By understanding the tremendous vision she shared with her
remarkable husband Juan Peron we can grasp something of her timeless
greatness.
EVA & JUAN PERON

"When I chose to be Evita, I
chose the path of my people."
- Eva Peron
Evita was born Eva Maria Duarte on May 7
1919 in Los Toldos, Argentina, the fifth and youngest illegitimate child of
Juana Ibarguren. Struggling free from a life of grinding poverty she moved to
the Argentine capital to find work as a radio soap opera actress.
1943 saw the young Colonel Juan Peron
appointed Argentina’s Secretary of Social Welfare and Labour in the military
junta of General Farrell. His leadership abilities and determination to
radically empower the Argentine working class soon became obvious to all.
Peron single-handedly transformed the labour movement and strengthened the
unions. As his popularity grew - he was appointed vice president and Minister
of War - opposition from reactionary elements in the armed forces and the
wealthy land-owning class also grew.

1944 found Evita working as a radio
actress and commentator on Argentina’s leading radio station in Buenos
Aires. A year earlier she had reached the top of her profession and was among
the highest paid radio actresses in the country. Evita later described her
work on radio as a combination of singer, disc-jockey, actress and lady
commentator all in one. These were the glory days of radio when people relied
on the airwaves to deliver news and comment along with entertainment.
On Saturday, January 15 1944, an
earthquake destroyed the ancient Argentine town of San Juan, claiming the
lives of over ten thousand people. Col. Peron distinguished himself in
organising the relief effort. Evita, already greatly interested in social
welfare, attended a meeting of artists called by Peron to raise funds for the
rebuilding of the town.
Peron described the meeting at which a
young woman, then unknown to him, boldly spoke out:
"I remember that she wasn’t seated
in the first row; that she was wearing a very simple dress; that she was thin,
that she had blonde hair, and that she had a little hat, like they wore in
those days. ‘We don’t need festivals,’ she replied to proposals that had
been made, ‘we should go directly to ask, without offering
anything....Let’s go to the streets, to the public places, to the
hippodrome, to the theatre, to all the important places, and say to the
people, our brothers are stricken, we have to help them! We have to get money
from those that have it, because those that don’t have it can’t give
it.’
"I liked the way this woman thought
and worked. I thought she wasn’t like the others. She had something very
superior to the others in the way she talked and in her suggestions. She was
practical and had new ideas.

"‘Good, very well,’ I said to
her then, ‘it’s your idea, organize it.’ And that’s the way it was.
She organized everything."
In another recollection, Peron told how
he was struck by Evita’s zeal and conviction. "I looked at her and felt
that her words were overpowering me....I saw in Evita an exceptional woman. A
true passion, animated by will and by a faith comparable to that of any of the
early Christians."
Evita shared Juan Peron’s commitment to
social justice. Peron saw in Evita a kindred spirit and co-worker in the
struggle for a revitalised Argentine nation. "When I first knew Evita
what attracted me to her was not the beautiful woman but the good woman,"
Peron later wrote. "It’s true that she combined those two things:
beauty and goodness. Instinctively I perceived that the collaboration of a
woman of this kind would be invaluable for the social task I had in mind....I
had to prepare a woman who would be the feminine leader of my political
movement: a capable woman with enough basic culture, natural talents of
intuition, with dedication..."

On her daily radio programmes Evita
dramatically recounted Peron’s welfare reforms. They were a passionate mix
of radio drama and current affairs. One of her most popular broadcasts went on
at seven in the evening, when men and women were together after work. Evita
explained to her listeners all about "that newcomer in the Ministry of
Social Welfare". She obtained records from Peron’s deputies and office
secretaries and brought the story of the fast rising military officer and his
vision, to the masses.
Looking back on this hectic period Peron
recalled "...our private life [was] totally subordinated to the political
and social calling...a veritable tyranny to which we submitted ourselves as if
it were a mission. Evita, in those first days, didn’t care much about her
appearance, or want to be taken for an elegant woman. She went to work, and
working all day didn’t leave much time to care for herself."

As Peron’s influence and mass support
grew, Argentina’s reactionary ruling class started a campaign of
vilification aimed at undermining his popularity. He was openly living with
Evita, and in a staunchly Catholic country, this provided ammunition for his
enemies. Professor Robert D. Crassweller in his book on Peron, points out:
"Evita’s image as a prostitute,
strongly held in some quarters, was one consequence although it had no basis
in fact. But it served well the sense of class antipathy and division that was
growing up around Peron, and in a society so deeply fragmented and so hotly
personalized any weapon that came to hand was welcome."1
By 1945 the forces of U.S. imperialism,
alarmed at the course of developments in Argentina, formulated a policy to
derail the growing anti-Yankee, anti-British, nationalist-labour coalition
inspired by Juan Peron. Spruille Braden, whose family made their fortune
exploiting Chile’s natural resources, became United States ambassador to
Argentina. A protege of Nelson Rockefeller, Braden’s job was to guarantee
Argentina’s compliance with the goals of U.S. imperialism in South America.
The U.S. ambassador had several explosive
meetings with Peron. Unable to persuade the Argentine vice president to
accept Washington’s demands, Braden openly intervened in Argentina’s
internal affairs, giving speeches to audiences of Peron’s opponents, and
publicly criticizing Peron. Part of this U.S. instigated disinformation
campaign smeared Peron as a fascist and ‘Nazi agent’. "North
Americans are the greatest criminals and thieves in the history of the
world", wrote Juan Peron.

Events came to ahead in October.
Reactionary army officers led by an insignificant general insanely jealous of
Peron, staged a coup. On October 12th, Peron was ousted from all his
government posts and arrested by the pro-U.S. clique. With Peron exiled to an
island prison, the self-appointed cabinet officers set about organising their
own regime. They had reckoned without Evita, and they underrated the support
of the working people for Peron.
On the boat to the prison island, Col.
Peron turned to the officer guarding him. "Well, I lost," he said.
"But, you know, there is only one person for whom I need to care. I am
your prisoner but I am also your fellow army officer. May I ask you a favour?"
"What is it, Colonel Peron?"
the officer asked. "Give a pistol to Evita for me - to defend herself or
to kill herself if someone touches her. Tell her I will not live after
her...."
When word spread of Peron’s
imprisonment, Evita started organising their bands of working class
supporters, the descamisados or "shirtless ones", with
furious speed.
Evita rallied the labour unions and all
who listened in a popular uprising that would forever change Argentina. Evita
told the union leaders: "Look, this is not just our chance, it is your
last chance to create a new social order, or we can all go back to the old
social order."
As the Argentine masses realised what had
happened to Peron, riots broke out all over Buenos Aires and other provincial
cities. By October 17 the Argentine capital was almost in the hands of
organised bands of descamisados. More than half a million people, led
by over fifty thousand labourers, gathered in front of Government House,
demanding "our leader, Peron."
Fearing bloody civil war, the military
promptly released Peron and he appeared before the crowds on the Government
House balcony. On October 23 he secretly married Evita. Then began his
campaign for the presidency.
In a desperate attempt to destroy
Peron’s presidential bid, the U.S. State Department issued the notorious
"Blue Book," a scandalous report officially entitled Consultation
among the American Republics with Respect to the Argentine Situation.
Containing all the false charges generated by Ambassador Braden, the
"Blue Book" was a vicious piece of propaganda. The agents of U.S.
imperialism went to work massively publicising its charges. Half the space of
many newspapers - with newsprint scarce - was devoted to reprints from it.
PERON’S VICTORY
"The reign of the bourgeoisie has
terminated throughout the world. The government of the peoples begins. With
that, demi-liberalism and its consequence, capitalism, has ended its cycle;
the future belongs to the people."
- Juan Peron
Despite the calculated disinformation of
the U.S. State Department’s "Blue Book" and Ambassador Braden’s
intrigues, Peron emerged victorious, following the first honest election in
Argentina in decades. There was rejoicing in the streets that night of
February 24 1946, as Peronist representatives gained an overwhelming majority
in the Chamber of Deputies and almost all the seats in the Senate.
In a direct move against the iniquitous
Anglo-American financial interests, Peron nationalised the Central Bank of
Argentina one day before the election. Two years later he referred to this
move in a speech: "Nationalisation has been, without doubt, the most
transcendent financial measure of the last fifty years."
"Is it true that you represent a new
doctrine?" the Associated Press reporter asked Peron after the 1946
election. To which Peron replied, "Yes, in effect, but not so new as
forgotten for a long time, because it is already 2,000 years old:
Christianity." His new government immediately launched a "social
programme of a revolutionary nature."
The new Argentine president enacted
legislation establishing labour councils to protect workers from arbitrary
dismissal, reduced the working week to forty-four hours, raised wages,
nationalised the British owned railway system and established free health
clinics for the poor.
Evita’s total devotion to the ideals of
Peronism impressed all who heard her spell-binding, stirring oratory. From her
quiet opening, modestly referring to herself as Peron’s little echo, she
told her audience: "I was no better off than you not long ago. Now I
exist only to interpret Peron’s great crusade to you - his people. I am only
here to save his energy, to explain his ideals, to carry out his glorious
programme...."
The new government granted women the
right to vote in 1947 and eighteen months later Evita organised the Peronist
Women’s Party. Meaningless feminist theories did not interest her. Her
actions did more, in the words of one observer, "to bring women into
public life in Argentina than a large army of feminists could have done."
In an early speech, Juan Peron paid tribute to the many women, inspired by
Evita, who joined the Peronist ranks:

"This Revolution has been echoed by
Argentine womanhood as few events in history have ever been. This is indeed
auspicious, for if man is a rationalist, woman possesses what is above
masculine rationalism; an intuition which is always superior to the success we
men may be able to attain. For this reason I render homage to the women of my
country in whom the men of the Revolution found an echo that fills us with
satisfaction and pride."
Evita Peron was a legend well before her
death. Her autobiographical La Razon de Mi Vida ("My Mission in
Life"), written in late 1951, after she learned that she had cancer, was
a best seller in Argentina and abroad. Some 50 million copies were printed,
150 000 copies selling on the first day of publication. An Arabic edition was
distributed in Egypt and throughout the Mediterranean. Wherever people were
rising up to confront imperialism, Evita’s book appeared.
In La Razon de Mi Vida she vents her
anguish at the injustice suffered by the poor at the hands of the oligarchs. A
strong sense of the evils of bourgeois capitalism and crusading zeal for
social justice were inseparable from Evita’s personality. She wrote:
"I remember well that I was sad for
many days when I discovered there were wealthy people as well as poor people
in the world; and the strange fact is that I didn’t resent so much the
existence of poor people as I did to discover there were also rich. The theme
of rich against the poor, has been, since then, my sole concern in my deepest
solitude." Throughout her years with the Argentine president, Evita
always scrutinised all government policies regarding worker’s rights and
social welfare.
"It is distressing to compel men to
live in an unjust world," Juan Peron once lamented. With Evita by his
side, he tirelessly laboured to build a new nation "in which every part
of Argentine society should contribute its share for the benefit of the
community: the worker, his muscles; the middle class, its intelligence and
activity; the rich, their money...."2
The Argentine leader exposed the
principle of unbridled liberty in the economic sphere, remarking: "We do
not favour unilateral liberty where the rich are free to do whatever they like
while the poor have but one liberty: to die of hunger.
"It is necessary to end the economy
of exploitation and replace it by a social economy without exploiters or
exploited and where each one receives a just payment in accordance with his
capacity and effort. Capital must be at the service of economy and not economy
at the service of international capitalism as has occurred up to now."
The 1949 Argentine National Constitution,
inspired by Peron’s ideas, stipulated that it is the duty of the State to
supervise the distribution and use of land and intervene in order to develop
and increase its yield for the good of the community. The State must give each
peasant or his family the possibility of becoming the owner of the land he
cultivates. Capital must be at the service of national economy and its
main object must be social welfare. The different forms of exploitation cannot
oppose the ends of public welfare of the Argentine people.
EVA PERON FOUNDATION
"...Peronism, which perhaps at
times doesn’t respect the forms but which tries to assimilate and comply
with the principles, is an effective, real, and deep way of practising
Christianity..."
- Juan Peron
Evita made part of her grand vision a
reality through the Eva Peron Foundation, a charity organisation that
distributed over $50 million a year to the poor and needy. The foundation
avoided the quagmire of government bureaucracy by relating directly to the
people. As Evita explained:
"It was Peron himself who told me:
‘The people who have been deeply punished by injustice have more confidence
in people than in institutions. In this, more than in anything else, I fear
the bureaucracy. In government it is necessary to have a lot of patience and
to know how to wait for everything to move. But in the works of social
assistance you cannot ask anybody to wait.’"3
In the first eleven months of Peron’s
presidency, Evita gave away close to $4,500,000 worth of school books,
clothes, shoes, furniture, toys, and food, to those in need. Prof. Crassweller
explains:
"With such singleness of direction,
the foundation flourished as none other. By the end of the 1940s it exceeded,
in size, in influence, and in general significance, most of the ministries of
the government. Its assets exceeded $200 million. It had 14,000 permanent
employees, including thousands of construction workers and a staff of priests.
It acquired for distribution to the poor fantastic amounts of supplies....Its
flood of revenues came from many sources. Labor unions donated cash and goods
made in the factories where members worked."4
Evita built more schools, orphanages,
hospitals and retirement homes than all previous Argentine governments
combined. Prof. Crassweller conveys the sheer enormity and range of the
foundation’s work:
"Twelve hospitals, with the best
equipment available anywhere, were built. A thousand new schools appeared.
There were clinics, medical centers, homes for the aged, convalescent centers,
a home for girls who had come to Buenos Aires looking for work, transit homes
for those needing temporary shelter, student cities, children’s homes,
including a famous Children’s City built to the scale of its inhabitants,
with small markets, a church, public buildings, a bank that issued script,
streets, houses, and dormitories for four hundred and fifty particularly
disadvantaged children. The foundation also built the Barrio Presidente
Peron, a development with six hundred new houses just west of Buenos
Aires, and it built Evita City, a planned community with 15,000 homes. Many of
the public structures were notable for a tone of luxury unfamiliar in such
places, a touch of brocade and damask and crystal, and this was deliberate, a
form of social recompense."
As if painfully conscious of her own
mortality, Evita was "working through the day and through much of the
night, at a pace the human body cannot long tolerate." She did not smoke.
Like her husband she drank no alcohol, only water. Just as the Christians in
ancient Rome died for Christ, Evita reminded the Peronist faithful, "We,
who love Peron more than anything, are going to die for Peron, because we are
not defending a personal thing, but a national cause."5
Juan Peron, after only three years in
office, had made Argentina the fourth industrial power in the world. Land
reforms boosted agricultural production and the Argentine Institute for Trade
Promotion set the price of Argentina’s booming exports. The development of a
national economy resulted in vast public works projects, bringing
economic prosperity. By 1949, Peron’s doctrine was summed up in the word Justicialismo,
a term coined from the Spanish words for "social" and
"justice". Justicialismo, the ideology of Peronism, being
officially defined as "a doctrine whose object is the happiness of man
within the society of mankind through the harmonizing of material, spiritual,
individual and collective forces, appraised from the Christian
standpoint."
JUSTICE & CHRISTIAN SOCIALISM
"I have always thought that above
all material values are the permanent values of spirit, which are the only
eternal things."
- Juan Peron
"Justicialism", Peron
proclaimed, "is nothing but national Christian socialism." Above
all, the goal of Justicialismo was to transform the Argentine masses
into an "organised community" in which conflicting interests would
be brought into harmony.
Evita Peron clearly defined the
difference between an organised community and a dispersed mass by comparing
Spartans with Helots. The former constituted a great people with conscience,
personality and social organisation, while the latter lacked those three
qualities and lived as slaves.
"The history of Peronism," said
Evita, "is already a long battle of seven years to have a suffering and
sweating mass - as General Peron many times called it - become a people with
social conscience, personality and organisation.
"You must remember how many times
General Peron addressed workers, industrialists, merchants, professionals,
everybody, asking them to organise themselves.
"Peron wants a people which feels
and thinks, which acts properly guided. For this reason he set three
objectives: social justice, economic independence and political sovereignty.
"Peron wants a united people,
because then nobody will exploit it, nor will it be defeated by any other
force in the world. Peron wants a people where everybody is privileged."6
The United States faced the problem of
what to do about Peron. His legally won 1946 election, after the publication
and distribution of the "Blue Book", was an open defeat of United
States diplomacy in Latin America. The U.S. could not afford to openly oppose
Peron, at the possible cost of Latin American solidarity. Washington chose
instead to try to publicly live with the "Peron problem", while
simultaneously carrying on covert operations designed to undermine and
discredit the Peronist revolution.

Peron understood the real nature of the
international forces arrayed against him. He saw how the British and U.S.
imperialists had actually used the Argentine Communist Party to oppose his
labour-nationalist coalition. The Communists broke up strikes in the railways
and meat packing plants (owned by Anglo-American interests) and strenuously
fought the anti-imperialist descamisados. "For capitalist
oligarchy a communist party is better than a Justicialist enemy,"
declared a popular Peronist slogan of the era.
The globalist forces, so hostile to
nationalism and responsible for the division of the world between capitalism
and communism, Peron termed: "the Great Internationals of Sinarchy."7
Sinarchy is a type of collective
shadow world government that brings together the highest leaders of the big
imperialist powers. The Argentine leader said that "Masonry, Zionism,
international societies of different kinds are but a consequence of the
globalisation of the present world. They are the hidden forces of imperialist
domination."8
"Capitalism and Soviet Communism are
but two of them," Peron observed, "seemingly opposed but in reality
perfectly united and co-ordinated.
"Everything can be summarized by
saying that the capitalist regime has abused property and is to blame for
communism because it has given it a reason to exist. Without the exaggerated
exploitation of the old capitalist regime, communism would never have existed.
That is the cause, and communism is the effect. In order to remove the effect,
it is necessary to remove the cause."9
Re-elected by an even greater margin in
1951, Peron continued to reshape Argentina. Reviewing the achievements of his
presidency in the face of opposition from Britain and the U.S., Peron wrote:
"During the ten years of
Justicialist Government [1945-55] Argentina was free and sovereign. Nobody poked their
noses with impunity. But at the end of those ten years, international
sinarchy, together with vernacular politicians at the service of foreign
interests and colonialism, treaded on us."
A NATION MOURNS
"I pray God that He should not
allow these madmen to lift their hand against Peron, for on that day, woe to
them! I shall go forth with the working people, I shall go forth with the
women of the people, I shall go forth with the descamisados, and I shall leave
no brick standing that is not Peronist."
- Evita Peron, May 1 1952
Evita tirelessly carried on her work at
the foundation, but now she was dying of cancer. At first resistant to
treatment of any kind, she accepted the inevitability of surgery.

On May 7 1951, a little more than twelve
months before her death, Evita declared:
"Peron is the air we breathe; Peron
is our sun, Peron is life. I want nothing but to be the heart of Peron.
Because, though I do my best to understand him and learn his marvellous ways,
whenever he makes a decision, I barely mumble. Whenever he speaks, I hardly
utter a single word. Whenever he gives advice, I scarcely dare make a
suggestion. What he sees I hardly glimpse. But I see him with the eyes of my
soul....And I have pledged myself to collect the hopes of the Argentine people
and empty them in the marvellous heart of Peron so that he may turn them into
realities.
"The humble people, my general, have
come here to prove, as they have always done, that the miracle that happened
2,000 years ago is occurring again. The rich, the learned, the men in power
never understood Christ. It was the humble and the poor who understood,
because their souls, unlike the souls of the rich, are not sealed up with
avarice and selfishness."
Argentina’s powerful Catholic Church,
traditionally aligned with Peron’s enemies the oligarchs, did not approve.
The Church hierarchy was already upset by Peron and Evita’s interest in the
esoteric sciences and the intrusion of the Eva Peron Foundation into education
and youth affairs.
Evita responded to the Church’s
disapproval explaining: "Once I read in a book by Leon Bloy, about
Napoleon, that he could not conceive heaven without his Emperor. This appealed
to me and in a speech I said that I also could not conceive heaven without
Peron.
"Some people thought that this was
almost a heresy. Nevertheless, every time I think of it, it seems more logical
to me.
"I know that God alone will fill
heaven.
"But God, who could not conceive
heaven without His mother, whom He liked so much, will forgive me because my
heart cannot conceive it without Peron.
"I shall not commit the heresy to
compare him (Peron) to Christ...but I am certain that, by imitating Christ,
Peron feels a deep love for humanity and that this, more than anything else,
makes him great, magnificently great."10

Evita continued to decline. On June 4
1952 she rallied for a last appearance in public at Peron’s inauguration for
a second term. She now weighed only eighty pounds. Later in June, she endured
radiotherapy, was burned, and suffered much.
To the end Evita’s concern was for her
beloved General. "As she lay in bed on a bad day toward the end, more
dead than alive, Peron walked by in the corridor beyond her door, coughing as
he passed. ‘Did you hear that?’ she said to her doctor. ‘General Peron
is coughing, because he smokes too much. Please, tell him not to smoke.
Examine him. See that he doesn’t get sick.’"11

During her last weeks, Evita wrote her
public will. When she died on July 26 1952, at age 33, the nation was in
shock. She never held any official post but had become the most famous and
beloved woman in the world. The largest funeral in the history of the
Argentine was held with millions of mourners lining the streets as her coffin
passed with full military honours.

On October 17, the anniversary of her
1945 mass rallies to free Peron, a day set aside to honour "Evita,
Spiritual Chief of the Nation," Evita’s public will was read to the
people. It began: "I wish to live eternally with Peron and with my
people. This is my absolute and permanent desire, and therefore my last will.
Where Peron is and where my descamisados are, there will my heart ever
be, to love them with all the forces of life and all the fanaticism that burns
my soul."
She continued: "I will be with them,
with Peron, to fight against the traitorous and perfidious oligarchy, against
the cursed race of exploiters and the dealers in humanity....if I have
committed errors, I have committed them out of love and I hope that God, who
has always seen into my heart, will judge me not for my errors, nor for my
defects, nor for my guilt, but for the love that consumes my life.

"I...was born of the people and
suffered with them. I have the body and the soul and the blood of the people.
I can do nothing other than to surrender myself to my people."
Evita passed from the scene of history, a
great and truly unique woman for whom no counterpart can be discerned.

In 1955 Juan Peron was overthrown by
pro-Anglo-American military officers and forced to leave the country. As one
commentator wrote of his years away from Argentina: "In exile, Peron had
continued to espouse the basic tenets of his political creed: hatred of
bourgeois capitalism and all forms of imperialism; advocacy of the Third World
causes (such as economic independence), which he so early championed and of
which he now calls himself the father; and government with and for, if not by,
the people."12
Returning in 1973 to an Argentina in
political and economic chaos, Peron was reelected to the presidency with 67%
of the vote. After only nine months in office Peron died and joined his
beloved Evita.
"Yes. I confess I have an ambition,
one sole and great personal ambition: I would like that the name of Evita
would appear someday in the history of my country. I would like that it would
say of Evita, even if it would not be more than a small footnote, at the end
of the wonderful chapter which history will certainly dedicate to Peron,
something approximately like this: ‘There was, by the side of Peron, a woman
who dedicated herself to take to the President the hopes of the people, which
Peron would promptly convert into realities.’ And I would feel properly and
fully repaid if the footnote would end like this: ‘Of that woman we only
know that the people used to call her, caressingly, EVITA.’"13

REFERENCES
1. Peron and the Enigmas of Argentina,
Robert D. Crassweller, 1987, W.W. Norton & Company, New York
2. Doctrina Peronista, Juan Domingo
Peron, 1952, Republica Argentina, Buenos Aires
3. La Razon de Mi Vida. English
translation: My Mission in Life, Eva Peron, 1952, Vantage Press, New
York
4. Peron and the Enigmas of Argentina,
Robert D. Crassweller, 1987, W.W. Norton & Company, New York
5. Historia del Peronismo, Eva Peron,
1951, Subsecretaria de Informaciones, Buenos Aires
6. Historia del Peronismo, Eva Peron,
1951, Subsecretaria de Informaciones, Buenos Aires
7. La Hora de los pueblos, Juan
Domingo Peron, 1968, Madrid
8. La Hora de los pueblos, Juan
Domingo Peron, 1968, Madrid
9. Catecismo de Doctrina National
Justicialista, Buenos Aires
10. La Razon de Mi Vida. English
translation: My Mission in Life, Eva Peron, 1952, Vantage Press, New
York
11. Peron and the Enigmas of Argentina,
Robert D. Crassweller, 1987, W.W. Norton & Company, New York
12. The New Encyclopedia Britannica,
15th Edition
13. La Razon de Mi Vida. English
translation: My Mission in Life, Eva Peron, 1952, Vantage Press, New
York
©
Copyright New Dawn Magazine, http://www.newdawnmagazine.com. Permission
granted to freely distribute this article for non-commercial purposes if
unedited and copied in full, including this notice.
Evita
Peron Historical Research Foundation
SINERGIE EUROPEE
Milano, Trento, il 24
Dicembre 1999
New World Order and Serbs
- Part XI
DON'T
CRY FOR ME, ARGENTINA
Globalization
Shows Its Ugly Side in Latin America
Who can forget the hauntingly
beautiful "Don't cry for me Argentina" melody from "Evita?"
It was a song of a passionate love for one's country. The patriotic flame
burned fiercely in Eva (Duarte) Peron's heart despite turbulent times and
grave illness which snuffed out her life at age 33. It was also a story of an
"American Dream" the Argentinean way - a poor girl from the pampas
countryside makes good and rises to become Argentina's First Lady at the age
of 27.
But "Evita" is
also a love story which only a jolted lover, or an exiled patriot, could
understand. It is a tale about things spiritual which can never be replaced by
matters material...
"Don't cry for me
Argentina
The truth is I never left you
All through my wild days
My mad existence
I kept my promise
Don't keep your distance.
And as for fortune, and as for fame,
I never invited them in
Though it seemed to the world they were all I desired.
They are illusions
They are not the solutions they promised to be
The answer was here all the time
I love you and hope you love me.
Don't cry for me Argentina..."
It is a supreme irony that the protagonist of the above
mind-and-heart-over-matter lyrics, written by Tim Rice reinforced by Andrew
Lloyd Webber's music, should be none other than Hollywood's "Material
Girl" - Madonna.. That's like Bill Clinton preaching celibacy. Yet,
despite the distractions which sometimes occur when real life interferes with
art, the larger-than-life story of "Evita" can still break every
patriot's heart.
[For those not intimately
familiar with Argentina's history, Eva ("Evita") was born in 1919.
She died in 1952 of cancer. Her husband, Juan Peròn, for whom she campaigned
tirelessly before marrying him, was elected president in 1946. He was deposed
by a military coup in 1955. After 18 years of exile, Peròn was again elected
president of Argentina in 1973. But he died 10 months later. So it goes...]
That "Evita" was
about the future and not just the past became evident in the 1990s. Carlos
Saul Menem was elected president of Argentina in 1989. It was the year the
Main Street started paying for the West Side Gang's victory in the Cold War
over their Kremlin East Side rivals. Ever since, Menem has ruled like a czar,
issuing over 300 decrees in nine eight years, according to a 1998 FOREIGN
AFFAIRS article about the pitfalls of globalization without corresponding
constitutional democracy and social liberalization.
One of Menem's legacies is
that the globalization of the Argentine economy - read privatization and sale
of former state-owned assets to foreign interests - has caused millions of
Argentineans to become exiles in their own country. They were disenfranchised
by their own elite in the name "free trade" and
"progress." Just as were the millions of Russians, Poles,
Hungarians, Koreans, Thais... later on in the 1990s decade.
In the province of Jujuy,
for example, some 42% are unemployed or doing menial work, according Bishop
Marcelo Palentini. "They used to ask for raises; now they ask for
jobs," he told the New York Times which printed a surprisingly candid
condemnation of the New World Order elite's mantra - the "free
trade" a.k.a. "globalization." The story, "Argentina
Grapples With Downside of Globalization," ran as a front page February
1998 article.
"Menem thinks that by
putting our country at the service of the International Monetary Fund, he
brought us into the First World," Carlos Santillan said, a union leader
in Jujuy province. "But workers have lost in a few years rights they
fought for over a century. We're a colony here. All that is missing is to have
Clinton come here and plant the American flag."
Clinton won't have to
disgrace our flag any more that he has already done, because Wall Street did
it for him. The "megabankers" have already seen to it that the
Almighty Dollar is the currency of choice in Argentina, fully interchangeable
with the local pesos. Any time you see that anywhere in the world, you know
that the New World Order has claimed yet another colony in the name of the
"Princes of the 20th Century," the multinational corporations.
The New York Times article
explained how the multinationals' profits drove many of Argentina's small
entrepreneurs out of business. And how some of the American globalist NWO
elite, as epitomized by Ted Turner, George Soros, Sylvester Stallone, Arnold
Schwarzeneger and others, have moved in and taken over the lands where ones
gauchos freely roamed.
"There are more
fences going up in Patagonia as the internationally wealthy install themselves
on newly acquired estates," the New York Times reporter, Roger Cohen,
wrote from Buenos Aires. "I used to go and camp or fish but now I hear
that Ted Turner is here, Rambo there, the Terminator somewhere else. And I
say, no, this is not my Argentina," Orlando Mendes, a proud Argentinian,
told the New York Times.
Meanwhile, YPF, the former
state-owned Argentinian oil company that used to employ 5,000 people, now has
only 500 employees. But YPF made a $900 million profit in 1996. Good for its
foreign scavenger-investors! Bad outcome for the Argentineans.
Mario Acosta, a YPF
manager, explained that when the old "semi-socialist" system was
dismantled, everyone who was not a professional was laid off.
"Before," he said, "uneducated people had a certain basic
security. But that's finished in the modern world."
Nevertheless, deceitful
chameleons that the globalists are, at the Wal-Mart in Buenos Aires, an
Argentine flag flutters in the store there is a sign reading, "Proudly in
Argentina." Families stroll down the wide, bright aisles, past displays
of Paul Newman's salad dressing.
"What is clear is
that it is changing the Argentine way of life: families buy their bicycles
here, sometimes using dollars; the corner bicycle store is no more," the
New York Times reported.
But, of course, Wal-Mart
is not impervious to the risks of "divided societies," a New York
Times term for Brazil, Argentina's bigger neighbor which has until recently
mostly resisted the globalization pressures. In the last few months, five
Wal-Mart stores in Brazil have been attacked and robbed by assailants
operating in large groups armed with assault rifles.
New World Order store
front operations, such as McDonald's, Starbuck's Coffee, Nike and others, were
also attacked and damaged by "anarchists" during the Seattle
protests against the World Trade Organization, in early December of this year.
Meanwhile, Wal-Mart is
bigger than 161 countries including Poland, Israel and Greece. Mitsubishi is
larger than Indonesia, according to Maude Barlow, a Canadian activist who does
not want to see her country's culture wiped out by the likes of IBM or General
Motors. "General Motors is bigger than Denmark," she railed in a
January 1998 speech at the University of Toronto. "The Top 200, with a
combined revenue of $7.1 trillion, have almost twice the economic clout of the
poorest four-fifths of humanity, whose combined income is only $3.9 trillion.
Meanwhile, economic
perversion of the New World Order abounds. Especially on Wall Street, the NWO
hub.
Which "normal"
Main Street businessman would want to buy his company shares from himself so
as to "boost the shareholders' value?" Only one who has ambitions to
be bronze-cast one day as a Statue of Moron. For, that's using the money all
shareholders earned for the benefit of only some (those who sell their shares
to the company) - without creating any real economic benefit, either to the
company or the nation's economy.
Yet $222 billion dollars
was squandered on such scams by the publicly-held American companies in 1998
alone, according to a Mar. 16 Investors Business Daily report, $882 billion in
the 1990s. That's more money wasted on this Wall Street fad, which we dubbed
"Corporate Cabbage Patch Dolls" (see Annex Bulletin 98-39, 10/31/98
- http://www.djurdjevic.com/Bulletins/industry-trends/98-39.htm ), than
we figure was invested in all developing countries in the world during the
same period ($831 billion - see Annex Bulletin 98-44, 12/11/98 - http://www.djurdjevic.com/Bulletins/global/98-44.htm).
IBM alone, for example,
has spent about $30 billion on stock buybacks in the last four years - WITHOUT
CREATING A SINGLE JOB OR A PRODUCT! That's almost four Bulgaria's GDPs (Gross
Domestic Products) being squandered.
No wonder that the Top 200
multinationals, the "Princes of the 20th Century" as we had dubbed
them in our reports, are the net job destroyers, according to Ms. Barlow,
despite their enormous wealth and clout. All together, they employ less than
one third of one per cent of the world's people."
And yet, according to the
thus far secret two-year negotiations of the 29 OECD nations in Paris over the
Multilateral Agreement on Investments (MAI), a New World Order elite's
attempted home run against all nations of the world, the MAI Treaty would
basically do away with the idea of the national sovereignty, including our
own, in America.
And so, if there is a
melody to be sung by the patriots the world over, it should be the song of
Evita: "Don't cry for me Argentina."
Or America... Or
Canada.... Or Russia... Or Germany... Or France... Or Iraq.... Or Serbia... Or
India... Or Australia... Or Japan...
Maybe the anti-NWO anthem
should be - "Evita: Vive la difference!"
"And as for fortune,
and as for fame,
I never invited them in..."
We know, Evita. But Carlos Menem did. Sorry.
Reproduced From:
SINERGIE
EUROPEE
THE MONTONEROS:
Argentina's
National Revolutionaries
By 1970, left-wing followers of General Juan Peron had coalesced around an
urban guerrilla group called the Movimiento Peronista Montonero. The
Montoneros-about 25,000 strong- hoped that Peron's return from exile in Spain
would transform Argentina into a true "Socialist Fatherland". As
most people will know, Peron and his legendary wife Evita led Argentina during
the 1940s and 1950s. Their populist form of Argentinean-based fascism- known
as Justicialismo or Peronism- was acknowledged by even their critics as being
very socially progressive. Unfortunately, after his wife's untimely death,
Peron was overthrown by reactionaries in the Army and Roman Catholic Church.
With Peron's blessings, the Montoneros initiated an intense campaign to
destabilize the pro-American (and anti-Peronist) regime then in power. They
kidnapped and executed former Argentinean president Pedro Aramburu,
foreshadowing the Italian Red Brigades' assassination of Aldo Moro in 1978.
They also seized and held for ransom executives from multinational
corporations. Emulating Evita's passion for charitable work, the Montoneros
used ransom money to feed and clothe the poor. Soon the Movement caught the
attention of Cuba's Fidel Castro. The fact that the apparently 'communist'
Castro supported the 'fascist' Montoneros shouldn't come as a big suprise: in
his student days, Fidel was often seen reading Hitler's Mein Kampf and was
probably more influenced by that work than by anything Marx himself scribbled.
The MPM also maintained close relations with the Palestine Liberation
Organization, Columbia's M-19, and the Spanish Socialist Party.
Ultimately, the Montoneros created a climate that allowed the Peronist party
to take power via an election. Peron loyalist Hector Campora became president
in 1973, paving the way for the General's triumphant return. During the
Campora interlude, the brave Montoneros emerged from the underground struggle
and briefly enjoyed semi-official status. Soon a feud developed between
right-wing Peronistas and the leftist Montoneros. The right-wingers feared the
prospect of national socialist revolution as envisioned by the Montoneros,
favoring instead a compromise with capitalist and conservative institutions
like the Church and Army. Right-wingers and Montoneros clashed at Peron's
homecoming ceremony of June 1973, leaving 13 dead and 100 wounded. The rift
was made worse when a handful of Montoneros were later charged with plotting
to assassinate General Peron and his second wife Isabel. While the majority of
Montoneros obviously didn't want their mentor dead, they also felt clear
disappointment over Peron's drift to the conservative side of the party.
In May 1974, the Montoneros' suspicions were confirmed: under pressure from
the right, General Peron threw the MPM out of the Justicialist movement,
calling them "treacherous and mercenary". Still displaying intense
loyalty towards their former leader, however, the Montonaros 'held their fire'
until after his death on July Ist,1974.
The Montoneros- true to the social revolutionary vision of "authentic
Peronism"- had no choice but to commence military operations against the
government. Isabel Peron- the new Argentinean president- was essentially a
captive in her own palace. Army officers held the real power. Later, even the
illusion of a "Peronist" government was discarded: in 1976, Isabel
was ousted and the hated military Junta installed.
In the middle of July 1974, Peronist guerrillas struck their first blow by
executing a former foreign minister. In September, they abducted two filthy
rich brothers, ransoming them off for a whopping $60 million! The Montoneros
certainly gave a whole new meaning to the slogan, 'taxing the rich'. Using
their newfound wealth, the Montoneros went on to bomb US installations
throughout Argentina. Executives from all the 'Big Three' automakers- G.M.,
Ford, and Chrysler- were murdered, and bomb-laden bouquets delivered to
others. The group also sank an Argentine naval ship in 1975, costing the
Oligarchy $70 million.
The Junta responded with a "Dirty War" of indiscriminate terror. Up
to 30,000 people died or "disappeared" at the hands of the security
forces. The Argentine Anti-Communist Alliance (AAA), an officially sanctioned
right-wing death squad, was one of the worst offenders. After being tortured
in installations like the Navy Mechanics School, victims were then tossed from
helicopters into the Atlantic Ocean. The Montoneros suffered heavy losses:
1600 killed in action in 1976 alone.
Despite their heroic resistance, the Montoneros were a spent force by 1977
(although, some did fight on until 1981). The high rate of attrition amongst
guerrillas- and their families- simply couldn't be maintained over a long
period of time. Lack of support from the larger Peronist community didn't help
Montonero cause much either!
Like the Strasserites of Nazi Germany and the Mazzini-inspired Corporatists of
Fascist Italy, the Montoneros upheld the highest ideals of Peronist Argentina.
They fought hard to establish General Peron's noble vision of a
"Socialist Fatherland", refusing to settle for some tawdry death
squad republic.
Reproduced From:
