Photograph of Pedro Albizu Campos.
Pedro Albizu Campos

Overview

Pedro Albizu Campos (September 12, 1891April 21, 1965) was a Puerto Rican politician and advocate of Puerto Rican independence from the United States. Albizu was the leader and president of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party since 1930. Albizu felt that Puerto Rico deserved the same right as the United States and other countries had to fight for independence.

Albizu was known to be an energtic orator. For that he was known also as El Maestro ("The Teacher").

Biography

Early Years
Albizu Campos was born in Tenerías Village in Ponce, Puerto Rico. He was the son of Alejandro Albizu and Juana Campos, and the nephew of danza composer Juan Morel Campos. Albizu Campos was of Afro-Taíno and Basque descent.
Education
In 1912, Albizu was awarded a scholarship to study Engineering, specializing in Chemistry at the University of Vermont. In 1913 he continued his studies at Harvard University.

At the outbreak of World War I, he volunteered in the United States Infantry. Albizu was trained by the French Military mission and served under General Frank McIntyre where he was assigned to an African-American unit and was discharged as a First Lieutenant. During this time he was exposed to the racism of the day which left a mark in his beliefs towards the relationship of Puerto Ricans and the United States.

In 1919, Albizu returned to Harvard University and was elected president of Harvard's Cosmopolitan Club. He met with foreign students and lecturers, like Subhas Chandra Bose (Indian Nationalist leader with Mahatma Gandhi) and the Hindu poet Rabindranath Tagore. He became interested in the cause of Indian independence and also helped to establish several centers in Boston for Irish independence.

Albizu met Éamon de Valera and later became a consultant in the drafting of the constitution of the Irish Free State. He graduated from Harvard University obtaining a Law degree while studying Literature, Philosophy, Chemical Engineering and Military Science. He was fluent in English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Latin and Greek. At the time he received job offers as Hispanic representative for a Protestant church and in the U.S. State Department's diplomatic corps in Mexico, yet Albizu opted to return to Puerto Rico.
Nationalist campaign
In 1922, Albizu married Dr. Laura Meneses, a Peruvian whom he had met at Harvard University. Two years later in 1924 he joined the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and was elected vice president. In 1927, Albizu traveled to Santo Domingo, Haiti, Cuba, Mexico, Panama, Peru, and Venezuela, seeking solidarity for the Puerto Rican Independence movement.

In 1930, there were some disagreements between Albizu and José Coll y Cuchí, president of the Party, as to how it should be run. As a result Coll y Cuchí abandoned the party and some of his followers returned to the Union Party. On May 11, 1930, Albizu Campos was elected president of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and formed the first Women's Nationalist Committee, in the island municipality of Vieques, Puerto Rico.

In 1932, Albizu published a manuscript in which he exposed Doctor Cornelius P. Rhoades, who admitted to killing Puerto Rican patients and injecting many with cancer cells as part of medical experiments conducted in San Juan's Presbyterian Hospital for the Rockefeller Institute. However, Dr. Rhoades later became head of two chemical warfare projects in the 1940s, served on the United States Atomic Energy Commission, and was awarded the U.S. Legion of Merit.

In 1933, Albizu lead a strike against the Puerto Rico Railway and Light and Power Company for alleged monopoly on the island. The following year, he represented sugar cane workers as a lawyer against the U.S. sugar industry.
First Arrest
In 1935, four Nationalists were killed by the police under the command of Colonel E. Francis Riggs. The incident became known as the Río Piedras massacre. The following year in 1936, nationalists Hiram Rosado and Elias Beauchamp assassinated Colonel Riggs. They were arrested, and summarily executed without a trial at the police headquarters in San Juan.

After these events, the San Juan Federal Court ordered the arrest of Albizu Campos and several other Nationalists for "seditious conspiracy to overthrow the U.S. Government in Puerto Rico." A jury of seven Puerto Rican and five Americans voted 7 to 5 not guilty. However, Judge Cooper called for a new jury, this time composed of ten Americans and two Puerto Ricans and a guilty verdict was achieved.

In 1937, a group of lawyers, including a young Gilberto Concepción de Gracia tried in vain to defend the Nationalists, but the Boston Court of Appeals, which holds jurisdiction over federal matters in Puerto Rico, upheld the verdict. Albizu Campos and the other Nationalist leaders were sent to the Federal penitentiary in Atlanta, Georgia.

In 1943, Albizu got seriously ill and had to be interned at the Columbus Hospital of New York. He stayed there almost until the end of his sentence. After ten years of imprisonment, in 1947 Albizu returned to Puerto Rico and it was believed that he began preparing, along with other members of the Nationalist Party, an armed struggle against the proposed plans to change Puerto Rico's political status into a commonwealth of the United States.
Second Arrest
Pedro Albizu Campos would be jailed again after two events: 1) the revolt of 1950 when a group of Puerto Rican nationalists staged a revolt in the town of Jayuya (known as the Jayuya Uprising) and 2) an attack on La Fortaleza (the Puerto Rican governor's mansion) and Blair House, by nationalist Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola, where president Harry S. Truman was staying while the White House was being renovated.

During the attack on the president, Torresola and policeman, Private Leslie Coffelt, were killed. Albizu Campos was arrested at his home after a brief shoot out with the police. Subsequently 3,000 independence supporters were arrested. In 1951 Pedro Albizu Campos was jailed again and sentenced to 80 years in prison.

Albizu was pardoned in 1953 by then governor Luis Muñoz Marín but the pardon was revoked the following year after the 1954 nationalist attack of the United States House of Representatives, when four Puerto Rican Nationalists, led by Lolita Lebron opened fire from the gallery of the Capitol Building in Washington D.C..
Later years and death
While in prison, Albizu Campos' health deteriorated. In 1956, he suffered a stroke in prison and was transferred to San Juan's Presbyterian Hospital under police guard. He alleged that he was the subject of human radiation experiments in prison. Officials suggested that Albizu was insane although others who attended him believe that burns on his skin where consistent with radiation exposure.

On November 1964, Albizu Campos was again pardoned by outgoing governor Luis Muñoz Marín. He died on April 21, 1965.

In 1994, under the administration of President Bill Clinton, the United States Department of Energy disclosed that human radiation experiments were conducted without consent on prisoners during the 1950s and 1970s. It is still unclear if Pedro Albizu Campos was among the subjects of such experimentation.

Relationship with Prominent Latin American Figures

Pedro Albizu Campos had very good relationships with many prominent figures of Latin American politics. Nobel Prize laureate and admirer of Albizu Campos, Gabriela Mistral, presented a tamarind tree to Albizu Campos as a symbol of her support for the Puerto Rican Independence Movement. She obtained the tamarind tree from the world-known Venezuelan leader Simón Bolivar's estate in Venezuela. The tree was planted at the Lares, Puerto Rico Plaza de la Revolución with soil taken from the eighteen other Spanish-speaking Latin American countries of the Hemisphere.

As inspired by Gabriela Mistral, Albizu Campos meant to give the Plaza a living symbol of solidarity with the struggle for freedom and independence initiated by Bolivar (who, while visiting Vieques, Puerto Rico, promised to assist the Puerto Rico independence movement, albeit said promise never materialized due to the power struggles surrounding him), as well as a symbol of the bittersweet (as the trees' flavor) hardships needed to reach Puerto Rico's independence. As such, the Tamarindo de Gabriela was meant to evoke the sympolism and significance afforded to the Gernikako Arbola hailing from the Basque Country, found between Spain and France.

Legacy

The extent of Albizu's legacy is generally the subject of passionate discussion by both followers and detractors. His followers state that Albizu's political and military actions served (even unintentionally) as a primer for positive change in Puerto Rico, these being: * the improvement of labor conditions for peasants and workers * a belated yet more accurate assessment of the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States by the political establishment in Washington * and a set of social and political conditions that led to positive change in the political - and eventually economic - environment prevailing in the country.

Detractors denounce Albizu as a radical fascist, whose actions only brought turmoil to Puerto Rico. Some claim that the weak following of the Puerto Rican independence movement in the present day can be traced, if not to Albizu, to the repression that his actions brought upon the movement.

Albizu can be definitely credited, however, with preserving and promoting Puerto Rican nationalism and national symbols, at a time where they were virtually a taboo in the country. The formal adoption of the Puerto Rican flag as a national emblem by the Puerto Rican government can be traced to Albizu (even while he denounced this adoption as the "watering-down" of an otherwise sacred symbol into a "colonial flag"); the revival of public observance of the Grito de Lares and its significant icons was a direct mandate from him as leader of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party.

Albizu was the most vocal and visible Puerto Rican of African descent of his generation; Afro-Puerto Rican leaders of other political extractions (such as Ernesto Ramos Antonini and Jose Celso Barbosa) attained similar status only after facing (and enduring) considerable bouts with racism. Albizu, while not exempt from it, confronted it and denounced it publicly.

Albizu's diagnosis of the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States earned him prison time, yet modern scholars take surprise at how accurate the diagnosis is, even years after Albizu's death. Finally, his political philosophy persists to this day, synthesized in quotes and verbal images.

An alternative high school in Chicago, called the Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos Puerto Rican High School, is located in the Puerto Rican Cultural Center. There, students learn about Puerto Rican history and culture, in the context of local community development. Archives there include original letters, representations of Albizu Campos in sculpture and art, as well as other material related to his life.

Additionally, five public schools in Puerto Rico are named after him, as well as numerous streets in most of Puerto Rico's municipalities. In 1976, Public School 161 in Harlem in New York City was named after him as well.

References

*Acosta, Ivonne, La Mordaza/Puerto Rico 1948-1957. Rio Pierdras, Puerto Rico, 1987 *Connerly, Charles, ed. Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, Vieques Times, Puerto Rico, 1995 *Corretjer, Juan Antonio, El Lider De La Desesperación, Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, 1978 *Davila, Arlene M., Sponsored Identities, Cultural Politics in Puerto Rico, Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1997 *Garcia, Marvin, Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, National Louis University *Torres Santiago, Jose M., 100 Years of Don Pedro Albizu Campos
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This biography says:

...In 1994, under the administration of President Bill Clinton, the United States Department of Energy disclosed that human radiation experiments were conducted without consent on prisoners during the 1950s and 1970s...

This biography says:

Pedro Albizu Campos would be jailed again after two events: 1) the revolt of 1950 when a group of Puerto Rican nationalists staged a revolt in the town of Jayuya (known as the Jayuya Uprising) and 2) an attack on La Fortaleza (the Puerto Rican governor's mansion) and Blair House, by nationalist Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola, where president Harry S. Truman was staying while the White House was being renovated...

That biography says:

...In 1932, when Collazo was 18 years old, he again participated in another demonstration commemorating Jose de Diego. This time however, the main speaker was Pedro Albizu Campos, the president of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. That day he was so impressed by Albizu Campos' leadership that he joined the Nationalist Party...

This biography says:

...Albizu was the most vocal and visible Puerto Rican of African descent of his generation; Afro-Puerto Rican leaders of other political extractions (such as Ernesto Ramos Antonini and Jose Celso Barbosa) attained similar status only after facing (and enduring) considerable bouts with racism...

That biography says:

In New York, she became a follower Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, leader of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. Lebrón participated in many of the meetings of nationalist party held in the Puerto Rican barrios of that city...

That biography says:

...His visit lasted from June 1919 to December 1920 and had mixed success. He met the young Harvard-educated leader from Puerto Rico, Pedro Albizu Campos and forged a lasting and useful alliance with him. De Valera managed to raise a sum of $5,500,000 from American supporters, an amount that far exceeded the hopes of the Dáil...

This biography says:

...He met with foreign students and lecturers, like Subhas Chandra Bose (Indian Nationalist leader with Mahatma Gandhi) and the Hindu poet Rabindranath Tagore. He became interested in the cause of Indian independence and also helped to establish several centers in Boston for Irish independence...

This biography says:

...He met with foreign students and lecturers, like Subhas Chandra Bose (Indian Nationalist leader with Mahatma Gandhi) and the Hindu poet Rabindranath Tagore. He became interested in the cause of Indian independence and also helped to establish several centers in Boston for Irish independence...

That biography says:

...In 1936, she joined the Daughters of Freedom, the women's branch of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party (Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico). This was the independence party headed by Pedro Albizu Campos, a Puerto Rican nationalist. Due to time and constraints, her activities had affected her marriage, she and her husband divorced in 1937...

This biography says:

Albizu Campos was born in Tenerías Village in Ponce, Puerto Rico. He was the son of Alejandro Albizu and Juana Campos, and the nephew of danza composer Juan Morel Campos. Albizu Campos was of Afro-Taíno and Basque descent.

That biography says:

...In 2001, Campos was poshumously inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame. His nephew Pedro Albizu Campos went on to become a famous political leader.

That biography says:

After returning from the war, and partly because of the prejudice he experienced within the Army ranks, Daniel became active in the Puerto Rican Independence Movement and identified himself with the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and its president Pedro Albizu Campos. His devotion for Albizu lasted all through his life, to the point of commissioning, later in his life, a full-sized statue of Albizu for his Florida estate...

This biography says:

*Latin American and Caribbean Congress in Solidarity with Puerto Rico’s Independence *Gilberto Concepción de Gracia *Blanca Canales *Puerto Rican Nationalist Party *Ponce Massacre *History of Puerto Rico *Private Leslie Coffelt * Puerto Rican Independence Party

That biography says:

...Before graduating, she attended a conference given by the President of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party, Pedro Albizu Campos, and was very impressed. Canales returned to the university that same year to take a course in social work.

That biography says:

...Another faction that confronted Muñoz for his change of status preference was the Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico, led by Pedro Albizu Campos. On October 30, 1950 a group of Puerto Rican nationalists staged a revolt which took control of the mountain town of Jayuya (in what has since been called the Jayuya Uprising), attacked the governor's mansion, La Fortaleza, the United States Capitol and Blair House, where United States President Harry S...

That biography says:

...Betances' remains arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico on August 5, 1920 and a funeral caravan organized by the Nationalist Party transferred the remains from the capital to the town of Cabo Rojo where he was laid to rest. In 1924 Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos joined the party and was named vice-president....

That biography says:

Gilberto Concepción de Gracia worked as a lawyer specializing in civil and constitutional law. In 1936, at the age of 25, he moved to New York to represent Pedro Albizu Campos and other members of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party, who were at the time jailed and appealing their case...

This biography says:

Pedro Albizu Campos had very good relationships with many prominent figures of Latin American politics. Nobel Prize laureate and admirer of Albizu Campos, Gabriela Mistral, presented a tamarind tree to Albizu Campos as a symbol of her support for the Puerto Rican Independence Movement...

That biography says:

...Mari Brás became the president of the party's "Puerto Rican Independence Youth". In 1948, the university's pro-independence student body invited nationalist leader Pedro Albizu Campos to the Río Piedras campus as a guest speaker. The president of the university, Jaime Benítez, did not permit Albizu access to the campus...

That biography says:

...In 1934, Canales enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico. During his university years he met and befriended Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, leader of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. This led to his active participation in the pro-independence movement...
How is Pedro Albizu Campos connected to Hayuya? Tell the world.

That biography says:

Delgado enrolled and was accepted in the University of Puerto Rico where he befriended Puerto Rican poet and Nationalist Juan Antonio Corretjer. Delgado became a pro-independence political activist and follower of Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos. He was a member of the "Cadetes de la República" (Cadets of the Republic), the youth organization of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party...

This biography says:

...In 1919, Albizu returned to Harvard University and was elected president of Harvard's Cosmopolitan Club. He met with foreign students and lecturers, like Subhas Chandra Bose (Indian Nationalist leader with Mahatma Gandhi) and the Hindu poet Rabindranath Tagore. He became interested in the cause of Indian independence and also helped to establish several centers in Boston for Irish independence...

That biography says:

...Eddie was buried in the old San Juan cemetery, along side Puerto Rican heroes like Jose de Diego, and Pedro Albizu Campos. His funeral was attended by governors, senators, colleagues, and members of the media....