Cuba: Education and Revolution

Authors

  • Ricardo Alarcón

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14452/MR-063-03-2011-07_15

Keywords:

Socialism, Marxism

Abstract

In 1795, Father José Agustín Caballero presented the first project for the creation of a system of public education for all the inhabitants of the island of Cuba. It was a visionary idea, but impossible to carry out at that time. The island was a colonial possession of the Spanish Crown, and most of the population was subjected to slavery or made up of Mestizos and freed blacks, the victims of segregation and racial discrimination. Education, within the reach of a very small minority, was confined within the strict canons of scholastic philosophy.… Father Caballero was profoundly critical of that philosophy and of the pedagogy springing from it. This would be the birth of an intellectual movement having decisive importance for the history of Cuba, a movement that would reach its pinnacle with another Catholic priest, Félix Varela, who was Caballero's disciple and the first Cuban intellectual who fought for national independence and the abolition of slavery.

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Published

2011-07-15

Issue

Section

Articles