Luis Emilio Recabarren
Luis Emilio Recabarren Serrano was a Chilean political figure. He was elected several times as deputy, and was the driving force behind the worker's movement in Chile.
Early life
Recabarren was born in the port of Valparaíso in 1876, to José Agustín Recabarren and Juana Rosa Serrano. He was of Basque descent. His family was very impoverished. From a very early age, he started to work as a typographer to help with the family finances. Even though he had very little formal education, he was a very voracious reader and was self-taught. He married Guadalupe del Canto, with whom he fathered two children. After the death of his first wife, he married Teresa Flores, who helped him with his political activities.After a trip to Antofagasta, Taltal and Tocopilla, Recabarren became aware of the extreme poverty and near-enslavement of the nitrate workers. He decided to act. In 1894, he joined the Democrat Party of Chile. He became an ardent public speaker and founded several organizations and newspapers to foment solidarity within the workers. He initially focussed his political activities on the city of his birth, where he became director and editor of El Trabajo newspaper. Due to his harsh criticisms of governmental labour policies, he was jailed for eight months. In 1905 he moved with his family to Antofagasta, where he became the publisher of La Vanguardia newspaper.
Political career
On May 15, 1906, Recabarren was elected as a deputy for Tocopilla to the National Congress representing the Democrat Party. He was prevented though from assuming his position because he refused to be sworn on a bible, based on his atheism. He moved his family to Iquique. Heavily involved in the labour movement, organising workers both politically and industrially, as a consequence of which he was re-prosecuted by the government and had to escape to Argentina. In that country he joined the Socialist Party of Argentina and in 1908 he travelled to Europe, finally returning to Chile at the end of that year.After his return, Recabarren was arrested and sent to jail in Los Andes during 18 months, until August 1910. In 1911 he moved back to Iquique where, unhappy with his party and together with a group of nitrate workers, he founded the Socialist Workers Party on June 4, 1912. Previously, on May 20 of that same year he had founded the El Despertar de los trabajadores newspaper to promote his ideas. During its existence the newspaper was banned several times, but Recabarren continued preaching his socialist credo from any tribune he could get.
"Reading is one of the means of emancipation for the working classes. That is why we recommend that they read widely." |
Luis Emilio Recabarren |
He moved, this time to Antofagasta, where he founded El Socialista newspaper. In 1915 he was a candidate for Congress for Antofagasta, but was defeated. He then moved back to Valparaíso where he lived until 1916, when he started a tour along Chile all the way to Punta Arenas. In 1918 he travelled to Argentina where he participated in the foundation of the Communist Party of Argentina, becoming a member of its first national directory.
After his return to Chile, he participated in the third Congress of his party, where they agreed to join the Third International and become the Communist Party of Chile. In 1919 he was deported to the south of the country for three months for speaking against the government. He was a candidate for the Chilean presidential election of 1920, where he lost to Arturo Alessandri. At the time of that election he was in re-incarcerated so he could not campaign and got a very small proportion of the vote. Nonetheless he was elected a deputy for Antofagasta again in 1921. After he moved to Santiago, he founded and edited La Justicia newspaper.
Fascinated by the October Revolution, and after the party congress of January 22, 1922 that transformed the Socialist Workers Party into the Communist Party of Chile'', he travelled to the USSR as the only Chilean delegate to the Union Congress of the Third International that took place in Moscow. He returned on January 1923 to a hero's welcome by the various workers' organizations.