Germán
Arciniegas Angueyra and Gabriela Vieira y Llano
[his parents] [parents not known]
Germán (Man) Arciniegas was born
on December 6, 1900, the son of Josefa
Aurora Angueyra y Figueredo and Rafael Arciniegas y Tavera.
He was baptized on February 6, 1901, in the Iglesia
[church] de la Veracruz, in Bogotá. Historian,
essayist, diplomat, and statesman, Arciniegas was one of the most
eminent men of letters of contemporary Spanish America. His
long and distinguished career in journalism and public service
strongly influenced the cultural development of Colombia in the
20th century, and his contributions abroad as an educator and a
diplomat played an important role in introducing North Americans
and Europeans to Spanish-American history and contemporary
culture.
At the age of 20 he entered law school at the prestigious National University in Bogotá. He immediately became an agitator and radical student leader. He marched to loosen education from Jesuit control, staged riotous student carnivals, and organized a nationwide federation to protest government educational programs, politics and appointees. He narrowly missed being killed when a bullet grazed his head as he harangued authorities from a Bogotá balcony, fellow activists were thrown into jail.
He graduated from law school in 1924, and, on November 19, 1926, in Medellin, Colombia, married Gabriela Vieira y Llano, who was born on September 5, 1903, in Medellin.
Germán contributed essays to several newspapers and magazines, founding the review Universidad in Bogotá in 1928, and becoming editor of the newspaper El Tiempo there in 1939. He was twice a congressman and, active in education, served as Colombian minister of education in 1941 and again in 1945. He taught at several universities in the US, including Berkeley in 1939, Chicago in 1944, and Columbia from 1947 to 1957, where he was visiting professor of Spanish-American literature.
He wrote more than 60 books and is described as one of the continents most important writers. Such works as Caribbean, Sea of the New World, in 1946, and Latin America: A Cultural History, in 1966, introduced an international audience to Arciniegas' panoramic view of his continent.
Joaquin Maurin, in Cuadernos magazine described the decade from 1947 to 1957, when Arciniegas lived in New York, as years in exile in which he meticulously documented the jailings, tortures, and murders committed as military dictatorships spread across the continent . Rafael Trujillo, president of the Dominican Republic, put Arciniegas on his hit list. Arciniegas 1952 book, Between Freedom and Fear, condemned authoritarian rulers around the region, was banned in several countries, and burned by Colombian officials. In the US, Arciniegas was an outspoken critic of the State Departments conciliatory policies towards these regimes.
In 1953, after having lived in New York for more than five years, Arciniegas was detained for security questioning at New Yorks Idlewild Airport on his return from a European vacation. He was held at Ellis Island overnight and released after a media campaign led by the New York Times and representation on his behalf by the Colombian Embassy in Washington.
Again in 1954, and in 1957, he was detained by US customs officials when returning to the US from trips abroad. Following the third incident, the NYT reported that Arciniegas believed that political enemies in Colombia had compiled a dossier on him proving that he was a communist and had sent this information to the FBI.
Later in the 50s, Arciniegas turned to a diplomatic career and in 1959, was appointed Colombian ambassador to Italy; later he served in Israel, Venezuela, and the Vatican. In 1997, Arcineagas, 97 years old and blind, dictated his twice-a-week columns for newspapers including Bogotás El Tiempo, Buuenos Aires La Nacion, and Miamis Diario Las Americas. His newspaper columns lash out at drug trafficking and Marxist guerrillas, which he believes are subverting his nations freedom. He attacks restrictive immigration policies in the US, exhorts Europe to join America in the preservation of the Amazon and Pacific basins, and urges the world to fight the drug scourge.
Gabriela
died in Bogotá on September 3, 1996, and Germán, also in
Bogotá, on November 30, 1999.
# Children of German Arciniegas and Gabriela Vieira y Llano:
| i | Aurora Arciniegas y Vieira [private] | |
| ii | Gabriela Mercedes Arciniegas y Vieira [private] |
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