每日大赛app

Sim贸n Rodr铆guez, Rebel Before And After Independence

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Sim贸n Rodr铆guez (1769-1854)

By Saiful Bahri Kamaruddin
Pix Wiki Commons

BANGI, Oct 21, 2015 鈥 聽Newly-independent nations might have fought hard to be liberated, but this did not necessarily mean that they were really free or ready for reforms.

The Latin American educator and revolutionary Sim贸n Rodr铆guez (1769 鈥 1854) who fought for independence from Spanish rule through his philosophy, found out the hard way that vested interests wanted to preserve the old ways, said 聽Prof Josu Landa of the Universidad Nacional Aut贸noma de M茅xico (UNAM).

Despite being given the responsibility of reforming the education system in Colombia by his prot茅g茅 the liberator Simon Bolivar, the landed elite resisted change, Prof Landa said in his lecture at The National University of Malaysia (每日大赛app), here today organised by the Centre For Latin American Studies (IKAL).

He said Rodriguez faced enormous opposition to reform education, leading the educator to declare: 鈥淲e are independent, but not free 鈥 owners of the land, but not ourselves鈥.

According to Landa, it was not just a few Latin American nations at that time that had yet to understand true independence, but most of them.

鈥淭his meant that although the political and administrative liberation accomplished by the vast majority of the countries聽 that make up 鈥楲atin America鈥 鈥 yet independence had yet to be achieved.

鈥淚t can be said that the aspects in which Sim贸n Rodr铆guez鈥檚 attention was focused were despised by the elite and the political leaders of the countries liberated from the Spanish yoke,鈥 he said.

He stated that Rodriguez proposed nothing short of the creation of a new republican order, with new social structures that were appropriate to the American reality after the fall of the Spanish empire.

While in exile in Jamaica during Spanish rule, Rodriguez wrote in his letters to Bolivar and other revolutionaries that the new American nations must surpass the passive state to which they were forced by the Europeans.

However, he said Rodrguez did not want to change everything, but to add to what was missing.

鈥淗e said: take the good 鈥 leave aside what is wrong 鈥 imitate with judgment and, whatever you lack, invent,鈥 Prof Lana explained.

What Rodriguez proposed was a Utopia in which he rejected a Eurocentric vision and the material riches of North America.

Prof Landa has been teaching as a full time professor at the department of Philosophy, Faculty of Arts in UNAM since 1988.

Also present at the lecture were the Director of the Institute of Malaysian and International Studies (IKMAS) Prof Dr Rashila Ramli and head of IKAL Assoc Prof Dr Zarina Othman.ukmnewsportal-eg