Cuban revolutionary Rubén Martínez Villena, 92 years after his death

Rubén Martínez Villena

Rubén Martínez Villena, that young man with a restless spirit against social injustices, died 92 years ago on January 16, 1934, at only 35 years old, leaving behind an impressive legacy in Cuba as a revolutionary and intellectual.

Villena—as he is mostly known by his second surname—was born on December 20, 1899, in Alquízar, in what is now Artemisa province, and his family moved to Havana in 1905. They lived first in the Guanabacoa neighborhood, and later in El Cerro.

From a very young age, he played a significant role in the revolutionary struggles in Cuba during the 1920s and 1930s, always linked to the fight against the corruption of the republican governments.He led the famous Protest of the Thirteen and was a founder of the Grupo Minorista (Minority Group).

He attended primary school in a public school, and at age 13, he entered the Havana Institute of Secondary Education.In 1916, he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences degree and in September of the same year enrolled in the Faculty of Law at the University of Havana.

He began writing his first verses at the age of 11; however, his poetic work truly took off during his university studies, and by the age of 21, he was already a well-known poet.To please his mother, he graduated in 1922 with a Doctorate in Civil and Public Law, graduating with honors. He then began working in the law firm of the Cuban scholar and anthropologist Fernando Ortiz, where he absorbed revolutionary and progressive ideas and discovered his anti-imperialist leanings.

During this time, he came into contact with other young people and figures not affiliated with traditional political parties, such as Pablo de la Torriente Brau and Emilio Roig de Leuchsenring.The year 1923 marked significant milestones in his poetic work; however, he abandoned writing poetry to dedicate himself entirely to the revolutionary struggle.

Aware of the need to establish links between the labor movement and the student body, radical groups within Cuban society at the time, he participated in the First National Student Congress at the invitation of student leader Julio Antonio Mella and later in the founding of the José Martí Popular University. This university aimed to empower the working class in its struggle for social justice, teaching classes and serving as the institution's secretary.He placed his legal studies at Mella's disposal, serving as his defense attorney on more than one occasion.

He was involved with the Veterans and Patriots Movement against the government of Alfredo Zayas, and from the time dictator Gerardo Machado came to power in 1925, he vehemently opposed him, even leading the general strike that overthrew Machado in August 1933, despite his serious illness and knowing his impending death.

In June 1927, he was admitted to the Quinta de Dependientes hospital with the illness that would ultimately lead to his death: pulmonary tuberculosis.In September of that same year, he joined the Communist Party, where he was appointed Legal Advisor to the National Confederation of Cuban Workers (CNOC), the unified organization of the Cuban proletariat. He became its leading figure and natural leader, though he never assumed the position of General Secretary.

In 1928, he was elected to the Central Committee of the Communist Party. However, he never held any official position due to the prejudices of the communist movement at the time, and his own, that an intellectual should not assume the highest responsibility in that organization.After the death of Julio Antonio Mella in 1929, by agreement of the Central Committee, he became the Party's principal and most active leader, carrying out arduous work despite suffering acutely from tuberculosis.

From that position of responsibility, he was tasked with organizing and leading the first political strike in Cuban history, which shook the foundations of the tyrannical regime, paralyzing the country for more than 24 hours on March 20, 1930. He later traveled to the Soviet Union to escape the fierce manhunt unleashed against him and to seek treatment for tuberculosis.

When his illness worsened in a sanatorium in the Caucasus, he received the news that it was terminal and decided to return to Cuba to meet his daughter, be with his wife, and dedicate his last breaths to the popular effort to overthrow Machado.His life ended amidst the upheaval of the fall of the so-called Hundred Days' Government on January 15, 1934, and the organization of the Fourth Congress of Trade Union Unity.

He had a brief but prolific life as a poet and editor, his literary work encompassing both prose and poetry.He left behind highly acclaimed poems such as "The Sleepless Pupil," "The Giant," "Inadequacy of the Scale and the Iris," and "The Futile Yearning," among others.

Despite his untimely death, his name is etched in gold in Cuban history as a revolutionary and intellectual, and the Cuban people pay tribute to him every year on his birthday.

 

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