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|A book by [[Mario Vargas Llosa]], set in the Dominican Republic and portraying the assassination of the Dominican dictator, and its aftermath, from two distinct standpoints a generation apart: during and immediately after the assassination itself, in May 1961; and thirty years later, in 1996.
|A book by [[Mario Vargas Llosa]], set in the Dominican Republic and portraying the assassination of the Dominican dictator, and its aftermath, from two distinct standpoints a generation apart: during and immediately after the assassination itself, in May 1961; and thirty years later, in 1996.
|}
|}
book; IN THE TIME BUTTERFLIES BY JULIA ALVEREZ


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:14, 14 July 2009

This article is about the former ruler of the Dominican Republic. For other persons see Rafael Trujillo (disambiguation).
Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina
File:Rafael Leonidas Trujillo.jpg
36th & 39th President of the Dominican Republic
In office
August 16, 1930 – May 30, 1938
May 18, 1942 – August 16, 1952
Preceded byHoracio Vásquez
Manuel Troncoso de la Concha
Succeeded byJacinto Peynado
Héctor Trujillo
Personal details
BornOctober 24, 1891 (1891-10-24)
San Cristóbal, Dominican Republic
DiedMay 30, 1961 (1961-05-31) (aged 69)
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
NationalityDominican
Political partyDominican Party
SpouseMaria Martínez de Trujillo
ResidenceSanto Domingo
Professionsoldier

Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina (October 24, 1891 – May 30, 1961) ruled the Dominican Republic from 1930 until his assassination in 1961.[1] He officially served as president from 1930 to 1938 and again from 1942 to 1952, ruling for the rest of his tenure in office as an unelected military strongman. His tyranny, historically known as "La Era de Trujillo" or "The Trujillo Era," is considered one of the bloodiest of the 20th century, as well as a time of a classic personality cult, when monuments to Rafael Trujillo were in abundance.

Family

Trujillo was born and raised in San Cristóbal to José Trujillo Valdez, a small retailer possibly of Canary origin, and Altagracia Julia Molina Chevalier, later known as Mamá Julia, whose mother was half-Haitian. Trujillo later suppressed knowledge of his mother's ancestry due to his ordered massacre of Haitians. He was also related to the Abreus family. He was the third of eleven children. His siblings were Rosa María Julieta, Virgilio, José "Petán" Arismendy, Amable "Pipi" Romero, Aníbal Julio, Nieves Luisa, Pedro Vetilio, Ofelia Japonesa, and Héctor "Negro" Bienvenido Trujillo Molina.[citation needed]

Trujillo with his second wife Bienvenida in 1934.

On August 13, 1913, at the age of 22 Trujillo married Aminta Ledesma, a reputable young girl from his hometown of San Cristobal. They had two daughters; Genoveva who was born, and died, in 1914, and Flor de Oro Trujillo Ledesma, born in 1915, who later married Porfirio Rubirosa.

Trujillo married Bienvenida Ricardo March 30, 1927, a girl from Montecristi and the daughter of Buenaventura Ricardo Heureaux. A year later he met Maria de los Angeles Martínez Alba, la españolita, and had an affair with her. She gave birth to Rafael Leonidas Ramfis on June 5, 1929. He divorced Bienvenida in 1935 and married Martínez. A year later he had a daughter with Bienvenida, Odette Trujillo Ricardo.

Trujillo's second child with Maria Martínez was María de los Angeles, Angelita, born in Paris on June 10, 1939, and Leonidas Rhadamés, born on December 1, 1942. Ramfis and Rhadamés were named after characters in Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida.

In 1937, Trujillo met Lina Lovatón Pittaluga,[2] an upper-class debutante with whom he had two children, Yolanda in 1939, and Rafael born on June 20, 1943.

Two of Trujillo's brothers, Héctor and José Arismendy, held positions in his government. José Arismendy Trujillo oversaw the creation of "La Voz Dominicana," the main radio station and later, the television station which became the fourth in the continent.

Early life

His childhood passed relatively without incidents. His basic education was irregular and quite limited. At six he was registered in the school of Juan Hilario Meriño. One year later he transferred to the school of Broughton, a disciple of Eugenio María de Hostos, and remained there for three or four years. They said that Trujillo was a normal student and their professors thought that he was unintelligent.[citation needed]

At sixteen Trujillo got a job as a Morse code telegraph operator. He became a member of, "The 44", a small gang based in Dominica.[3]

In 1916, the U.S. occupied the island due to threats of defaulting on foreign debts. The occupying force soon established a Dominican army constabulary to restore order. Seeing opportunity Trujillo impressed the recruiters and was soon promoted through the ranks. When U.S. troops left the island in 1924, they left Trujillo in charge.[3]

Rise to power

File:PartidodeTrujillo.jpg
Poster of Trujillo, representing the Dominican Party.

The rebellion against President Vázquez broke out in 1930 in Santiago, and the rebels marched toward Santo Domingo. Trujillo was ordered to subdue the rebellion, but when the mutineers arrived to the capital on February 26, they encountered no resistance. Rebel leader Rafael Estrella was proclaimed as acting-president when Váz resigned. Trujillo then became the nominee of the newly-formed Dominican Party in the 1930 presidential election. He won on May 16, officially registering 95 percent of the vote — an implausibly high total that could have only been obtained by means of massive fraud. A judge actually declared the election fraudulent, but was forced to flee.[4] On August 16, the then 38-year-old general took office, wearing a sash with the motto, "Dios y Trujillo" (God & Trujillo). He immediately assumed dictatorial powers.

Trujillo government

Three weeks later, the destructive San Zenon hurricane hit Santo Domingo and left more than 3,000 dead. With relief money from the American Red Cross, Trujillo rebuilt the city. On August 16, 1931, the first anniversary of his inauguration, Trujillo made the Dominican Party the sole legal political party. However, the country had effectively been a one-party state since Trujillo had been sworn in. Government employees were required to "donate" 10 percent of their salary to the national treasury,[4][5] and there was strong pressure on adult citizens to join the party. Party members were required to carry a membership card, the "palmita," and a person could be arrested for vagrancy without the card. Those who did not contribute, or join the party, did so at their own risk. Opponents of the regime were mysteriously killed. In 1934, Trujillo, who had promoted himself to generalissimo of the army, was up for re-election. Although he would have won in any case as there was virtually no organized opposition left in the country, Trujillo dispensed even with these formalities. Instead, he relied upon "civic reviews," with large crowds shouting their loyalty to the government.[4]

Cult of personality

At the suggestion of Mario Fermín Cabral, Congress voted overwhelmingly in 1936 to rename the capital from Santo Domingo to Ciudad Trujillo. The province of San Cristobal was created as "Trujillo," and the nation's highest peak, Pico Duarte, was renamed in his honor. Statues of "El Jefe" were mass produced and erected across the Republic, and bridges and public buildings were named in his honor. The nation's newspapers now had praise for Trujillo as part of the front page, and license plates included the slogan "Viva Trujillo!" An electric sign was erected in Ciudad Trujillo so that "Dios y Trujillo" could be seen at night as well as in the day. Eventually, even churches were required to post the slogan, "Dios en cielo, Trujillo en tierra" (God in Heaven, Trujillo on Earth). As time went on, the order was reversed (Trujillo on Earth, God in Heaven). Trujillo was recommended for the Nobel Peace Prize by his admirers, but the committee declined the suggestion. When he received (or summoned) a visitor, his four bodyguards would have submachineguns trained upon the "guest" during a meeting.[6]

Trujillo was eligible to run again in 1938, but, citing the U.S. example of two presidential terms, he stated that "I voluntarily, and against the wishes of my people, refuse re-election to the high office."[6] The Dominican Party nominated Trujillo's handpicked successor, 71 year old vice-president Jacinto Bienvenido Peynado. As the government had banned all other political parties, the election of Peynado and Manuel de Jesús Troncoso was merely a formality. Meanwhile, Trujillo limited himself to being the "Generalisimo" while only nominally ceding control to President Peynado. Peynado increased the size of the electric "Dios y Trujillo" sign and died on March 7, 1940, with Troncoso serving out the rest of the term. In 1942, with President Franklin D. Roosevelt having run for a third term in the United States, Trujillo ran for president again and won overwhelmingly. He served two terms, having lengthened a presidential term to five years. In 1952, his brother, Héctor Trujillo, nominally assumed the presidency.

His daughter Angelita was designated "queen" of the 1955 "International Fair of Peace and Fraternity of the World," a pompous event that cost US$30 million. Fair organizers declared Trujillo's semi-literate wife María Martínez a 'writer and philosopher'.[citation needed]

Immigration

Trujillo was known for his open-door policy, accepting Jewish refugees from Europe, Japanese migration during the 1930s, and exiles from Spain following its civil war. He developed a uniquely Dominican policy of racial discrimination, Antihaitianismo ("anti-Haitian"), targeting the mostly-black inhabitants of his neighboring country.

Refugees from Europe broadened the Dominican Republic's tax base and "whiten[ed]" the mixed-race nation. The government favored Caucasian refugees over others while Dominican troops expelled illegal aliens, resulting in the 1937 Parsley Massacre of Haitian cane-workers.

Environmental policy

The Trujillo regime greatly expanded the Vedado del Yaque a nature reserve around the Yaque del Sur River. In 1934 he created the nation's first national park, banned the slash and burn method of clearing land for agriculture, set up a forest warden agency to protect the park system, and banned the logging of pine trees without his permission. While he acted in the name of environmentalism, he probably wanted to create logging monopolies for his private companies. In the 1950s the Trujillo regime commissioned a study on the hydro-electric potential of damming Dominica's waterways. The commission concluded that only forested waterways could support hydroelectric dams so Trujillo banned logging in potential river watersheds. After his assassination in 1961, logging resumed in the Dominican Republic. Squatters burned down the forests for agriculture, logging companies clear cut parks, and potential hydro electrical watersheds thus reducing the Dominican Republic's potential generation of hydro-electric energy. In 1967, Joaquín Balaguer launched military strikes against illegal logging.[5]

Foreign policy

Trujillo's anti-communism tended toward a peaceful coexistence with the United States government. During World War II Trujillo sided with the Allies. Trujillo encouraged diplomatic and economic ties with the U.S., but his policies often caused friction with other nations of Latin America, especially Costa Rica and Venezuela.

Parsley Massacre

In 1937, claiming that Haiti was harboring his former Dominican opponents, Trujillo ordered an attack on the border, slaughtering tens of thousands of Haitians as they tried to escape. The number of the dead is still unknown, though it is now calculated between 20,000[7] and 30,000.[8] Trujillo hoped for a war with Haiti and control over the entire island of Hispaniola. U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Haitian President Sténio Vincent sought reparations of US$750,000, of which only US$525,000 (US$ 11,127,083.33 in 2024) were ever paid; 30 dollars per victim, of which only 2 cents were given to survivors, due to corruption in the Haitian bureaucracy.[6][9]

Trujillo paid special attention to improving the armed forces. Military personnel received generous pay and perks under his rule, and their ranks as well as equipment inventories expanded. Trujillo maintained control over the officer corps through fear, patronage, and the frequent rotation of assignments, which inhibited the development of strong personal followings. The establishment of state monopolies over all major enterprises in the country brought riches to the Trujillos through price manipulation and embezzlement.

Betancourt incident

By the late 1950s, opposition to Trujillo's regime was starting to build to a fever pitch. A younger generation of Dominicans had been born who had no memory of the instability and poverty that had preceded him. Many clamored for democractization. The Trujillo regime responded with greater repression. The Intelligence Military Service (SIM) secret police, led by Johnny Abbes, remained as ubiquitous as before. Other nations ostracized the Dominican Republic, compounding the dictator's paranoia.

Trujillo began to interfere more and more into the domestic affairs of other neighboring countries. Fidel Castro of Cuba assisted a small, abortive invasion attempt by dissident Dominicans in 1959. Trujillo, however, expressed greater contempt for Venezuela's president Rómulo Betancourt (1959-64). An established and outspoken opponent of Trujillo, Betancourt associated with Dominicans who had plotted against the dictator. Trujillo developed an obsessive personal hatred of Betancourt and supported numerous plots of Venezuelan exiles to overthrow him. This pattern of intervention led the Venezuelan government to take its case against Trujillo to the Organization of American States (OAS). This development infuriated Trujillo, who ordered his foreign agents to plant a bomb inside Betancourt's car. The assassination attempt, carried out on June 24, 1960, injured but did not kill the Venezuelan president.

The firestorm caused by the Betancourt incident inflamed world opinion against Trujillo. Outraged OAS members voted unanimously to sever diplomatic relations with Trujilloa's government and impose economic sanctions on the Dominican Republic. The brutal November 25, 1960 murder of the three Mirabal sisters, Patria, María and Minerva, who opposed Trujillo's dictatorship, inflamed widespread discontent against his repressive rule.

Assassination

On the night of May 30, 1961, Rafael Trujillo was shot to death on San Cristobal Avenue, Santo Domingo. He was the victim of an ambush plotted by Modesto Diaz, Salvador Estrella Sadhalá, Antonio de la Maza, Amado Garcí Guerrero, Manuel Cáceres Michel (Tunti), Juan Tomás Diaz, Roberto Pastoriza, Luis Amiama Tió, Antonio Imbert Barrera, Pedro Livio Cedeño, and Huáscar Tejeda. According to U.S. reporter Bernard Diederich, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) planned the operation to kill the dictator. In a report to the Deputy Attorney General of the United States, CIA officials described the agency as having "no active part" in the assassination and only a "faint connection" with the groups that planned the killing.[10] However, an internal CIA memorandum states that an Office of Inspector General investigation into Trujillo's murder disclosed "quite extensive Agency involvement with the plotters."[11] A key scholarly book on the Dominican Republic states that "the CIA arranged, planned and executed the assassination" using their elite paramilitary operations officers from the famed Special Activities Division.[12]

Trujillo's family tried to flee with his body upon his boat Angelita, but were turned back. His funeral was that of a statesman with the long procession ending in his hometown of San Cristóbal, where his body was first buried. Then-president Joaquín Balaguer gave the eulogy. After this, the people voted for the Trujillo family to leave the country, so his son, Ramfis Trujillo, came back to relocate his father's body outside of the country. Trujillo was buried in Paris, in Père Lachaise Cemetery, at the request of his relatives.[1]

Legacy

Trujillo reorganized the state and the economy and left a vast infrastructure to the country. His rule also saw more stability and prosperity than most living Dominicans had previously known. However, this came at a great cost. Civil rights and freedoms were virtually nonexistent, and much of the country's wealth wound up in the hands of his family or close associates.[citation needed]

He was popularly known as El Jefe ("The Chief") or El Benefactor (The Benefactor), but he was privately referred to as Chapitas (Bottlecaps) because of his indiscriminate wearing of medals. Dominican children emulated El Jefe by constructing toy medals from bottle caps. He was also called el chivo (the goat).

Trujillo in media

Media type Title Release date Details
Movie The Feast of the Goat (*) 2006 Directed by Luis Llosa and Trujillo played by Tomás Milián
TV Movie In the Time of the Butterflies (film) 2001 Directed by Mariano Barroso and Trujillo played by Edward James Olmos
Documentary El Poder del Jefe III 1998 Directed by René Fortunato
Documentary El Poder del Jefe II 1996 Directed by René Fortunato
Documentary El Poder del Jefe I 1994 Directed by René Fortunato
Movie El Misterio Galíndez - The Galindez File 2003 Gerardo Herrero directed El Misterio Galíndez, a movie about Jesús de Galíndez Suárez, activist of the PNV party and Basque Diplomat who disappeared in 1956; allegedly because of his opposition to Trujillo`s regime.
Book La era de Trujillo: un estudio casuístico de dictadura hispanoamericana 1990 Manuel Vazquez Montalbán, a Catalan writer, wrote about Galíndez en 1990. The book is a fictional recreation of the life and disappearance of the diplomat.
Book The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 2007 Junot Diaz, a native of Santo Domingo wrote Pulitzer Prize Winning book about a dysfunctional Dominican/American family. The book is a fictional account of the family's misfortunes experienced as a result of the atrocities of Trujillo's regime.
Book The Feast of the Goat 2000 A book by Mario Vargas Llosa, set in the Dominican Republic and portraying the assassination of the Dominican dictator, and its aftermath, from two distinct standpoints a generation apart: during and immediately after the assassination itself, in May 1961; and thirty years later, in 1996.

References

  1. ^ a b "Rafael Trujillo y Molina". Find A Grave. 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  2. ^ "The Dictator's Seduction: Gender and State Spectacle during the Trujillo Regime", by Lauren Derby, Callaloo, v. 23 n. 3 (2000), pp. 1112-1146.
  3. ^ a b Bernard Diederich. Trujillo: The Death of the Goat (1978 ed.). Little, Brown; 1st edition. p. 264. ISBN 0316184403.
    Pg 13-With only a few years of formal schooling, at sixteen the quick witted youth became a Morse code telegraph operator. Soon Rafael was trying his hand at less savory employment. As a member of a gang of hoodlums known as "The 44"
  4. ^ a b c pp. 870-72 - Maxine Block (Author), E. Mary Trow (Editor). Current Biography Who's News and Why 1941 (January 1, 1941 ed.). The H. W. Wilson Company. p. 976. ISBN 9997376676. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  5. ^ a b Jared Diamond. Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (December 27, 2005 ed.). Penguin (Non-Classics). p. 575. ISBN 0143036556.
  6. ^ a b c p. 672 - Maxine Block (Author), E. Mary Trow (Editor). Current Biography Who's News and Why 1941 (January 1, 1941 ed.). The H. W. Wilson Company. p. 976. ISBN 9997376676. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  7. ^ pg 78 - Robert Pack (Editor), Jay Parini (Editor). Introspections (when ed.). PUB. p. 2222. ISBN B0006P7UY8. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help); Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
    pg 78 - On October 2, 1937, Trujillo had ordered 20,000 Haitian cane workers executed because they could not roll the "R" in perejil the Spanish word for parsley.
  8. ^ pg 182 - Alan Cambeira. Quisqueya la bella (October 1996 ed.). M.E. Sharpe. p. 286. ISBN 1563249367.
    pg 182 - anyone of African descent found incapable of pronouncing correctly, that is, to the complete satisfaction of the sadistic examiners, became a condemned individual. This holocaust is recorded as having a death toll reaching thirty thousand innocent souls, Haitians as well as Dominicans.
  9. ^ p.41 - Madison Smartt Bell. A Hidden Haitian World - New York Review of Books - Volume 55, Number 12 (July 17th, 2008 ed.). New York Review of Books. pp. 4039 words.
  10. ^ Justice Department Memo, 1975; National Security Archive
  11. ^ CIA "Family Jewels" Memo, 1973 (see page 434) Family jewels (Central Intelligence Agency)
  12. ^ G. Pope Atkins (Author), Larman C. Wilson (Author). The Dominican Republic and the United States: From Imperialism to Transnationalism (January 1998 ed.). University of Georgia Press. p. 288. ISBN 0820319317. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)

Bibliography

  • Richard Lee Turits, Foundations of Despotism: Peasants, the Trujillo Regime, and Modernity in Dominican History, Stanford University Press 2004, ISBN 0804751056
  • Secretaría de Estado de las Fuerzas Armandas In Spanish
  • Ignacio López-Calvo, “God and Trujillo”: Literary and Cultural Representations of the Dominican Dictator, University Press of Florida, 2005, ISBN 0-8130-2823-X
Preceded by President of the Dominican Republic
1930–1938
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Dominican Republic
1942–1952
Succeeded by