Juan Oropeza
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Juan Oropeza Riera (April 24, 1906 – November 29, 1971) was a Venezuelan diplomat, lawyer, educator, and writer. He was born in Carora in the state of Lara, and was the younger brother of pediatrics pioneer, Pastor Oropeza Riera.
In his youth, he opposed the totalitarian regime of President Juan Vicente Gómez and became a member of the student-led movement called "Generation of 1928". He was imprisoned and eventually sent into exile with some of the other group members. In 1931, he worked as a correspondent for Élite Magazine in Madrid, Spain. Upon his return to Venezuela he became a founding member of Acción Democrática, one of the two most prominent political parties in the nation's republican history, alongside such important figures as Luis Beltrán Prieto Figueroa, Mariano Picón Salas and former Venezuelan President Rómulo Betancourt.
In 1944, he married venezuelan Alicia Sosa in Mexico City, with whom he only had one child. Under Isaias Medina Angarita's presidential term, he became the rector of the Universidad Central de Venezuela (Central University of Venezuela) and was subsequently appointed Venezuela's ambassador to the United Kingdom under President Rómulo Gallegos's term, where he attended Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip's wedding.
He took up Paris as his permanent residence during the dictatorship of Marcos Pérez Jiménez, where he befriended such personalities as poet Paul Éluard, writers Jorge Luis Borges, Nicolás Guillén, Miguel Ángel Asturias and painters Salvador Dalí, Marie Laurencin and Pablo Picasso.
In the 1960's, he continued his duties as the venezuelan ambassador in Paris for Rómulo Betancourt's administration. During that time, he was also chosen to represent Venezuela as its ambassador before UNESCO and, during Raúl Leoni's presidency, was assigned to the position of venezuelan ambassador in Bogotá, Colombia, the highest honor any venezuelan diplomatic official can achieve. He received the Orden del Libertador (first degree) and the Orden Francisco de Miranda, as well as the Orden del Águila Azteca (Mexico) in 1946, in recognition for his outstanding academic skills. He was an arts and literature professor at the University of Minnesota. Some of his literary works include: Sucre, Cuatro siglos de historia venezolana, En perpetua fuga, Sobre Inglaterra y los ingleses, Imparidad del destino americano, Breve Historia de Venezuela, Fronteras and Del tiempo en que vivimos.
His close friend Pablo Neruda once said of him: "Juan couldn't possibly be president, let someone else take care of that, it would be a waste of his talent, he's too brilliant and far too honest to be ever president". Arturo Uslar Pietri, one of Juan Oropeza's closest friends and his intellectual peer, once ran for office without much success, on account of his lack of political savy due partly to his impeccable prose, refined manners and strong moral values and points of view, obvious trademarks of his well-to-do upbringing. Everyone agreed on the fact that he was an intellectual force to be reckoned with but not a fierce political leader, so in the end, Neruda's words were proven right.
Juan Oropeza died of cancer in Caracas on November 29, 1971, at the age of 65.
Trivia
- Juan Oropeza was close friends with writers Mariano Picón Salas, Andrés Eloy Blanco, Arturo Uslar Pietri, Agustín Nieto Caballero, Miguel Otero Silva, Pablo Neruda, french politician Pierre Cot and his wife Nena Phelps Cot as well as colombian President Carlos Lleras Restrepo.
- One of his mentors was Rómulo Gallegos.