The Denver Post

Students’ struggles pushed teacher to run for president

- By Franklin Briceño and Regina Garcia Cano

As schools across Peru closed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, Pedro Castillo tried to find a way to keep classes going for his 20 fifth- and sixthgrade students. But in his impoverish­ed rural community deep in the Andes, his efforts were futile.

Seventeen of the students didn’t even have access to a cellphone. Tablets promised by the government never arrived.

“I called my students who have a basic cellphone, and the father answers you from the farm. You cannot connect with the child,” he said. “You call again in the afternoon or evening. The children don’t answer because they are exhausted in bed.”

“Where is the state?” Castillo, 51, told The Associated Press after a day of planting sweet potatoes on his own land.

It was the last straw for Castillo, who over 25 years had seen his students struggle in crumbling schools where teachers also cook, sweep floors and file paperwork. He’d already dabbled in activism with the local teachers’ union and helped lead a national strike in 2017. But now he went further, tossing his name into a crowd of 18 candidates in Peru’s presidenti­al election.

Defying the polls, the elementary school teacher came first in the April 11 voting, albeit with less than 20% of the overall vote. The stunning result gave him a place in June’s presidenti­al runoff against Keiko Fujimori, one of Peru’s most establishe­d political figures and the daughter of former president Alberto Fujimori. It is her third attempt to become president.

Castillo’s unlikely campaign comes at a turbulent time for the South American nation that has suffered such as few others from the COVID-19 pandemic. It recently ran through three presidents in a week after one was removed by congress over corruption allegation­s. Every president of the past 36 years has been ensnared in corruption allegation­s, some imprisoned. One died by suicide before police could arrest him.

Fujimori herself has been imprisoned as part of a graft investigat­ion, though she was later released. Her father Alberto, who governed between 1990 and 2000, is serving a 25-year sentence for corruption and the killings of 25 people. She has promised to free him should she win.

The two candidates have had dramatical­ly different lives.

While Fujimori’s father himself was a political outsider when he won office, his daughter grew up in the halls of power. She attended Boston University and got a master’s from Columbia University in the United States. She later served as first lady during her father’s last six years in office.

Castillo is the son of illiterate peasants, the third of nine children. While he went on to complete a degree in educationa­l psychology at Peru’s César

Vallejo University, he still lives in the country’s third poorest district, his home surrounded by cypress trees, cornfields, pigs and cows.

He wears ponchos, straw hats and sandals made from leftover tires. When he walks through rural areas, people run to shake his hand.

“He is my neighbor, he is good people, he talks to us wherever he is,” said Emelina Medina, 70, who was shucking corn at her home a few blocks from Castillo’s house.

Castillo’s politics mingle a nationalis­t, agrarian leftism with socially conservati­ve impulses. He is Catholic and his wife, Lilia Paredes, a rural teacher like him, and his two children are evangelica­l. He has expressed opposition to same-sex marriage and has said that for him abortion and LGBT issues “are not a priority.”

He has proposed nationaliz­ing mining, oil and energy sectors as well as deporting all immigrants living in the country illegally who commit crimes, a move aimed largely at the wave of Venezuelan­s who have sought refuge from their country’s crisis.

His chances of enacting his policies are uncertain. He would face a deeply divided unicameral congress that was newly elected on April 11. At the moment, his party has 37 of the 130 seats though the electoral counting to determine how many seats each party gets has not yet concluded.

 ?? Martin Mejia, The Associated Press ?? Free Peru party presidenti­al candidate Pedro Castillo hugs his daughter, Alondra, who cries for him not to leave home, as he prepares to campaign in Chugur, Peru, on Thursday.
Martin Mejia, The Associated Press Free Peru party presidenti­al candidate Pedro Castillo hugs his daughter, Alondra, who cries for him not to leave home, as he prepares to campaign in Chugur, Peru, on Thursday.

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