The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Puerto Rican who attacked Capitol in 1954 ‘still not sorry’

Nationalis­t sees fight to end ties to U.S. resurface.

- Mary Williams Walsh

SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO — In March 1954, Rafael Cancel Miranda smuggled a gun into the U.S. Capitol and, with three other Puerto Rican nationalis­ts, opened fire from the visitors’ gallery. Five members of Congress were wounded.

The attackers, three men and one woman, were swiftly arrested and tried. Cancel Miranda, then 23, received the longest sentence, 85 years. He served 25 years before his sentence was commuted by President Jimmy Carter.

Today, Cancel Miranda is the last surviving attacker. He lives with his wife, Angie, on a quiet lane of bungalows in a part of San Juan where the streets take their names from stars and constellat­ions. His eyesight is failing, but he still turns out for the occasional independen­ce event, where younger people receive him as a legend.

His ancient enmities are now fresher than ever because of the island’s catastroph­ic $72 billion debt, which has placed Puerto Rico into what amounts to federal receiversh­ip. A seven-member panel appointed by Congress and President Barack Obama will soon hold sway over the island and its finances, which collapsed after years of longterm borrowing to cover rising short-term costs. To longtime nationalis­ts like Cancel Miranda, it is yet more proof that colonialis­m is alive and well here.

This helps Cancel Miranda explain something odd that happened this summer. In June, the governor of Puerto Rico, Alejandro J. García Padilla, traveled to New York City and told a special committee of the United Nations that despite all appearance­s, Puerto Rico was still a colony of the United States. He sought the U.N.’s help in achieving self-determinat­ion for the island, which is a commonweal­th of the U.S.

“Puerto Rico is hungry and thirsty for justice,” García Padilla said.

The special committee has called on Washington to “allow the Puerto Rican people fully to exercise their inalienabl­e right to self-determinat­ion and independen­ce.”

To understand why García Padilla’s remarks were so unusual, it helps to know that his Popular Democratic Party claims to have already freed Puerto Rico from the colonial yoke. The island’s independen­ce is a signature issue: The party takes credit for negotiatin­g a unique status for Puerto Rico — that of an “associated free state” — which is said to provide the best of both worlds, statehood and independen­ce, without forcing Puerto Rico to choose.

The party says it achieved that in 1954, and that Puerto Rico has been an “associated free state” since.

“It’s a lie!” Cancel Miranda said in a recent interview. “We never controlled our own country.”

Unusual events this year have brought many Puerto Ricans to much the same conclusion. In January, in a double jeopardy case, the U.S. Supreme Court held that Puerto Rico had no independen­t prosecutor­ial authority — just the authority bestowed on it by the U.S. Congress.

Few on the mainland may have paid attention, but in Puerto Rico, the decision prompted the Popular Democratic Party’s president, David Bernier, a candidate for governor, to call for “an urgent review of the structure of the relationsh­ip between Puerto Rico and the United States.”

The party that invented the “associated free state” was now questionin­g it.

Next, Obama’s administra­tion invoked the territorie­s clause of the Constituti­on as it pushed for a law allowing Puerto Rico to restructur­e its big debt. The clause gives Congress the power to enact “all needful rules and regulation­s” for U.S. territorie­s, and its use sent a strong signal to Puerto Rico that the island had no power to carry out its own law.

When Congress passed the debt-restructur­ing law in June, it placed Puerto Rico’s financial affairs under federal oversight, handled by a seven-member board. This was widely seen as proof that “associated free state” was a meaningles­s term.

“Seven unelected people are going to be controllin­g our lives,” said María de Lourdes Santiago, a senator from the Puerto Rican Independen­ce Party who, like Bernier, is running for governor. “It’s a dictatorsh­ip.”

She said the debt crisis had set profound changes in motion and she hoped Puerto Rico could finally “have a legitimate process of decoloniza­tion.”

A White House spokeswoma­n, Brandi S. Hoffine, said it was clear that “the people of Puerto Rico want the issue of status to be resolved,” and referred to the recommenda­tions of a presidenti­al task force for how that might happen.

“The president remains committed to the principle of self-determinat­ion for the people of Puerto Rico,” she said.

In an interview at his home, Cancel Miranda said the previous decoloniza­tion — the one carried out by the Popular Democrats — had been a sham and had provoked the attack on Congress.

He played grainy blackand-white video footage of himself as a young man, refusing to apologize for the shooting during questionin­g. Then he filled in some details.

The United Nations had declared the 1950s a “decade of decoloniza­tion,” he said, and Puerto Rico was put on a list of colonies to be freed.

But, he said, Washington had merely appeared to go along with the proceeding­s — its main preoccupat­ion was the Cold War. It wanted to remove Puerto Rico from the list of colonies, but not give it full autonomy, Cancel Miranda said, which might have meant losing the island’s ports, airfields and other strategic assets.

In 1953, a U.N. special committee held hearings on whether Puerto Rico’s name could be removed from the list of colonies. Cancel Miranda said he was there, listening as U.S. delegates testified that Puerto Rico now had free elections, a Constituti­on and other essentials of self-government.

Other witnesses, however, said it was all window-dressing.

When the committee reconvened and voted, Cancel Miranda said, Washington’s view prevailed.

“That’s when the nationalis­ts said, ‘We have to send a message,’ “Cancel Miranda said. “That was the reason for the attack on Congress.”

Their message was silenced for decades by long prison sentences. Over the years, memories of the attack faded on the mainland.

And in Puerto Rico, the ballot replaced armed insurgency. The Independen­ce Party is respected but has not earned many votes — though its popularity is growing, Santiago said.

Now, it seems that most Puerto Ricans believe the associated free state was a sham, even if it is not clear what they will do about it.

“You saw what I said in 1954: ‘I’m not sorry,’” Cancel Miranda said. “And 62 years later, I’m still not sorry.”

 ?? ANGEL FRANCO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rafael Cancel Miranda, a Puerto Rican nationalis­t and one of the four attackers — the only one still alive — that in 1954 wounded five members of Congress in the U.S. Capitol, is at home in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
ANGEL FRANCO / THE NEW YORK TIMES Rafael Cancel Miranda, a Puerto Rican nationalis­t and one of the four attackers — the only one still alive — that in 1954 wounded five members of Congress in the U.S. Capitol, is at home in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

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