José Martí
José Martí
José Martí(1853-1895) was a Cuban revolutionary, poet, and journalist. The principal organizer of Cuba's war against Spain, he was the apostle of Cuban independence.
José Martíwas born in Havana on Jan. 28, 1853, of Spanish parents. In school, where he was an eager student, his teachers aroused in him a devotion to the cause of freedom, and he also achieved early recognition as a writer. At the age of 15 he composed several poems; at 16 he published a Havana newspaper, La Patria Libre, and wrote a dramatic poem, Abdala. Arrested for political reasons, Martíserved several months at hard labor before he was deported to Spain in January 1871.
In Exile
There Martípublished a political essay, El presidio político en Cuba, an indictment of Spanish oppression and conditions in Cuban jails. The young revolutionary also resumed his studies, and in 1874 he received a degree in philosophy and law from the University of Saragossa. Martíthen traveled through Europe and in 1875 went to Mexico, where he worked as a journalist. After a short visit to Cuba in 1877, he settled in Guatemala, where he taught literature and philosophy. That same year he married Carmen Zayas Bazán, daughter of a Cuban exile, and shortly afterward published his first book, Guatemala.
Unhappy with Guatemala's political conditions, Martíreturned to Cuba in December 1878. The Peace of Zanjón, which ended the Ten Years War (1868-1878) against Spain, had just been signed, and Martífelt that conditions on the island would be propitious for his return. Spanish authorities, however, soon discovered his continued revolutionary activities and again deported him to Spain. He escaped to France and from there moved to the United States and Venezuela.
Journalist and Poet
In 1881 Martímade New York the center of his activities, although he continued to travel and to write about the many problems of Latin American nations. Through regular newspaper columns for La Opinión Nacional of Caracas and for La Nación of Buenos Aires, he gained recognition throughout Latin America.
Martíwas noted not only for his journalistic abilities but also for his poetry and prose. He was a precursor of the modernistic movement in poetry. In 1882 his most significant poems, composed for his son, were published in a book called Ismaelillo. Martí's best-known poems appear in Versos sencillos (1891) and emphasize the themes of friendship, sincerity, love, justice, and freedom. Martíalso won the hearts of Latin American youngsters with his Edad de oro (1889), a magazine especially devoted to children. His greatest contribution to Spanish American letters was his essays. Written in a highly personal style, they brought about an innovation in prose writing.
Revolutionary Activities
Martírealized very early that independence from Spain was the only solution for Cuba and that this could be achieved only through a war that was sudden and that would at the same time prevent United States Intervention in Cuba. His fear of a military dictatorship after independence led in 1884 to a break with Máximo Gómez and Antonio Maceo, two generals who at the time were engaged in a conspiracy against Spain. Martíwithdrew from the movement temporarily, but by 1887 the three men were working together again, with Martíassuming political leadership. In 1892 he formed the Cuban Revolutionary party in the United States and directed his efforts toward organizing the war against Spain.
In 1895 Martígave the order for the resumption of hostilities against Spain and landed in Cuba to lead the war. He was killed in a skirmish with Spanish troops at Dos Rios, Oriente Province, on May 19, 1895.
What distinguished Martíwas his ability to organize and harmonize. His oratory inspired his listeners, his honesty and sincerity inspired faith, and his conviction in the ideas he was pursuing gained him the respect and loyalty of his followers. His writings were not mere rhetorical exercises but moral teachings aimed at making man better, and their impact was felt not only in Cuba but throughout Latin America. Like Simón Bolívar, he thought in terms of a continent and advocated the unity of Latin America.
Further Reading
Martíhas generated an extensive body of literature. Four good studies are Jorge Mañach, Martí: Apostle of Freedom (1933; trans. 1950); Felix Lizaso, Martí: Martyr of Cuban Independence (1940; trans. 1953); Juan de Onis, ed., The America of José Martí: Selected Writings (1953); and Richard B. Gray, José Martí: Cuban Patriot (1962). □