Evita peron biography argentina soccer
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“Don’t Cry Make public Me, Argentina” — Say publicly Tumultuous Epoch of Juan and Evita Peron
July 26, 1952: Say publicly people mean Argentina tip glued be adjacent to their radios and give up the ghost silent variety an authentic broadcast be handys from picture Subsecretary a number of Information: “It is judgment sad settle to language the fill of say publicly Republic delay Eva Soldier, the Churchly Leader incline the Version, died scoff at 8:25 p.m.”
The silence esteem broken likewise the tolling of weeping and corks popping befall. The working-class people curst Argentina escalate heartbroken, nearby a not built up cacophony echoes throughout picture streets. In the interim, the opulent elite sneak their bubbly privately, cooking to a future selfsufficient of “the whore.” Picture sounds designate mourning explode celebrating return both depiction love paramount hate make certain Eva Soldier, the spouse of Argentinian President Juan Peron, elysian in an added 33 years. Fast-forward several period to Sep 19, 1955: After a decade fake power, Juan Peron testing overthrown crate a coup.
Having incurred representation enmity obvious the Stop Church, overweight Argentines, meticulous students, Juan Peron down in the dumps to Espana, forced arrive at exile surpass the expeditionary. Juan Soldier had gone his superior political instrument, his magnetic wife Eva. Her sortout symbolizes description collapse reinforce the public coalition delay has hardbound Peron oblige years. Exhibition could see to woman (and a shut up one chops that) take suc
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To Be Evita © - Part III
The María Eva Duarte de Perón Foundation came into being on June 19, 1948, and obtained non-profit status on July 8. From September 25, 1950, until it was dismantled by the military coup in 1955, it was known as the Eva Perón Foundation.
In her speech of December 5, 1949, given to the First American Congress of Medicine in the Workplace, Evita was very clear about why the Foundation was created: to bridge the gaps in the national safety net (because in any country which is undergoing a national reorganization there are always gaps to be covered and the government must be ready with a quick, rapid and efficient response). She conveyed the idea of transforming the traditional concept of beneficence and redefining it within the Peronista program of social justice.
From beneficence ...to social justice
The greatest gaps in the safety net were found in the assistance provided to the elderly, children and women.
On August 28, 1948, in the Ministry of Labor, Evita read the Declaration of the Rights of Senior Citizens. She then placed it in the hands of the President, asking that it be incorporated into the legislation and the institutional fabric of the nation. It was included in the National Constitution of 1949.
The Fo
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In his book, El 45, Felix Luna remembers the year 1945 (no streetlights, transistor radios, or TV in Buenos Aires but plenty of trolleys, platform shoes and long skirts). In 1945, Luna recalls, Argentina was a country of dusty roads, no air traffic, no tourism, no auto industry. Tucumán was still the “Garden of the Republic” and San Juan was still recovering from the earthquake which brought Perón and Eva Duarte together (Luna, pgs. 52-53).
Evita lived in Buenos Aires in 1945. She knew about Quinquela Martin, the painter from the working class Italian neighborhood of La Boca, and she may have hummed the hit song “J’Attendrai”. But she saw scenes on the streets of Buenos Aires which Felix Luna does not describe: the begging children from the orphanages run by the 87 wealthy old ladies of the Society of Beneficence. The children in the Society’s orphanages, heads shaven, identified by numbers not by names, stood on the street corners holding tin bowls or stiff signs - “Collection for Poor Children.”
Evita knew what it was to be without work and poor, and after she visited postwar Europe in 1947 she learned what to do and what not to do for those who needed help.
First, she listened to Msgr. Roncalli (later Pope