War against all Puerto Ricans Revolution and terror in America's colony

Nelson A. Denis

Book - 2015

Details the unsuccessful Puerto Rican insurrection of 1950 through the life of Pedro Albizu Campos, the president of the Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico.

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2nd Floor 972.95052/Denis Due Feb 12, 2025
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Nation Books, A Member of the Perseus Books Group [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Nelson A. Denis (-)
Physical Description
xiii, 379 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 341-353) and index.
ISBN
9781568585017
  • Preface
  • Facts
  • Chapter 1. La Princesa
  • Chapter 2. Four Hundred Years of Solitude
  • Chapter 3. Our Children Speak English and Spanish
  • Chapter 4. The Green Pope
  • Chapter 5. A Good Career Move
  • Chapter 6. Cadets of the Republic
  • Chapter 7. The Ponce Massacre
  • Chapter 8. Its Only Chinatown
  • Chapter 9. Carpetas
  • People
  • Chapter 10. The Governor
  • Chapter 11. How to Rule a Country with a One-Page Report
  • Chapter 12. The Nationalist
  • Chapter 13. The Artist
  • Chapter 14. The OSS Agent
  • Chapter 15. The Barber
  • Chapter 16. The Academy of Truth
  • Events
  • Chapter 17. Last Days
  • Chapter 18. Revolution
  • Chapter 19. Salón Boricua
  • Chapter 20. La Caja de Chinchas
  • Chapter 21. Atomic Lynching
  • Chapter 22. Weird Science in Puerto Rico
  • Chapter 23. The King of the Towels
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Sources and Methodology
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Appendix
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

The US acquired the island of Puerto Rico in 1898 and from that time until the 1965 death of the island's most prominent 20th-century nationalist leader, Pedro Albizu Campos, brutally repressed Puerto Rican nationalism. Journalist Denis's graphic account explains the destruction of the Puerto Rican nationalist movement through stories of US-sponsored blackmail, routine violation of civil liberties, harassment, medical experimentation, sterilization without consent, torture, unlawful imprisonment, outright assassination, and bombing not only of critics of US colonial rule but also of ordinary citizens. Though a handful of studies of US colonial rule in Puerto Rico exist, this account is unrivaled in its accessibility and raw emotion. Twenty-three short, vividly written chapters recount the sheer violence of US colonial rule in Puerto Rico through individual life stories, mostly gut-wrenchingly tragic and ill fated. Amid recent debates surrounding Puerto Rico's debt crisis, police brutality against mainland African Americans, and the denial of basic civil rights to women, LGBTQ people, and children of undocumented immigrants, this book offers some much-needed perspective on the ugly history of US racism and terrorism against its own citizens. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General, public, and undergraduate libraries. --Bonnie A. Lucero, University of Texas-Pan American

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Denis, former editorial director of Spanish-language daily newspaper El Diario, reveals the true face of American imperialism in its own backyard through the history of military occupation, economic exploitation, and weak leadership that led to the October 1950 armed revolt in the Puerto Rican towns of Jayuya and Utuado. He shares the stories of young revolutionaries, federal agents, corrupt governors, and Pedro Albizu Campos, a man born into the lowest social tier who would become the president of the Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico. Characters such as Waller Booth, an undercover agent for the OSS (the precursor to the CIA) known by locals only as the proprietor of a nameless nightclub, take on weight through Denis's firm grip on narrative and attention to detail. Structurally, however, the book is weakly organized into three parts: Facts, People and Places. Forgoing a straight chronology, the anecdotes of minor and major players are often padded with points that are repeatedly explained. Nonetheless, Denis's meticulous research reveals an often overlooked element of American history and provides context to the current status of Puerto Rico as a U.S. territory. Photos. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

In searing and well-researched prose, former New York assemblyman and El Diario editorial director Denis covers a much-neglected side of U.S. imperialist and colonial practice in Puerto Rico. From the Spanish-American War in the 1890s to a failed and bloody revolution on the island in 1950, in which the U.S. Army deployed 5,000 troops and bombarded two towns-the only time in history that America has bombed its own citizens-the events chronicled will strike a chord with Puerto Rican and Latin American history students and enthusiasts. Recounting Nationalist hero Pedro Albizu Campos's last tortured days in the filthy, inhumane La Princesa prison and the botched plan to assassinate President Harry Truman at the Blair House in Washington, DC, the author presents decades' worth of interviews, public records, and personal documents. The historical account he adeptly weaves unabashedly reveals the government's racist and often predatory actions toward its Caribbean colony. VERDICT With a decidedly pro-Puerto Rican independence bent, this timely, eye-opening title is as much a must-read as Juan Gonzales's Harvest of Empire.-Shelley Diaz, School Library Journal © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Scathing examination of American colonial policy in Puerto Rico, culminating in the violent, brief revolution of 1950 and its brutal suppression. Filmmaker, former editorial director of El Diario and New York State Assemblyman Denis seethes at the injustices inflicted on the small island protectorate of Puerto Rico since it was seized from Spain during the Spanish-American War of 1898 and relegated to being a base for President Theodore Roosevelt's "big stick" policy in the Caribbean. According to the prevalent racial policy of the time, Puerto Ricans were considered too ignorant and uncivilized for self-rule. Massive sugar cane-grinding mills run by American corporations would soon dot the tropical landscape, and the impoverished inhabitants were enlisted in the backbreaking labor of cutting and processing the cane for pennies a day. In 1922, the U.S. Supreme Court declared the island a territory, not a state, and thus the U.S. Constitution did not apply, denying the workers any fair labor policies enjoyed by U.S. citizens. A Nationalist Party was formed at the same time, closely followed and infiltrated by the FBI, according to documents the author secured. The Ponce massacre of March 1937when the police opened fire on unarmed cadets marching through the town square, killing 19 and wounding over 200 peoplegalvanized unrest and rebellion. In telling this gruesome and little-recorded history, Denis concentrates on the personalities involved: the corrupt governor Luis Muoz Marn; the Harvard-educated Nationalist leader Pedro Albizu Campos; the documentarian of the Nationalist cause, Juan Emilio Vigui; and the humble barber Vidal Santiago Daz, whose Saln Boricua became the fulcrum of dissent and political organization. The 1950 rebellion concluded horrifically in violent death or imprisonment at San Juan's notorious La Princesa prison. Denis produces compelling evidence of U.S. government-sponsored radiation and other medical experiments inflicted on prisoners. A pointed, relentless chronicle of a despicable part of past American foreign policy. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.