March 12, 2010

  • Eva Perón de Argentina

    I read this quote today from Wikipedia about Eva Perón and it really touched me, so here it is to share it with you:

    it was Evita’s work with the foundation that played a large role in her idealization, leading some to even consider her to be a saint. Though it was unnecessary from a practical standpoint, Evita set aside many hours per day to meet with the poor who requested help from her foundation. During these meetings with the poor, Evita often kissed the poor and allowed them to kiss her. Evita was even witnessed placing her hands in the suppurated wounds of the sick and poor, touching the leprous, and kissing the syphilitic. Fraser and Navarro write that though Argentina is secular in many respects, it is essentially a Catholic country. Therefore, when Evita kissed the syphilitic and touched the leprous she “ceased to be the President’s wife and acquired some of the characteristics of saints depicted in Catholicism.” Poet José María Castiñeira de Dios, a man from a wealthy background, reflected on the times he witnessed Evita meeting with the poor: “I had had a sort of literary perception of the people and the poor and she had given me a Christian one, thus allowing me to become a Christian in the profoundest sense….”

    There is a lot of criticism of Eva, but it is certain she cared about the people, and her faults are most likely attributable to her inexperience. She was a great woman.

Comments (2)

  • “And as for fortune and as for fame
    I never invited them in
    Though it seemed to the world
    They were all I desired
    They are illusions
    They’re not the solutions
    They promise to be
    The answer was here all the time
    I love you and hope you love me” : )

  • She was one of my favorite people to read about when I took the History of the America’s class back in HS :) . Her and Juan Peron were quite interesting! And it’s nice that she was able to ascend socially, and then give back…it seems like a lot of other people forget their roots.

    Well, looking at the history of US relations with South America, I feel generally ashamed >_>.

Post a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Comments

Categories