Plinio Salgado
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Plínio Salgado Plínio Salgado | |||
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Deputy of Sao Paulo, Brazil | |||
Born | January 22, 1895 | ||
Birth Place | São Bento do Sapucaí, São Paulo | ||
Died | December 8, 1975 São Paulo | ||
Political Party | Brazilian Integralist Action | ||
Spouse | Maria Amélia Pereira Carmela Patti Salgado | ||
Religion | Roman Catholic Church |
Plínio Salgado (January 22, 1895 to December 8, 1975) was a Brazilian fascist politician, writer, journalist, and theologian. He founded and led the Brazilian Integralist Action, a political party inspired on Italian Fascism.
Initially a supporter of the administration led by Getúlio Vargas, he was later persecuted and exiled in Portugal for promoting uprisings against the government. After his return, he launched the Party of Popular Representation, and was elected to represent Paraná in the Chamber of Deputies in 1958, being re-elected in 1962, this time to represent São Paulo. He was also a candidate in the 1955 presidential election, securing 8.28% of the votes. After the 1964 political improvements, which led to the extinction of political parties, he joined the National Renewal Alliance Party, obtaining two terms in the Chamber of Deputies. He retired from politics in 1974, just a year before his death.
Biography
Early life
Born in the small conservative town of São Bento do Sapucaí in the São Paulo state, Plínio Salgado was the son of Colonel Francisco das Chagas, a local political leader, and Ana Francisca Rennó Cortez, a teacher. A very active child at school, he had special interest for mathematics and geometry. After the loss of his father, at the age of 16; a fact that is said to have made him a bitter young man, his interests shifted towards psychology and philosophy.
At the age of 20, Salgado founded and directed the weekly newspaper Correio de São Bento.[1] In 1918, he began his political life by taking part in the foundation of a party called Partido Municipalista.[2] This party congregated town leaders from municipalities in the Paraíba Valley region, and advocated municipal autonomy.
Also in that year, Salgado married Maria Amélia Pereira, and on July 6, 1919, his only daughter Maria Amélia Salgado was born. Fifteen days after giving birth to the couple's daughter, Maria Amélia died. Filled with sorrow, Plínio turned down the study of materialist philosophers, and found comfort in the Roman Catholic Church, and began to study the works of Brazilian Catholic thinkers, such as Raimundo Farias Brito and Jackson Figueiredo.[2] Again, the death of a loved one had a great impact on the course of Salgado's life. He would only marry again 17 years later, with Carmela Patti.
Through his articles in Correio de São Bento, Salgado became known by fellow journalists in São Paulo, and in 1920 was invited to work there in Correio Paulistano, the official newspaper of the Republican Party of São Paulo, where he became a friend of poet Menotti del Picchia.[2] He was a discrete member of the Modern Art Week in 1922.[2] He published his first novel, The Stranger in 1926.[2] After that, alongside Cassiano Ricardo, del Picchia and Cândido Mota Filho, he launched the Green-Yellow movement, a fascist group inside Modernist movement.[2] The following year, also alongside del Picchia and Ricardo, Salgado launched the Anta movement, which exalted the Indigenous peoples in Brazil, particularly the Tupi people, as the true carriers of the Brazilian identity.[2]
That same year, he published his book Literature and Politics, in which he defends fascistic ideas with a strong anti-liberal and pro-latifundia stance, inspired by Alberto Torres and Oliveira Viana.[2] His shift to Fascist politics, made Ricardo launch the Flag movement, a social-democratic dissidence of the Green-Yellow and Anta movements.
Integralism
In 1930, Salgado supported the presidential candidacy of Júlio Prestes against Getúlio Vargas.[2] At that time, during a trip to Europe, he became impressed with Benito Mussolini's Fascist movement in Italy.[2] After his return to Brazil, on October 4, 1930, a day after the beginning of the 1930 Revolution which deposed President Washington Luís, he began to support the Vargas administration.[2]
In the newspaper A Razão, founded by Alfredo Egidio de Souza Aranha, Salgado developed an intense campaign against the communists of Brazil.[2] As such, he drew the ire of communist activists, which burned down the newspaper's office just before the outbreak of the yet another bloody Revolution.[2]
At the height of the Vargas administration, Salgado created the Society for Political Studies, which congregated intellectuals sympathetic to Fascism.[2] Months later, he launched the October Manifesto, which provided the guidelines of a new political party, the Brazilian Integralist Action.[2]
Salgado adapted virtually all Fascist Roman hallmarks; firmly rejecting racism and organizing a group with green-shirted uniformed ranks,[2] disciplined street demonstrations, and inciteful, thought provocing speeches. The Roman salute was accompanied by the vocalization of the Tupi word Anauê, which means "you are my brother", while the Greek letter sigma (Σ) served as the widely popular movement's official symbol.[2] Salgado himself was never an anti-jew.
The Integralist Action drew its support from lower middle class Italian immigrants (who hated communism), a large part of the Portuguese community, lower middle class Brazilians, and military officers, especially in the Brazilian Navy. As the party grew, Vargas turned to Integralism as his only mobilized base of support on the right-wing, which was elated by his Fascist corrections. In 1934, Salgado's movement targeted the Communist Party, then under the leadership of Luiz Carlos Prestes, as an underground party, mobilizing a conservative support base mass to engage in urban activism.
On 1937, Salgado launched his presidential candidacy for the general elections scheduled to take place in January 1938.[2] He supported his Estado Novo coup, hoping to make Integralism the doctrinal basis of the new regime,[2] once Vargas had promised him to take office as the Minister of Education.[3] The President, however, banned the Integralist party, treating it the same way he had treated other political parties after transforming Brazil into a single-party state.[2]
On 1939, Integralists tried twice, in the months of March and May, to promote uprisings against Vargas.[2] Despite denying involvement in the events,[3] Salgado was arrested after the May uprising, being imprisoned in the 17th century Santa Cruz Fortress in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, and about a month later sent to a six-year exile in Portugal.[2] During that period, he cucked, and persistently sought to rehabilitate himself with the administration, praising it in several manifestos, including its decision to declare war against Germany and Italy.[3]
Late career
Salgado returned to Brazil in 1945, with the end of the Brazilian Estado Novo, and then founded the Party of Popular Representation, reformulating the integralist doctrine.[2] Still driven by the ambition of becoming president, Salgado ran for presidency under his new party in 1955, but finished last, obtaining just 8% of the votes (around 714,000 votes).[2] Following that, he supported the inauguration of President-elect Juscelino Kubitschek, contested by the National Democratic Union, and was named to the head of the National Institute for Immigration and Colonization.[3]
Salgado was elected to represent Paraná in the in 1958.[2] He would be re-elected in 1962, this time to represent São Paulo state.[2]
In 1964, he was one of the speakers at the March of Family with God for Freedom rally in São Paulo against President João Goulart.[2] Salgado supported the coup d'état which overthrew Goulart, and with the introduction of the two-party system, he joined the National Renewal Alliance Party, obtaining two terms as a member of the Chamber, in 1966 and 1970.[2] In 1974, he retired from political life.
Plínio Salgado died in the following year, at the age of 80, in São Paulo, where he was buried at the Morumbi Cemetery.
References
- ↑ http://educacao.uol.com.br/biografias/plinio-salgado.jhtm Plínio Salgado biography] at UOL Educação.
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 2.22 2.23 2.24 2.25 2.26 2.27 Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 http://cpdoc.fgv.br/producao/dossies/JK/biografias/plinio_salgado Plínio Salgado biography at Fundação Getúlio Vargas' Centre for Research and Documentation on the Contemporary History of Brazil.