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A moment of hope. THE SANDINISTA REVOLUTION IN NICARAGUA

Sandinista revolution in nicaragua 2017rev

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Page 1: Sandinista revolution in nicaragua 2017rev

A moment of hope.

THE SANDINISTA REVOLUTION IN NICARAGUA

Page 2: Sandinista revolution in nicaragua 2017rev

WHY A REVOLUTION?

• Long history of repression and corruption under Somoza regimes

• Extreme poverty

• Increasing alienation of the middle classes from the ruling regime

• Successful organizing efforts by the Sandinistas

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A LONG BURNING FUSE

US Interventions in Nicaragua:

• 1850• 1853• 1854• 1857• 1910• 1912• 1926

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WILLIAM WALKER IN NICARAGUA 1854-1857

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1927-1934 SANDINO V. U.S. MARINES

U.S. Marines in Nicaragua 1927 Sandino and staff

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ASSASSINATION AND ASCENSION

February 1934 – Sandino negotiates settlement with Nicaragua President Sacasa

February 21, 1934 – Sandino assassinated by National Guard under direct supervision of General Anastasio Somoza Garcia

1937 – Somoza assumes presidency of Nicaragua

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1936-1979 THE SOMOZA REGIME

Anastasio Somoza García (1896–1956; ruled 1937–1947, 1950–1956), the father.

Luis Somoza Debayle (1922–1967, ruled 1956–1963), his legitimate eldest son.

Anastasio Somoza Debayle (1925–1980, ruled 1967–1972, 1974–1979), his second legitimate son.

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SANDINISTAS AND SANDINISMO

Founded in 1961 as the National Liberation Front by Carlos Fonseca, Silvio Mayorga and Tomas Borge

Fought a prolonged guerilla war against Somoza's National Guard

Marxist/Leninist and Nationalist philosophies

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2 TRIGGERS – 1972, 1978

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DECEMBER 323, 1972 - EARTHQUAKE

• Managua

– Massive devastation in Managua (90%destroyed)

– Over 5,000 killed (some estimate 10,000)

– Additional 20,000 injured

– 250,00 lost their homes

– Major infrastructure devastation

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1972 EARTHQUAKE

• Massive influx of foreign aid in response

• Somoza and cronies diverted large sums of aid to personal accounts.

• What little remained was poorly managed

• Rebuilding in Managua never really began until the 1990’s

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PEDRO JOAQUIN CHAMORRO

• Journalist and editor of La Prensa newspaper which consistently opposed the Somoza regime.

• 1975 to Somoza “I am waiting, with a clear conscience, and a soul at peace, for the blow you are to deliver.”

• Jailed multiple times due to opposition to dictatorship

• Assassinated in 1978

• 1977 La Prensa series “ The Vampire Chronicles” exposed the Plasmaferesis lab in Managua

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PLASMAFERESIS LAB

• Established in the 1970’s by right-wing Cuban doctor Pedro Ramos

• Somoza family part owners of Lab

• Sold blood worldwide

• Paid 35 cordobas a half liter (=1.15 current U.S.)

• Donors were drawn from the poor and destitute desperate for any income

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JANUARY 10, 1978

• Chamorro assassinated by unknown gunmen

• Thousands attended and participated in his funeral

• His murder sparked riots in Managua involving 30,000 people

• Unrest in multiple locations across Nicaragua

• Government reintroduced martial law censorship, increased military violence

• La Presna experienced 7 machine gun attacks and bombing attempts during 1978

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1978

• January 23-24 General strike shuts down 80% of business in Managua and other urban centers

• August 22, 1978 Sandinista forces capture National Palace forcing release of prisoners, broadcast of communique calling for general insurrection

• September insurrection. Armed youth take over Matagalpa, FSLN cadres attach national Guard posts in Managua, Masaya, Leon, Chinandega and Esteli. Somoza attacks cities with air force. Insurrection failed, several thousand- mostly civilian- casualties

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JULY 19, 1979 – SANDINISTAS VICTORIOUS

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NICARAGUA JULY 20, 1979

• $1.6 billion dollar debt

• Ruined economic infrastructure

• 30,000 – 50,000 war deaths

• Low to no access to healthcare in rural regions

• High illiteracy rate (50.3% overall)

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SANDINISTA RESPONSE

• Land reform

• Literacy and health campaigns

• Price fixing of commodities

• Equality for women (in theory)

• Right to unionize

• Assumption of outstanding debt burden

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1980 LITERACY CRUSADE

March to August 1980

Reduced overall illiteracy rate from 50.3% to 12.9%

FSLN viewed literacy as fundamental to development

Literacy education is ongoing in Nicaragua – 2012 Campaign “Yo Si Puedo”

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HEALTH CRUSADES POPULAR HEALTH CAMPAIGNS

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HEALTH EDUCATION MATERIALS

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LAND REFORM

• Confiscation and re-distribution of land previously held by Somoza and cronies

• Land titles were given to individuals and cooperatives for agricultural development

• Some private property transitioned to state property

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‘YANKEE SANDINISTAS’

• Volunteer brigades in support of the revolution

• Not just yankee – brigadistascame from across the globe

• Continued through the contra war

Second Brigade Coffee Harvesters "Zumbi Dos Palmares"

http://brigadasennicaragua.blogspot.com/

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BEN LINDER

• U.S. Volunteer in the north of Nicaragua.

• Engineer working on small scale hydro for rural community

• Killed in a contra attack.

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CONFLICTS AND CONTRAS

1980 - Conflicts within government between Sandinista and non-Sandinista members escalated

Formation of the Contras (counter-revolutionary guerilla groups)

1982-1988 State of emergency and the contra war

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CONTRAS A PROXY FOR U.S. POLICY

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“FREEDOM FIGHTERS”Americas Watch Report on Contra Abuses - 1989

• targeting health care clinics and health care workers for assassination[

• kidnapping civilians

• torturing civilians

• executing civilians, including children, who were captured in combat

• raping women

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IMPACT OF CONTRA WAR ON REVOLUTIONARY PROGRESS

• Shifted resources from progress to defense– Between 1980-1986 Contras responsible for destruction of property and

losses in production = $596,000,000

– 17,500 killed during same period

– Approximately half of government spending absorbed by defense effort.

Page 29: Sandinista revolution in nicaragua 2017rev

DEVELOPED FOR ANTH 260 – OCTOBER 2017

• Paul Treadwell

[email protected]

• @ptreadwell