The resurrection of Simón Bolívar
Latin America’s Go-To Hero
By MARIE ARANA, NYT
Can you name an American founder whose name is shouted in the streets, whose legacy inspires fanatical worship, whose image is used to bolster ideals not his own, whose mantle is claimed by both left and right? There is no Washington party, no Jeffersonian republic. No one runs for president in Madison’s name. But in Latin America, as the Venezuelan election on Sunday reminded us, the question is easy, and the answer is Simón Bolívar.
The past is very present in Latin America. Although Bolívar rode 75,000 miles to win the freedom of what are now six nations, his vision for a unified continent was never realized. In time, he was shunted to ignominy; a rigid racial hierarchy replaced Spain’s haughty overlords; the vast, powerful union he imagined spun into a riot of bickering caudillos; and although (with a higher moral instinct than Washington or Jefferson) he ended slavery more than a half-century before the Emancipation Proclamation, his dream vanished like a fickle specter. But his revolution grinds on.
Time has a way of tweaking history. In the United States, the anticolonial Tea Party was appropriated by those who wanted to turn back the clock. In Venezuela, Bolívar was retrofitted by the late Hugo Chávez into “Bolivarianismo,” a mix of anti-capitalism and free-handout socialism that has crippled the nation — the opposite of what Bolívar had in mind.
Chávez wasn’t the first Venezuelan leader to assume Bolívar’s mantle: José Antonio Páez did so in 1842 when his own presidency was faltering. The old general had the bones of Bolívar, a onetime nemesis, exhumed in Colombia and brought to Caracas with fanfare, and then proceeded to bask in (as one of Bolívar’s adjutants called it) “the magic of his prestige.” Later, Antonio Guzmán Blanco, who embodied everything Bolívar despised — corruption, pomposity, Freemasonry and anticlericalism — exhumed Bolívar again, installed him in the National Pantheon, and presided bombastically over the centenary of his birth. The strongman went on to rule for a total of 18 years in the 1870s and 1880s.
(More here.)
Can you name an American founder whose name is shouted in the streets, whose legacy inspires fanatical worship, whose image is used to bolster ideals not his own, whose mantle is claimed by both left and right? There is no Washington party, no Jeffersonian republic. No one runs for president in Madison’s name. But in Latin America, as the Venezuelan election on Sunday reminded us, the question is easy, and the answer is Simón Bolívar.
The past is very present in Latin America. Although Bolívar rode 75,000 miles to win the freedom of what are now six nations, his vision for a unified continent was never realized. In time, he was shunted to ignominy; a rigid racial hierarchy replaced Spain’s haughty overlords; the vast, powerful union he imagined spun into a riot of bickering caudillos; and although (with a higher moral instinct than Washington or Jefferson) he ended slavery more than a half-century before the Emancipation Proclamation, his dream vanished like a fickle specter. But his revolution grinds on.
Time has a way of tweaking history. In the United States, the anticolonial Tea Party was appropriated by those who wanted to turn back the clock. In Venezuela, Bolívar was retrofitted by the late Hugo Chávez into “Bolivarianismo,” a mix of anti-capitalism and free-handout socialism that has crippled the nation — the opposite of what Bolívar had in mind.
Chávez wasn’t the first Venezuelan leader to assume Bolívar’s mantle: José Antonio Páez did so in 1842 when his own presidency was faltering. The old general had the bones of Bolívar, a onetime nemesis, exhumed in Colombia and brought to Caracas with fanfare, and then proceeded to bask in (as one of Bolívar’s adjutants called it) “the magic of his prestige.” Later, Antonio Guzmán Blanco, who embodied everything Bolívar despised — corruption, pomposity, Freemasonry and anticlericalism — exhumed Bolívar again, installed him in the National Pantheon, and presided bombastically over the centenary of his birth. The strongman went on to rule for a total of 18 years in the 1870s and 1880s.
(More here.)
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