Odón Betanzos Palacios

Odón Betanzos Palacios
Born September 16, 1925
Rociana del Condado, Huelva (Andalusia, Spain)
Died 24 September 2007(2007-09-24)
New York
Occupation Poet, writer

Odón Betanzos Palacios (1925–2007) was a Spanish writer who lived in New York since 1956 until his death in 2007. Odón Betanzos was a tenured member of the Academia Norteamericana de la Lengua Española, which is a Director and Corresponding Member of the Royal Spanish Academy, the Guatemalan, Filipino, Chilean, Colombian and Nicaraguan Language and the Hispanic Society of America. Moreover, he was president of the Hispanic Cultural Foundation in the United States and was in possession of the Commandery of the Order of Isabel the Catholic and the Civil Merit in the degree of Number granted by the King of Spain,[1] and Columbus the Dominican Republic, and received the Silver Medal of Andalusia in 1989. Also, the rocianero writer gave his name to a foundation and an International Poetry Competition - the second largest in the province of Huelva, after Juan Ramon Jimenez-.[2]

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Early years

Odón Betanzos Palacios was born in Rociana del Condado,in the province of Huelva, Andalusia, Spain, on September 16, 1925. His father was Manuel (Manolo) Betanzos, and his mother was Caridad Palacios Urquijo, a descendant of an aristocratic Basque family. His father was shot in August 1936 in the Spanish Civil War, when Odón was 10 years old, as he was accused of being a socialist. His literary taste was evident from an early age, showing a great concern in learning so, he read everything that fell into his hands. He earned honors from the time he began to study until high school ended. Dire need and economic hardship overwhelmed his home. His mother had to leave their village to look for ways to rebuild their lives and try to reunite the family, but he could not stand it any longer. He, therefore, decided to abandon their land travel alone to Madrid in search of work in August 1942, at the age of sixteen. At this young age he began his forced emigration that lasted until 1956 when he settled in New York (United States).

In Madrid he continued his studies in high school, but his life changed completely by having to work to send money home and pay for his studies. He had to complete the last three years of high school, 5th, 6th and 7th, for free, studying at night, and when his work permitted. Surviving was hard, difficult and not very pleasant for the young man at his tender age, with simultaneous work and study.

There were several jobs. The first was to keep the accounting of a furniture store, while managing it on Calle Valverde, owned by a family friend of his mother - Caledonian Hernandez -a "good and fair man" who helped him a lot during those years of loneliness, anxiety, hunger and misery.

Since he didn't make enough money by working at this job, he set up a stationery along with a Basque man- Aldamiz - but the experience would be short - just a few months - because of the many difficulties involved in the business at the time.

His first residence was a modest pension in Fuencarral Street where Odon Betanzos found a room to be isolated with his books. Later, his mother decided to settle in Madrid with two of her five children, Manuel and Marisol, and together with Odon, they resided in the home of a sister of his mother's. They finally had their own home.

Among the many difficulties a new one was added: Caledonian Hernandez died and the business disappeared with his death, which meant that Odon lost his job and became wrapped in a sea of confusion. He had to find new employment. Odon Betanzos made his way through the Merchant Navy career in Cadiz, as he himself said, "to raise my family," as from the 40's he sailed the seven seas. In 1956, he stopped sailing while in Caracas, Venezuela where, along with two Spanish friends, he formed an import/export company. The deal yielded no results, despite so many efforts, because it needed more capital available to them. It was precisely in the short time he lived in Venezuela - just four months - that he met and became involved with the outstanding figures of the country. Despite the favorable social environment as they moved in those lands, he decided to settle permanently in New York because the climate was not propitious.[3]

Literary career

"Escribir es como estar picado de tarántula; quien está herido no tiene solución; no hay más salida que entregarse por entero a la escritura (...) Nadie se parece a nadie. Al escritor se le conoce por la palabra, que en él tiene que ser esencia".
"Writing is like being bitten by tarantula, who is injured has no solution, there is more output to surrender himself entirely to writing (...) Nobody seems to anyone. The writer is known by the word, that in him must be his essential".

He began his literary career in New York, in 1956, where he settled in one of his trips along with a group of Spanish exiles who already lived there and was one of the founders of (Editorial Mensaje) Message magazine and editorial that led until his death. He graduated in Arts (MA) at Fordham University, and Philosophy (Ph.D.) at The City University of New York, where he received his doctorate, and later became a professor of the same institution. In 1986, he was elected president of the foundation that bears his name, based in his hometown, in Huelva.

He died in New York on September 24, 2007 due to heart disease and cancer with which he had been suffering for some years, and he was buried a week later in his hometown in Spain, in Rociana's Cemetery, in the pantheon alongside his son, Manny. The author was suffering from health problems since two years ago, when he performed heart surgery followed by five by-pass. The president of the Foundation Betanzos, Antonio Ramírez, said the writer died in a New York hospital after several days of agony.[3]

Awards

He received many awards throughout his life, among those: the Commendation of Isabel the Catholic, Medal of Andalusia, Vasconcelos, Award the Knights Order and of Civil Merit in the degree of Number granted by the King of Spain, and the Christopher Columbus from the Dominican Republic. He was declared favorite son of his hometown of Rociana in 1979, where the House of Culture bearing his name, in addition to an existing intellectual foundation based in the locality. His works have been translated, at least in English, Portuguese, French, Italian, Russian, Chinese, Dutch, Arabic, Hebrew and Macedonian.[4]

Personal life

It was in 1952 during one of his trips to New York that he met the Bronx woman who would become his wife, Amalia Migues, the daughter of a Spaniard - Pontevedra, Galicia, who emigrated to America as a child - and of a Puerto Rican mother, from Santurce. Odon Betanzos saw in her his own rebellion, and along with her intelligence, administrative ability, talent and understanding, she became irresistible. At that time, Amalia was a professor of cytology at the New York University, a private university. The courtship was brief - just a year or so - and they married on March 21, 1953. On January 14, 1954, his only son was born, and he gave him the name of his father and that of his paternal grandfather, Manuel. The poet wanted to perpetuate the name of his ancestors in the son God had granted him. Manny became a magnificent and amazing person and after high school went on to study literature, social work and law. Because of the closeness and love they shared, the author was chosen by his son to be his best man the day of his wedding at St. Patrick's Cathedral, where he married a young lady he had met the first day of college; the same young woman the poet had secretly hoped his son would one day marry. In September 1993, the accidental and untimely death of his only son, aged 39, completely crushed Odon, and marked him both personally and in his literary work, to the day he died on the 24th of September 2007, just 14 years after his son's death.[3]

Odon's own father's capture and shooting during the Spanish Civil War, and then decades later, the death of his son, were both very heavy marks in the life of the author and of his literature. Some critics say, is was reflected in his writing due to his life's sorrows and weariness.

During the 70's, he published poetry, most of them collected in three anthologies: “Santidad y guerrería" (Holiness and Guerrieri), “Hombre de luz” (Man of Light) and “La mano universal" (The universal hand). Should be noted “Poemas del hombre y las desolaciones” (Likewise, we should point Poems of man and desolation), "De ese Dios de las totalidades" (From the God of wholes), "Antología poética” (Poetic Anthology), " La desolación" ("The desolation), " Sonetos de la muerte" (Sonnets of Death) and a two-volume novel about the Spanish Civil War : “Diosdado de lo alto” (Diosdado from above). He also worked as well extensive teaching, journalism and essays. He published them in magazines and newspapers around half the world. His work has been chosen for doctoral theses in many parts of the world.[5]

Works

Lyric

Narrative

Criticism

References

  1. ^ http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2007/09/27/obituarios/1190923745.html. Odón Betanzos, el poeta y académico del español en Nueva York (In Spanish). (Translation: Odon Betanzos, the poet and scholar of Spanish in New York).
  2. ^ http://www.poemas-del-alma.com/blog/noticias/fallece-el-escritor-odon-betanzos. Fallece el escritor Odón Betanzos (Writer Odon Betanzos dies) (In Spanish). Accessed September 19, 2010, 15:00
  3. ^ a b c . Huelvapedia.. November 26, 2009. http://wikanda.huelvapedia.es/wiki/Od%C3%B3n_Betanzos_Palacios. Odón Betanzos - Huelvapedia.(In Spanish). Retrieved May 20, 2010. 
  4. ^ Odón Betanzos
  5. ^ http://www.lukor.com/literatura/noticias/0709/30162818.htm. El cuerpo del escritor y académico Odón Betanzos llega mañana a Rociana (Huelva) para recibir sepultura el martes, 2007 (In Spanish). (Translation: The body of writer and academic Odon Betanzos arrives tomorrow to Rociana (Huelva) for burial on Tuesday. 2007).

External links