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Olga Viscal Garriga

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Olga Viscal Garriga
Garriga on trial for refusing to recognize U.S. authority over Puerto Rico
BornMay 5, 1929
DiedJune 1995
NationalityPuerto Rican/American
Political partyPuerto Rican Nationalist Party
MovementPuerto Rican Independence
ChildrenPedro, Olga, and Maria Luz

Dr. Olga Viscal Garriga (May 5, 1929 – June 1995), was a public orator, political activist, and a descendant of a former governor of Puerto Rico. She was a student leader and spokesperson of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party's branch in Rio Piedras. As an advocate for Puerto Rican independence, she was sentenced to eight years in a U.S. federal penitentiary, for refusing to recognize the sovereign authority of the United States over Puerto Rico.

Early years

Olga Viscal's (birth name Olga Isabel Viscal Garriga [note 1]) parents, Francisco Viscal Bravo and Laura Garriga Gonzalez, moved from Puerto Rico to Brooklyn, New York, where she was born in the in early 1920s. Olga was one of seven children born to the couple. The children were the fourth-great-grandchildren of Field Marshal Don Juan Andres Daban y Busterino, who served as the Spanish-appointed Governor and General Captain of Puerto Rico from 1783-89.

Her parents returned to Puerto Rico and settled in Rio Piedras, where she was raised and educated. Olga Viscal had witnessed the discrimination against Puerto Ricans in New York. As she grew up, she strongly disagreed with U.S. policies that limited human rights, freedom of speech, and self-determination in Puerto Rico.[1]

Student activist

Viscal enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico where she earned her Doctoral Degree in Political Sciences. During the late 1940s, and while finishing her Ph.D., she became a student leader and spokesperson of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party's branch in Rio Piedras. The Party was headed by Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, and favored the forceful expulsion of the U.S. from Puerto Rico.

The arrest of (L to R) Nationalists Carmen María Pérez Roque, Olga Viscal Garriga and Ruth Mary Reynolds in November 2, 1950

On May 21, 1948, a bill was introduced before the Puerto Rican Senate which would restrain the rights of the independence and Nationalist movements in the island. The Senate, controlled by the PPD and presided by Luis Muñoz Marín, approved the Bill.[2] The Bill, also known as the Ley de la Mordaza (Gag Law), made it illegal to display a Puerto Rican flag, to sing a patriotic tune, to speak of independence, or to advocate for the liberation of the island - even if this speech or advocacy occurred in one's own living room.

The bill resembled the anti-communist Smith Law passed in the United States. was signed and made into law on June 10, 1948, by the U.S.-appointed governor of Puerto Rico, Jesús T. Piñero and became known as Ley 53 (Law 53).[3]

In accordance with the new law, it would be a crime to print, publish, sell or exhibit any material which advocated against the U.S. insular government, or to assist any organize any group or assembly of people who advocated or intended the same. Anyone accused and found guilty of disobeying the law could be sentenced to ten years of prison, fined $10,000 dollars (US), or both. According to Dr. Leopoldo Figueroa, a member of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives, the law was in direct violation of the First Amendment of the US Constitution, which guarantees Freedom of Speech. Given that all Puerto Ricans were U.S. citizens as of 1917, this law violated the civil rights of every Puerto Rican.[4]

Viscal, who befriended Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, was a talented orator and political activist. Although she was not directly involved in any violent act in 1950, Viscal was arrested because she participated in a demonstration that turned deadly in Old San Juan, after U.S. forces opened fire on the demonstrators. In the violent confrontation between the "Nationalists" and the "Forces" of the United States, one of the demonstrators was killed. She was detained on November 2, along with Carmen María Pérez Roque and Ruth Mary Reynolds (The American Nationalist) and held in the La Princesa jail. During her trial in the federal court in Old San Juan, she was uncooperative with the U. S. Government prosecution and refused to recognize the authority of the U.S. over Puerto Rico. She was sentenced to eight years in prison for contempt of court, and released after serving five.[1][5]

Later years

After her release from prison, Viscal went to Cuba, where she was the Puerto Rican representative to the Cuban Parliament. As such, she met with Fidel Castro, Che Guevara and Albert Einstein. She was a very devout Catholic, and thus became disillusioned with Castro's politics and selectively atheist policies. After publicly criticizing Castro, she escaped from Cuba with the help of her younger sister, Irma.[1] Olga Viscal Garriga died in June 1995 in San Juan, Puerto Rico. She was the mother of three children, Pedro, Olga and Maria Luz.

Legacy

Viscal Garriga was the inspiration for the main character Antígona, in the play La Pasión Según Antígona Pérez (The Passion According to Antígona Pérez), written by Puerto Rican playwright Luis Rafael Sánchez.[6]

There is a plaque, located at the monument to the Jayuya Uprising participants in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico, honoring the women of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. Viscal Garriga's name is on the fifteenth line of the third plate.

Plaque honoring the women of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party

Notes

See also

19th Century female leaders of the Puerto Rican Independence Movement

Female members of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party

Articles related to the Puerto Rican Independence Movement

References

  1. ^ a b c Viscal Family
  2. ^ "La obra jurídica del Profesor David M. Helfeld (1948-2008)'; by: Dr. Carmelo Delgado Cintrón
  3. ^ "Puerto Rican History". Topuertorico.org. January 13, 1941. Retrieved November 20, 2011.
  4. ^ La Gobernación de Jesús T. Piñero y la Guerra Fría
  5. ^ The Nationalist insurrection of 1950
  6. ^ Sanchez

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