Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Poet, hero, rapist – outrage over Chilean plan to rename airport after Neruda

Human rights activists argue that the honour is inappropri­ate for a man who described raping a maid in then Ceylon, in his memoir

- By Charis McGowan

Pablo Neruda was a Nobel laureate whose poetry chronicled the lives and struggles of ordinary Latin Americans, and whose life was upheld as a symbol of resistance to dictatorsh­ip.

But a decision to rename Chile’s busiest internatio­nal airport after him has been met with outrage from human rights activists who argue that the honour is inappropri­ate for a man who admitted to rape in his own memoirs.

The cultural committee of Chile’s lower house voted this month to rename Santiago airport after Neruda, best known for his encycloped­ic work Canto General, or General Song, a sweeping verse history of the Americas.

Carolina Marzán, a deputy who voted in favour of the move, told reporters that the name of the poet “who made all Chileans proud” should be the first thing visitors see when they arrive in the country.

But any pride Chileans may have previously felt for Neruda is souring amid a reassessme­nt prompted by a string of student-led feminist protests across the country.

The movement was rooted in the campaign for abortion rights, and has been bolstered by Latin America’s #NiUnaMenos protests against femicide and the global #MeToo movement against sexual violence.

“There is no clear reason to rename the airport, and it is happening at a time when women are only beginning to dare denounce their abusers,” said Karen Vergara Sánchez, a student and activist who protested sexual harassment during a national wave of university strikes earlier this year.

The current controvers­y springs from a page in Neruda’s memoir, in which he describes raping a maid in Ceylon, where he occupied a diplomatic post in 1929.

After the woman ignored his advances, Neruda says he took “a strong grip on her wrist” and led her to his bedroom. “The encounter was like that of a man and a statue. She kept her eyes wide open all the while, completely unresponsi­ve,” he recalled. “She was right to despise me.”

Although the memoir was published more than 40 years ago, the passage has only become the subject of debate in recent years, said Vergara Sánchez.

“We have started to demystify Neruda now, because we have only recently begun to question rape culture.” Isabel Allende, the author and women’s rights campaigner, argued that Neruda’s work still had value. “Like many young feminists in Chile I am disgusted by some aspects of Neruda’s life and personalit­y,” she told the Guardian. “However, we cannot dismiss his writing.”

“Very few people – especially powerful or influentia­l men – behave admirably. Unfortunat­ely, Neruda was a flawed person, as we all are in one way or another, and Canto General is still a masterpiec­e,” she said.

Neruda was a prolific writer but also a political activist who helped thousands of Republican refugees escape to Chile after the Spanish civil war, and became ambassador to France during the leftwing government of Salvador Allende. He died under suspicious circumstan­ces, days after Augusto Pinochet’s military coup.

 ??  ?? Pablo Neruda
Pablo Neruda

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