José Antonio Echeverría

Echeverría

José Antonio Echeverría (July 16, 1932, Cárdenas, Matanzas March 13, 1957, Havana, Cuba) was a Cuban revolutionary and student leader. The President of the Federation of University Students (Federación Estudiantíl Universitaria - FEU), he was a founding member of the Directorio Revolucionario Estudantil (DRE), a militant organisation that played an important role in the Cuban Revolution to oust President Fulgencio Batista. He had the nickname "Manzanita", meaning "Little Apple".

Born to a middle-class family in Cárdenas, in 1950 Echeverría enrolled at the University of Havana in order to study architecture.[1]

Three minutes of truth

Echeverría and his colleagues took part in an assault at the National Radio Station of Cuba on March 13 1957, at the time of a music program which most of Cuban people usually listened to so that Echeverría's anti-Batista speech would be broadcast to the whole Cuban nation. Echeverría estimated that the rioters could only occupy the radio station in three minutes, therefore he had to prepare a speech which lasted three minutes at most. Echeverría finally managed to finish his speech right at the 181st seconds. he managed to leave the station unharmed and in the way to the university of Havana just a few block from the radio station he open fire to an incoming police patrol, the guards front the patrol kill him in the side walk of the north side of the university, where there is a memorial plaque. Echeverría's speech was mentioned in the poem "Three minutes of Truth" written by the Soviet-Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko. The Vietnamese writer Phùng Quán also wrote a short story with the same name about Echeverría's speech, and commented: "The story about Manzana teaches me a great lesson about language arts. Even the greatest topics like reality or truth could be expressed only in 180 seconds, on condition that the author has to use his life to pay for such invaluable time."

References

Footnotes

  1. Quirk 1993. p. 102.

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