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==Education==
==Education==
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Aguilar was educated by the [[Jesuits]] first at the ''Colegio de Dolores'' in [[Santiago de Cuba]] and then at the [[Instituto Tecnico Militar|Colegio de Belen]] in [[Havana]]. Fidel Castro was his classmate at both schools. They both graduated in 1944 from [[Belen Jesuit Preparatory School|Belen]]. Aguilar graduated from the [[University of Havana]] Law School in 1949 and Castro in 1950. In 1950, Aguliar earned a degree in international relations from the [[Complutense University of Madrid]] in [[Spain]]. Later, while in exile, he would earn a Ph.D. from [[American University]] in [[Washington, D.C.]].
Aguilar was educated by the [[Jesuits]] first at the ''Colegio de Dolores'' in [[Santiago de Cuba]] and then at the [[Instituto Tecnico Militar|Colegio de Belen]] in [[Havana]]. Fidel Castro was his classmate at both schools. They both graduated in 1944 from [[Belen Jesuit Preparatory School|Belen]]. Aguilar graduated from the [[University of Havana]] Law School in 1949 and Castro in 1950. In 1950, Aguilar earned a degree in international relations from the [[Complutense University of Madrid]] in [[Spain]]. Later, while in exile, he would earn a Ph.D. from [[American University]] in [[Washington, D.C.]].


==1950's and the Cuban Revolution==
==1950's and the Cuban Revolution==

Revision as of 23:37, 13 November 2014

Luis E. Aguilar Leon
Born1926
Manzanillo, Cuba
Died5 January 2008
Key Biscayne, Florida USA

Luis Enrique Aguilar Leon, J.D., Ph.D. (1926 in Manzanillo, Cuba - 5 January 2008 in Key Biscayne, Florida, USA) was a Cuban journalist, professor and historian. He was a professor to Bill Clinton and a classmate of Fidel Castro.

Education

Aguilar was educated by the Jesuits first at the Colegio de Dolores in Santiago de Cuba and then at the Colegio de Belen in Havana. Fidel Castro was his classmate at both schools. They both graduated in 1944 from Belen. Aguilar graduated from the University of Havana Law School in 1949 and Castro in 1950. In 1950, Aguilar earned a degree in international relations from the Complutense University of Madrid in Spain. Later, while in exile, he would earn a Ph.D. from American University in Washington, D.C..

1950's and the Cuban Revolution

When he returned from Spain, he taught for a time at the Universidad de Oriente - Santiago de Cuba, but then went to Havana to practice law. He was also a political writer for the newspaper Prensa Libre and the magazines Bohemia and Carteles. Aguilar was also the director of Universidad del Aire (University of the Air) on the radio network CMQ.

He was one of the founders of the Christian Democrat movement, which was banned once Castro took power.

In 1960, Aguilar wrote an article entitled “It’s Time for Unanimity” which was a denunciation of censorship in Cuba. The Committee of Revolutionary Freedom flagged the article and requested that the government execute Aguilar. He then went into exile.

Exile

Aguilar was a professor at Columbia University, Cornell University and finally for three decades at Georgetown University. Bill Clinton was one of his students. He retired from Georgetown in 1992 with the title professor emeritus. In 2003, Georgetown University created a scholarship named after him.

Aguilar then moved to South Florida and taught at the University of Miami until 2002. In 1988, he founded the Emilio Bacardi Moreau Chair on Cuban Studies at the University of Miami.

He was involved with Radio Marti since its inception in 1985 and was the Director of the Opinion Section of El Nuevo Herald from 1993 to 1995.

Family and death

Aguilar suffered the last years of his life with Alzheimer’s disease. He died on January 5, 2008 in his home at Key Biscayne, Florida. Aguilar was married to Vera Mestre y Fernandez Mascaro and they had three children, Jorge Augusto, Elizabeth Ann and Luis Enrique Aguilar, Jr. Aguilar’s older brother was Juan F. Aguilar Leon, Professor Emeritus of Drake University School of Law.

References

  • The Miami Herald; Luis Aguilar Leon, 82: Prominent Cuban Exile Intellectual by Wilfredo Cancio Isla; January 9, 2008, Page B4
  • Clinton, Bill (2004). My Life. Hutchinson. ISBN 978-0-09-179527-6.

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