Farabundo Martí


Farabundo Marti Agustín Farabundo Martí Rodríguez (born May 5, 1893 in Teotepeque, February 1, 1932) is a Salvadoran Communist, military, peasant, and martial lawyer, founder of the Communist Party (1931) The Salvadoran Party, the revolutionary leader of the peasant uprising from 1930 to 1932. From 1927 to 1929 he participated in the anti-American partisan insurrection in Nicaragua, during which he served as personal secretary and adjutant Augusto Sandino. He was forced to abandon the guerrilla when the Comintern, after failing to subdue Augusto Sandino, began to campaign against him for a propaganda campaign of slander. Farabundo Marti then followed the instructions of the Comintern and accused his superiors. betrayal of international anti-imperialist movement Before the outbreak of the peasant uprising in El Salvador, he was arrested along with the rest of the leaders of the uprising, as the plans for the uprising were already known to the government and then shot. Prior to his death, he appealed against Sandino, whom he considered to be one of the greatest patriots in Latin America. The rebellion was bloody suppressed by the dictator, Maximilian Hernandez Martinez.

In 1980, the National Liberation Front was named in his honor. Farabunda Martíne (Frente Farabundo Martí de Liberación Nacional, FMLN), who first became a guerrilla organization in a civil war with a ruling junta, and since 1992 has been acting as a leftist political party. Bibliography

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