Wednesday, November 1, 2017

CUBAN MARTYR JOSE MARTI'S MONUMENT VANDALIZED AGAIN

"Los hombres van divididos en dos bandas; los que aman y construyen y los que odian y destruyen." Jose Marti

"Washington Park features a gazebo, a fountain, a bust of Mexican revolutionary Father Miguel Hidalgo, and a monument to Cuban revolutionary Jose Marti, but most are marred by graffiti. It’s not a very pleasant spot."
Municipal Parks and Plazas on Waymarking.com

By Juan Montoya
The municipal parks and plazas website can add this about Marti's monument in Washington Park. It has been vandalized and broken up by unknown culprits.

Brownsville urban myth asserts that local Republican scion Frank Yturria paid vandals way back then to steal the bronze bust of the Cuban martyr who fought to overthrow the Spanish monarchy and heave it into a local resaca. Yturria was said to consider Marti a forerunner to the communist regime that overthrew U.S.-backed Fulgencio Batista and was livid that such a man was celebrated by the local Cuban community called El Circulo Cubano.

The monument has quotes by Marti –who was also a writer and poet – inscribed and a map of the island. (The photo at right shows how it looked sans Marti's bust before the most current vandalism.)

Few –  if any – Brownsville schoolchildren could tell you where the memorial for the man Cuban-Americans consider the Apostle of that island’s liberation is at in their city.
And probably, most have seen the white marble memorial when they visit Washington Park for the Christmas light show or the SombreroFest during Charro Days.

But the man who fought for Cuban independence from Spain and who coined the unforgettable verses inscribed in black lettering on the marble siding of the memorial is remembered in this border city.
"Men are divided into two bands," reads one. "Those who love and build; and those who hate and destroy."

José Julián Martí y Pérez was born in Havana, Cuba in January 28, 1853, 164 years ago. At the time, he was the son of a peninsular official. Peninsulares were Cubans born in Spain, and as such, afforded the privileges of the colonial power. The young Martí, however, did not share his father’s loyalty to a system that enslaved the black population which labored in the lucrative sugar plantations and who bore the brunt of the empire’s repression.

He soon rebelled against his father – a military official – and schemed to make the island independent from Spain.
Ha witnessed the whipping of black slaves in Hanábana and the cruelty of the imperial authorities revolted him.
"I saw it when I was a child, and I can still feel the shame burning on my cheeks," he wrote as a man.

His adherence to independence soon led him to rail and publish against the crown, much to his father’s displeasure. Soon, after his teacher was arrested without cause for having encouraged his students to express their pro-independence stances against the government. Martí, at 16, was sentenced to six years at hard labor in the stone quarries.

Only after his father’s influential friends intervened was he freed – nearly blind, permanently scarred from the chains he wore and suffering from a hernia.
His imprisonment forged in him even more determination to end Spain’s reign over the agonized island. The authorities, in turn, exiled him to Spain.

While in Spain, Martí published a pro-Cuban independence newspaper. The turmoil in the colonies eventually forced the crown to abdicate and the Spanish republic encouraged him to advocate his cause even more strongly. But soon he found that the republic is no better than the crown was on the Cuban question and he leaves to find refuge in México.

"Never are the shores of exile as beautiful as when one bids them farewell," he would write later. His stay in México would only serve to disillusion the young revolutionary. During his stay, the constitutional president, Sebastian Lerdo de Tejada, was deposed by Porfirio Díaz, who would remain in power for the next 30 years.

Martí decided his place was in Cuba and arrived in the island under a false identity from México. But under pressure from Cuban authorities, he left and married Carmen Zayas Bazan in México.
Upon his return to Cuba, he was again arrested and deported to Spain which he left and travelled to France and then the United States.

In 1880, Martí fomented revolution in New York and wrote some of his most memorable verses in exile. Although he was lauded as a erudite spokesman for Cuban liberation, his Versos Libres gain him recognition as a first-rate poet and writer.

But the revolutionary movement in Cuba was beset by division and obstacles that make it impossible for a native-born leadership to ascertain power. Martí became a spokesman for the independence movement throughout Latin America. His plans to invade Cuba failed and in 1895 he died in battle fighting for Cuban independence.

Soon after, in 1898, the United States entered the war and established a military government. Cuba, again, was under foreign domination.
In 1902, a puppet Cuban government signed the Platt Amendment which placed the island under U.S. control.

Fifty seven years later, Fidel Castro overthrew the Fulgencio Batista regime and placed the island under a communist government.

From beyond, Martí’s voice still calls out like his verse, "There are some things that are glorious; The sun in the sky and freedom on earth."
Cuba awaits.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ain't no Cuban ever done anything good for this country!
Bunch leeches

Anonymous said...


Defacing and destroying monuments is the worse kind vandalism, other than graves. It is an expression of the worse kind of ignorance and intolerance.

Anonymous said...

The young people that have vandalized Washington Park statues and rocks are just future Antifa members or ISIS members practicing their disrespect for our city and the people who respect history. They have nothing to do, so they go over there at night and tear up or tear down things. Just like the little assholes who spray painted the murals downtown, or the little gangsters that tag walls, fences and railroad cars. These are little angels to their parents and little hoodlums for the city. These are perceived as juveniles now, but they are likely to end up in jail. Just put a camera on the park. Maybe we could get these kids to spray paint Cesar de Leon....a real, live racist.

Anonymous said...

How do you know its young people. penjejo!!!

Anonymous said...

Cameras were put at city cemetery and many monuments and crosses were vandalize and no one knows WHO?

Anonymous said...

What's a "penjejo?"

Anonymous said...

Uh. learn to espell pendejo.

Anonymous said...

Penjejo? You fucking ill-educated slob! If you can't spell you shouldn't be able to get Food Stamps. God Damn You!

Anonymous said...

Where's Pipe?

Anonymous said...

It's not nice to make fun of disable people. Penjejos

Anonymous said...

I see there are a lot of estupios cubanos pejejos here on thesse block

rita