© Latinas in History 2008 |
CASAL,
LOURDES (19381981)
Writer,
activist and intellectual, Lourdes Emilia Irene de la Caridad Casal y
Valdés was born into a middle-class family of privilege in Havana,
Cuba. At the Catholic University of Villanueva, she earned a degree in
chemical engineering while honing her skills as a student activist in
the Student Revolutionary Directorate. Counterrevolutionary activities
followed and forced Casals into U.S. exile. She completed a doctorate
at the New School for Social Research, and joined the faculty at the City
University of New York, and later Rutgers University. In 1969 she co-founded
the Institute of Cuban Studies, contributed to the magazine Nueva
Generación, and helped found the Antonio Maceo Brigade. Among
her early publications are El caso Padilla (1971), and Los
fundadores: Alfonso y otros Cuentos (1973). In 1974 she published
The Cuban Minority in the United States. Four years later, Casals
participated in the Dialogue, a meeting between members of the Cuban government
and a group of exiles that led to the release of political prisoners,
family reunification, and travel agreements. Her last book, Palabras
juntan revolución, received a posthumous award by Casa de
las Américas in Cuba.
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