Gen. José Braulio Cástulo Alemán Urquía (23 March 1866 – 15 January 1930),[1] was a Cuban brigadier general in the Spanish–American War, promoted to major general after the war.[2] He also worked as a politician, lawyer and journalist,[1] and was the Governor of the province of Santa Clara (or Las Villas) and the Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts of Cuba.[2][3]

José Braulio Alemán
Born
José Braulio Alemán Urquía

(1866-03-23)March 23, 1866
DiedJanuary 15, 1930(1930-01-15) (aged 63)
Havana, Cuba
Occupation(s)Governor of a province, major general, politician, journalist
Known forPrincipal author of the Cuban constitution

General Alemán was the principal author of the Constitution of Cuba proclaimed at La Yaya in 1897. This Constitution was used as template for the 1901 Constitution of the new Republic of Cuba.

Biography edit

He studied Law, but he did not graduate. He was an owner and journalist of two newspapers at Santa Clara, Cuba in the province of Las Villas, he was incarcerated several times for articles written in favor of Cuba's independence.[citation needed] He was a very prominent and key player in the fight against the Spanish and the eventual liberation of Cuba. Joining the fight for liberation from Spain he was soon promoted from colonel to brigader general. It was Alemán who served as prosecutor in the famous Morote trial for espionage and treason against the burgeoning republic. Alemán is fondly and respectfully remembered as the principal author of the Cuban Constitution written at La Yaya while still at arms against the Spanish in 1897. At the end of the war during the American occupation he was one of the very few dignitaries who voted against the unfair and terribly lopsided Platt Amendment.

Promoted to Major General after the war, Alemán served first as Governor and later as Senator for the province of Las Villas.[when?][citation needed] He later became the Minister of Education for the newly established Republic of Cuba. He perhaps was the best Minister of Education Cuba ever produced. As Minister of Education he founded the first Agricultural Schools, the first Institutes of Commerce, the first Sports & Physical Education Institute, and the School of Fine Arts at Santiago de Cuba.[citation needed] He also created the first night schools for adults, the first schools for Languages, and the Technical School of Rancho Boyeros in La Habana, Cuba. He was also instrumental in the partial reorganization of the University of Havana.[citation needed]

Still later in his political career he was appointed as Ambassador to Mexico where he was recognized for his beliefs in helping the native Indian poor and downtrodden. Alemán was a stalwart fighter for equal civil rights for all Cubans and for the right of suffrage. A brilliant statesman he was much admired, widely respected and loved by his contemporaries and the people of Cuba.

At his passing in 1930 all flags in the nation were flown at half mast and the President of Cuba, all his Cabinet Ministers, several foreign dignitaries and more than 100,000 citizens attended his funeral procession.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cabrera Cuello, Migdalia (2021-09-23). "José Braulio Alemán Urquía (1866–1930)". Portal del Ciudadano Mi Santa Clara (in European Spanish). Equipo de Producción Nacional. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  2. ^ a b "Alemán: Patriota entero". Mi Santa Clara Gloriosa: Historia y actualidad de una tricentenaria ciudad (in Spanish). March 26, 2011. Archived from the original on March 28, 2012.
  3. ^ Laguna Enrique, Martha Elizabeth (2014-04-08). El museo nacional de bellas artes de la habana y la colección de retratos de la pintura española del siglo XIX (in Spanish). Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca. ISBN 978-84-9012-381-2.