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With
profound sorrow, the leadership of our Party and
State announce that Comrade Vilma Espín Guillois,
a heroine of the clandestine struggle, an
outstanding combatant of the Rebel Army and an
untiring fighter for the emancipation of women
and the defense of the rights of children,
passed away in Havana on Monday, at 4:14 p.m.,
after a long and painful illness.
Vilma was born in Santiago de Cuba on April 7,
1930 in a family that very early on cultivated
the values and ethics that would distinguish
her. From a young age she assumed political and
revolutionary positions, actively participating
in student demonstrations following the coup
d'etat carried out by Batista in 1952.
From that time, she was an inseparable
collaborator of Frank Pais, joining
organizations founded by him in the struggle
against the tyranny, until the members of what
was then called the National Revolutionary
Action joined the ranks of the 26th
of July Movement.
The doors of her home were opened to protect the
comrades who attacked the Moncada Barracks
persecuted by troops of the bloody oppressor
regime. After finishing a post-graduate course
in the United States and as the struggle entered
a new stage, Vilma, following the directions of
the leadership of the Movement, stopped in
Mexico to meet with Fidel, receiving
instructions and messages. Under the direct
orders of Frank, she took part in the armed
uprising of Santiago de Cuba on November 30,
1956, in support of the expeditionary force
arriving on the Granma yacht. Following
that important action she converted her home
into the headquarters of the revolutionary
movement in Santiago de Cuba.
A member of the National Leadership of the 26th
of July Movement, just before Frank Pais was
assassinated, she was named the Provincial
Coordinator of the clandestine organization in
what was then the eastern province of Oriente, a
role that she carried out with particular skill
and bravery, facing constant danger and
persecution, until she joined the Rebel Army in
June 1958, becoming the legendary guerrilla
fighter of the Frank Pais Second Western Front
and the effective coordinator of the clandestine
movement of Oriente.
Upon the triumph of the Revolution in 1959, and
immersed in various tasks assigned by Fidel, she
headed the unification of women's organizations
and the stetting-up of the Federation of Cuban
Women (FMC). She tirelessly led the organization
until the last minute of her life.
She was a member of the Central Committee of the
Party from its foundation in 1965, which was
ratified in all of its Congresses. At the Second
Congress of the Party in 1980 she was elected
substitute member of the Politburo. At the Third
Party Congress she was promoted as a full member
of the leadership, a responsibility she held
until 1991. She was a member of the National
Assembly since its first legislature and a
member of the Council of State since its
constitution.
Vilma presided over the National Commission of
Prevention and Social Attention from its
creation and the Commission of Children and
Youth, as well as the Commission on Women's
Equal Rights of the National Assembly of
People's Power.
Her name will be eternally linked to the most
significant conquests of Cuban women in the
Revolution and as one of the most important
fighters for the emancipation of women in our
country and throughout the world.
For her merits, she received many awards and
national and international orders, among them
the honorary title of Heroine of the Republic of
Cuba.
According to her wishes, Comrade Vilma Espín
will be cremated. Her ashes will be deposited in
a ceremony that will be strictly for her family,
and burial will be with military honors, at a
time that will be announced later, in the
Mausoleum of the Frank Pais Second Front, with
the remains of other heroic combatants of the
Front, in which she was one of is most
outstanding members.
In her memory, our people, with profound
feelings of sorrow, will render a heartfelt
homage at the Jose Marti Memorial in Havana and
at the Salon de los Vitrales, at the base of the
monument to Antonio Maceo, in her native and
heroic city, Santiago de Cuba, beginning at 9
a.m. and lasting until 5 p.m., today, June 19.
At the same time, homage will be paid to her
throughout the rest of the provinces.
In her honor, the leadership of the Communist
Party and Cuban State has decided to observe a
solemn ceremony at the Karl Marx Theater, today
at 6:00 p.m., headed by leaders, the National
Leadership of the FMC and the provincial
Secretariats of this women's organization, as
well as women of the capital and representatives
of the diverse sectors of Cuban society.
(Translation taken from Radio Havana Cuba)
(Granma)
19-06-2007
Cuban heroine Vilma Espín Guillois dies.
The builder, from its foundations, of a new
society
BY MARTA ROJAS
VILMA
has died. She has moved on to another category
of the beloved. We are still struggling with the
certainty of her death, after her stoic battle
for life – which, in reality, has belonged for
many years now not just to her but also to Cuba
– and for whatever just idea that appealed to
her in any part of the world; a life that she
lavished wherever she thought it could be
useful.
Vilma Espín Guillois is now a revolutionary
icon, something that her simplicity never
allowed her to even imagine, because one of her
great personal and revolutionary virtues was
that: modesty.
An exponent of the valor and intelligence of the
vanguard women who emerged in the Centenary
Generation has departed this life. One single
detail will permit us to discover that her
revolutionary activities unfolded during that
historic time, the year of the centenary of José
Martí. Specifically, when the student Rubén
Batista died in Havana from injuries sustained
in a student demonstration honoring the bust of
Julio Antonio Mella, desecrated with impunity,
on January 10, 1953. Like all of those young
people who would later follow Fidel, she had
spoken out against the perfidious military coup
of March 10, 1952 perpetrated by Fulgencio
Batista, although it is disagreeable for us, in
these initial paragraphs dedicated to Vilma, to
mention the name of the individual who led that
cruel blow and established a bloody
dictatorship.
Vilma, a pleasant and profound
conversationalist, recounted one day that after
that March 10, the first demonstrations began in
the streets of her hometown of Santiago de Cuba
— she did not mention that she was one of the
organizers; in one of the first, if not the
first, she took to the streets to protest the
death of Rubén Batista. She told how on that
occasion, a symbolic funeral was held in
Santiago, and that action ended in a veritable
battle against the dictator’s thugs. The idea
had been to take flowers to the cemetery, but it
ended in the young revolutionaries taking
shelter in cafés, throwing sugar bowls at the
police.
That episode would be sufficient to include
Vilma among the heroic revolutionary combatants
of the Centenary Generation. Interestingly,
during Rubén Batista’s final moments at the
Student Clinic in Calixto García Hospital,
another Santiago native, Renato Guitart, met
Fidel, and later became one of the advance party
of the revolutionary movement that assaulted the
Moncada Garrison that year. And during that
action, the young Vilma, hearing the shots
without knowing what was happening, affirmed to
her father in their home on San Jerónimo Street
that the Moncada was being attacked. A few hours
later, it was confirmed. Later, nothing would
intimidate her from approaching one of the
garrison’s posts and asking the impossible, to
be able to see the heroes. The response left her
and the other women with her with no alternative
other than to quickly retreat and even so, two
of them were arrested. Her intuition and swift
reactions allowed her to escape on a city bus
and lose herself in the city until she was able
to return home without being identified. The
heroic clandestine combatant was emerging in the
Heroic City.
During those days of horror, Santiago de Cuba
took in, with an attitude of solidarity, the
combatants pursued by Batista’s soldiers, who
had already murdered dozens of young people in
the dungeons of the Moncada. Vilma’s house, too,
was open to take in and protect any of those
heroic participants in the attack who sought
refuge.
Acción Revolucionaria Oriental (Eastern
Revolutionary Action), an organization created
by Frank País, was the first that Vilma joined,
as an active founder, after the assault on the
Moncada. Later, it became the future 26th of
July Revolutionary Movement where she would
develop her talents as an organizer and
combatant. The M-26-7 carried out the broadest
and most daring range of tasks. It was a channel
for her deep patriotic, social and humanistic
sentiments. She herself reiterated on various
occasions that in the initial years of her
revolutionary youth, there were two events that
deeply moved her: the Moncada attack on July 26,
1953, and History Will Absolve Me, making
her realize that Fidel was a valiant leader and
a man of ideas, with a consistent political
development and great firmness of revolutionary
principles.
And she – who was she? A young woman who was
capable and educated in the broadest sense of
the word. Her vocation and scientific interest,
in the service of industrial development, joined
with her love for the arts: music, song,
painting and ballet, mainly. But she was also
enthusiastic about sports, hence her successful
performance as volleyball player and captain of
the team at the University of Oriente. In
addition, she was a fervent follower of José
Martí, and she nourished her knowledge, in great
detail, of the campaigns of the Mambí forces and
the revolutionary intransigence of Antonio Maceo.
Conversations with Vilma on these subjects were
always marvelous, and not because of any bookish
knowledge, but in terms of her sentiment, which
was contagious given her communicative style. In
her soft tone, with the cadence of her voice,
loved and respected, she was capable of
providing a fresco of our history, whether of
the anticolonial struggles for independence, or
as a republic, from the days of Julio Antonio
Mella.
Her education began at home. She was born in
Santiago de Cuba on April 7, 1930, into a
well-to-do family. She could have been a simple
“society” girl, but the education she received,
together with her own sentiments and
personality, made her a revolutionary leader.
Her parents were generous and friendly people,
understanding with their children —six— and left
a trail of affection and respect among everyone
from any background who knew them. In Santiago,
Espín was referred to as the honorary consul of
France, whose home was open to Haitian
immigrants, so discriminated against by the
elite society of that time. They brought up
their children under the influence of their own
example of austerity, human sensitivity and
respect, without any type of barrier due to
social, racial or religious background. Their
children grew up according to the way they were
and their personal inclinations with respect to
choosing higher education, friendships,
political positions and social and cultural
activities.
For Vilma, once she was a mother, it was not
difficult to create a home with similar
characteristics, an exemplary one.
Education was always a premise in her home, and
Vilma chose to study a scientific discipline in
college: chemical/industrial engineering. Very
few women were enrolled in that major. She
conquered it magnificently, graduating on July
14, 1954, without neglecting her participation
in the cultural and sporting events that she
enjoyed at the University of Oriente, including
her active participation in the University
Choir. Upon graduating, she became one of the
two first women chemical-industrial engineers in
Cuba. That same year, she traveled to the United
States for postgraduate study at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in
Boston. When she finished her course, she asked
for instructions from the leadership of the 26th
of July Movement, and the response was for her
to head for Mexico to meet with Fidel and bring
his orders and messages back to Cuba. That was
the moment when the Granma expedition was
being organized.
That was how Vilma’s student life ended and her
complete commitment to the Revolution began,
without any time to exercise her solid training
as an engineer.
Under the orders of Frank País, she participated
in organizing the armed uprising of Santiago de
Cuba that took place on November 30. She was a
pillar in that essential action, planned to
coincide with the arrival in Cuba from Mexico of
the Granma expedition under the
leadership of Commander Fidel Castro Ruz. Her
serenity, courage and movement capability
distinguish the role played by Vilma.
In was in January 1957 that the enemy detected
her, and her home, which had become the
headquarters of the Movement, was searched for
the first time. Vilma had led a march of mothers
in mourning, protesting the many murders
committed by the dictatorship in a face-to-face
confrontation with Batista’s thugs, many of whom
were the notorious torturers and merciless
murderers of the prisoners in the Moncada and
whose criminal records had continued to grow.
There is one event in the history of the
Revolution that is known all over the world.
Vilma is present in it.
It was in February 1957 that Fidel summoned the
clandestine leadership of the 26th of July
Movement to a meeting in the Sierra Maestra
mountains, and drafted a manifesto to the people
of Cuba, informing them of the creation of the
Rebel Army and the purpose of its struggle. It
was also at that time that the transcendental
interview of Fidel by U.S. journalist Herbert
Mathews took place, demonstrating to the world
that Batista government was lying when it said
the revolutionary leader was dead. Vilma was
present at the meeting and actively participated
in carrying out the orders that Fidel gave Frank
País; later, she went completely underground.
She was subsequently designated a member of the
National Leadership of the 26th of July
Movement, and shortly before Frank País was
assassinated, the essential “Déborah” [her
clandestine name] was appointed as the
movement’s coordinator in Oriente province, a
task she carried out until June 1958. The danger
of her situation as head of clandestine
revolutionary missions became unsustainable,
requiring a change of location for her struggle,
and she joined the Rebel Army, becoming the
legendary guerrilla fighter in the Frank País
2nd Eastern Front, commanded by Raúl Castro Ruz.
Déborah, Alicia, Mónica, were the names she used
while operating underground, and she became
Mariela, the brave and efficient rebel
combatant, charged during the month of July 1958
with tasks supporting the leadership, related to
the process of returning a group of U.S.
citizens who had been kidnapped. Later, she was
assigned – among many other responsibilities –
with attention to and organization of the
clandestine movement in the eastern
municipalities located in the vast territorial
expanse of the Rebel Army’s 2nd Front. That was
essential, given that those areas provided
indispensable logistical support for ensuring
combat actions. As with every task she carried
out in her life, she carried this one out
conscientiously.
BUILDER OF A NEW SOCIETY
In the early days of the triumph of the
Revolution, Vilma and Raúl married. At a time
like this, 45 years ago, Déborah, their
firstborn, was one of the first to enter, as one
infant more, the Los Compañeritos Day Care
Center on the ground floor of the Ministry of
Labor. The Federation of Cuban Women (FMC) had
already been created (August 23, 1960) and the
task of organizing Day Care Centers was given by
the Revolution to the FMC under the direction of
Wilma Espín. Prior to that, likewise in the
early days of the Revolution—in 1959 – still
wearing campaign uniform, as Déborah,
Vilma was involved in various tasks as a leader
of the 26th of July Movement, and a group
approached her with the idea of exchanging ideas
and – so as not to left behind – to make
Revolution by working voluntarily. She took that
concern to Fidel who, with his brilliant vision
of the role of women in society and history, saw
the importance of a social movement that would
include half of the Cuban population.
In 1959, Vilma created and presided over the
Auspices Committee in order to participate in
the 1st Latin American Congress for the Rights
of Women and Children, convened by the
International Democratic Federation of Women.
This congress took place in Santiago de Chile.
It was a platform that would serve as a base for
unifying all the existing revolutionary women’s
groups at that time.
In Cuba the work never stopped. Vilma knew how
to lead and thus created cadres that would form
a broad platform to take the organization to the
farthest corners of the island and from there be
nourished by grass-roots women who, up until
then, had never participated in the country’s
social and political life.
On August 23, 1960, after intensive preparatory
work nationwide – in rural, mountainous or
swampy areas – the Federation of Cuban Women was
officially created (FMC). During the first 15
months of work, the nascent organization, still
embryonic, had mobilized women en masse for the
construction of schools and hospitals; to
collect up and take care of unsupported children
wandering the streets at the triumph of the
Revolution; to improve living standards in the
so-called “destitute” barrios; and other social
tasks.
Vilma was elected president of the FMC by its
founding assembly, a position ratified at every
FMC Congress, from the first in 1962 to the
seventh in 2000.
The history of the FMC is an important part of
Vilma’s life. Although she did not exercise her
career as an industrial engineer, she had a
voice in programs of the Revolution of a
technical or economic nature. But her central
task was political and social in the widest
sense.
The initial tasks of the new organization were
to promote educational, ideological and cultural
training for women. Campesino women arrived in
Havana from the Sierra Maestra and other remote
areas and took classes in hairdressing and
dressmaking. At least to start off with, every
woman would have a sewing machine. There was a
meeting in Sports City. The jubilation was
extraordinary; it was the incipient beginning of
a road that took thousands of campesino women to
a different life, one of full participation in
the country’s economy.
In the wake of those courses the most humble
women were offered other studies as the first
forms of participation outside of the home.
Those women, who had never left the narrow
family environment, discovered a new world.
Vilma was one of Fidel’s most enthusiastic
collaborators in promoting knowledge and
cultural education and, logically, she began
with literacy teaching. Thus she was a member of
the National Literacy Commission and placed the
new mass organization at the center of the
colossal battle waged for all the people. With
that goal fulfilled, others were taken on, such
as the follow-up, battles for sixth and ninth
grade and classrooms for adult education, all of
them filled with women. Vilma’s work was not
passive. Someone like her who, at risk of death,
drove all over Oriente province in tasks as a
clandestine combatant, or walked through the
streets on difficult functions as a member of
the M-26-7 National Directorate, couldn’t spend
her time behind a desk. Thus Vilma toured the
entire country, and took part in mobilizations
with grass-roots delegations. She attended to
women who were part of the Rebel Army and young
people incorporated into defense tasks.
Vilma Espín gave special attention to women’s
military training, including their incorporation
as professionals in the Revolutionary Armed
Forces. No task on that front could be more
complex for a woman who did what she did,
pursued by the brutal dictatorship of Fulgencio
Batista, the unconditional servant of U.S.
imperialism.
As a cornerstone of the unity of women all over
the world in favor of revolutionary causes,
internationalism is fundamental and would find
in Vilma a promoter and participant in every
action in that context. The revolutionary war in
South Vietnam for its liberation and the equally
heroic resistance of the then Democratic
Republic of Vietnam in defense of its
sovereignty in the face of the merciless U.S.
aggression, had in Vilma an effective
collaborator, as did members of women’s
movements in Asia, Africa and Latin America. To
that end, among other things, she created the Fe
del Valle Cadres School, currently the FMC
Further Education Center.
Her struggle to attain an understanding of
gender equality began in the early days of the
triumph of the Revolution. With that objective,
she headed the great ideological battle that was
being waged in the country to eliminate the
retrograde effect of culture inherited from the
past on gender roles, with its consequent
prejudices, erroneous beliefs, traditional
sexual stereotypes and taboos, in order to make
real the revolutionary principles that condemn
every kind of discrimination of a social,
ethnic, gender, religious, sexual orientation
origin and any other expression of inequality or
pejorative treatment.
The list, still brief, of the values of this
revolutionary woman who has just died,
demonstrates to us that we should take into
account the great loss we have suffered.
However, the knowledge of her thoughts, actions
and projection will be a school for actively
continuing her example.
The organizations, national and international
projects in which Vilma personally participated
throughout the history of the Revolution are
numerous.
Someone like her who was so capable and creative
in an underground revolutionary organization was
just the same in a legislative organization. It
is not about a list of responsibilities.
However important these may have been, the valid
point is the work she carried out in her duties,
whether as a deputy at the National Assembly and
member of the Council of State, the highest
governmental organization in the country, or as
part of the Central Committee of the Communist
Party of Cuba, of which she was a founding
member and at the Second Congress (1980) became
a reserve member of the Political Bureau. At the
3rd Congress, she was promoted to effective
membership, a responsibility she carried out
until 1991.
A special chapter should be dedicated to her
duties of a diplomatic nature, or those
connected to foreign relations on all continents
at different times and at the head of Cuban
delegations.
FAMILY ENVIRONMENT
As has been mentioned above, in 1959 Vilma and
the then Commander Raúl Castro Ruz, head of the
Frank País 2nd Eastern Front and, from October
1959, minister of the Revolutionary Armed
Forces, were married. They raised a family
currently consisting of four children and eight
grandchildren. Vilma always trusted in the value
of setting an example for the education and
raising of children, and was consistent with
this principle in the education and raising of
her own children. She was a mother, friend and
comrade. Her children and grandchildren love her
and will continue to love her, admire her and
will continue to admire her; even more so now,
for her legacy: the wisdom she possessed in
creating harmony, the most just and humane
sentiments, with a steely strength of character
and her revolutionary intransigence in the
defense of important decisions, in defending the
principles and the work of the Revolution, both
with respect to great tasks and in important
day-to-day work.
Vilma Espín Guillois was an exceptional Cuban
woman; a representative of the most elevated
human values dedicated with creativity and
passion to her homeland, to the Revolution that
she lived from her heroic and risky beginnings
with Fidel’s leadership; to her family, and to
all our people, with the generosity that
distinguishes all great men and women.
Hasta siempre
Vilma, the builder, from its very foundations,
of a new society.
(Granma) 19-06-2007
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