Luís Espinal Camps
Luís Espinal Camps (1932–1980), also known by the nickname "Lucho"[1][2] and by the Catalan name Lluís Espinal i Camps, was a Spanish Jesuit priest, poet, journalist, filmmaker, and film critic. BackgroundLuís Espinal Camps was born on 2 February 1932 in Sant Fruitós de Bages, Catalonia, Spain.[1][3] He aspired to be a priest even as a child.[4] Espinal was educated at the minor seminary of San Jose in Roquetes, Baix Ebre between 1944 and 1949.[3] He joined the Society of Jesus of Veruela, Zaragoza in 1949, made his perpetual vows in 1951, and studied Humanities and Greco-Roman Literature (1951–53) there.[3][5][6] He studied Philosophy at the Facultad Eclesiástica of San Cugat del Vallés from 1953 to 1956.[5] While doing another licenciate course in Philosophy at the Universidad Civil de Barcelona, Espinal gave classes of Greek literature and Latin poetry to Jesuits.[5] He studied Theology (1959–63) at the Facultad Eclesiástica of San Cugat del Vallés,[5] and was ordained priest in 1962.[3] He later obtained a degree in film and television from the Italian Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore (1964–65).[3] CareerIn 1968, Espinal moved to La Paz, Bolivia, as a missionary.[1] There, he lived alongside the families of miners during the dictatorship of Luis García Meza.[7] Becoming a human-rights activist,[8] he co-founded the Permanent Assembly for Human Rights.[1][6] He gained Bolivian citizenship in 1970.[1] Beyond priest and activist, Espinal was also a poet, journalist, and filmmaker.[7] He had worked for a brief period in Spanish television.[1] In December 1967, he left Spain in protest against Francisco Franco's dictatorship censorship of him and his program channel, TVE.[5][6] In Bolivia, he directed the social issues-themed Cuestión urgente[4] ("Urgent Issue"). In Bolivia, he directed a similar program,[4] En carne viva (lit. "In living flesh"[9]), a series of 20-minute documentaries for Televisión Boliviana (TVB).[2] The show lasted from 1970 to 1971, when Espinal was sent off from TVB because he interviewed the Ñancahuazú Guerrilla.[5] Espinal was a film professor at the Higher University of San Andrés and the Universidad Católica Boliviana,[1][4] and worked for Radio Fides.[1] Espinal was a film critic for the newspapers Presencia, Última hora and Aquí,[1][2] a member of film company Ukamu, and author of ten books on cinema.[1] He was one of the most informed critics of film, television and radio in the country.[1] DeathIn 1980, a Bolivian-government death squad murdered Espinal in La Paz.[10] In the headquarters of the newspaper Presencia Espinal joined a December 1977 hunger strike led by Domitila Chúngara,[1] requesting amnesty for exiled labour and political leaders.[11] Espinal was killed by a right-wing paramilitary death squad in March 1980.[8][12] He was kidnapped by the paramilitaries on 21 March and was tortured.[1][7] His bounded and gagged body was only found by peasants the next day on the road to Chacaltaya.[1][7] Some sources say Espinal was killed because he would publicize the cocaine traffic done by military personnel.[13] Other say that the reason was that he informed against efforts to censor a public exhibition of Jorge Sanjinés's film El coraje del pueblo,[14] a documentary that denounced the massacre of 67.[15] LegacyEspinal's funeral on March 24 was reportedly attended by over 7,000 people in a manifestation against the regime.[1][7] A posthumous book written by Espinal, Oraciones a quemarropa (lit. "Point-blank Prayers"), was published containing his poetic prose and prayers.[1] In his homage, the Catalonia's Society of Jesus created the Luis Espinal Camps Foundation.[1] For Espinal's contribution to cinema and human rights, Morales declared in 2007 the "Bolivian Cinema Day" to be commemorated on 21 March.[7] In 1982, Bolivian historian Carlos Mesa published the book El cine boliviano según Luis Espinal.[2] Bolivian writer Alfonso Gumucio Dagron wrote a biography of Espinal in 1985.[16][17] The 2007 documentary Lucho: Gastar la vida por los demais, directed by Nelson Martínez, explored the life of Espinal.[18][19] In 1985, the song "A Luis Espinal" appeared on their debut album El Huerto by the Bolivian group Rumisonko, based in Washington, DC.[20] In July 2015, Pope Francis visited the site where Espinal was killed.[7] Espinal gained international notoriety as the author of a crucifix that incorporated the hammer and sickle after Bolivian president Evo Morales gave a replica of it to Pope Francis.[21] The Pope said the Jesuit "preached the Gospel, the Gospel that bothered them, and because of this they got rid of him".[22] Vatican representative Frederico Lombardi said that the object stands for open dialogue and his commitment to freedom.[21] However, Espinal's friend, Xavier Albó, said it symbolised that the Church should be in dialogue with Marxism, peasants and miners.[21] FilmographyFilms
Television
See alsoReferences
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