© Latinas in History 2008 |
RODRÍGUEZ DE TIÓ, LOLA (18431924)
"It
is necessary for a woman to receive solid liberal instruction
so that she
can join her intellectual efforts to those of men; the result would be the complete
wholeness that many great thinkers are fruitlessly searching for."
The
author of La Borinqueña the islands national
anthem Rodríguez de Tió lived the life of a sojourner
as she, her husband and daughters were ousted from the island on numerous
occasions for their political beliefs. Born in San Germán in
1843 into an educated family that traced its lineage to Ponce de León,
Rodríguez de Tió defied and re-defined the type of life
expected of women in her social class throughout the Americas. She
strongly believed in the solidarity binding Cuba and Puerto Rico in
their common struggles for liberation, comparing them to the two wings
of one bird, which received bullets and praise in the same heart.
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