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Evita: Saint Or Sinner? Essay, Research Paper

Evita: Saint or Sinner?

The story of Eva Peron is a fascinating one . Evita, as she is known,

enjoyed a rise to power like no other. The details of this ascension are often

disputed, making Santa Evita’s tale all the more intriguing. . .

Maria Eva Duarte was born on May 7, 1919,1 the fifth and youngest

illegitimate child of Juan Duarte and his mistress, Juan Ibarguen. The week of

her birth was known as Tragic Week, when the army massacred striking workers,

perhaps a foreshadow of what was to come in her life.2

Eva spent her childhood in an adobe farmhouse, with farm animals and

earthen floors. In the farming trade, Juan Duarte incurred many debts,

eventually leaving him with nothing. Thus, early in her life, Eva learnt the

humiliation of poverty.

The Duartes were further put down by the stiff Argentine caste system,

which divided the poor from the wealthy. Being a bastard child, Eva and her

four sisters were seen as ‘brats,’ and were stopped from associating with the

other village children. Rejection, thrown upon young Eva through no fault of her

own, would not be forgotten nor forgiven.3

At age fifteen, Eva Duarte set out to become a radio actress. She knew

she could be like the women in the movie magazines she either stole or borrowed

from her friends. Eva met singer Agustin Magaldi, and, packed her bags and

sneaked out of her mother’s boarding house to the city of Buenos Aires.

Once Eva learned the rules of the ‘casting couch,’ she dropped Magaldi

and began her ascent to stardom. For years she wandered the streets, auditioned,

and did whatever she had to do, no matter how distasteful. Eva gained modeling

work and small parts in radio plays, frequenting nightclubs, and began to find

better work.

After several jobs in theatres, she was interviewed by the magazine

Sintonia. After Eva started an affair with the magazine’s owner, he began to

give her good exposure. This led to jobs in the film industry. Though she made

several, she had no talent to be seen in any of her films.4

Eva’s body was what sold her to the masses. She could have any man that

she wanted, and soon set her sights on Colonel Juan Peron, who had political

ruthlessness, a passion for younger women (especially good-looking actresses),

and was a 48-year-old widower.5

On January 15, 1944, San Juan Argentina was hit by a terrible earthquake.

A gala benefit show was held to support the relief effort, where Eva and

Colonel Peron first met. They were seen leaving the gala together.6

Their attraction was not kept secret. Evita- what she liked to be

called, now that she was a celebrity- and Peron became inseparable. Their

attraction became a personal bond as well as a political alliance. She was

active in formation of policy and penned plays about the Peronist ‘Revolution.’

By her account, Juan himself was responsible for the coup of 1943. This and

other similar events disturbed military officers greatly.

The U.S. Ambassador to Argentina, Spruille Braden, openly criticized the

Argentine government, and schemed to overthrow it. Peron labeled his opposition

as foreign intervention, and made his own cause a national one.7

This helped Peron become the most important man in the government, and

thus a target of much criticism. Military officers hated him, and the President

ordered him to resign his position. They decided to arrest Peron and place him

under ‘protective custody.’ It was October 12, 1945.

Peron, while in prison, won the support of the labor unions. Strikes

took place, and the workers took to the streets. The government had

underestimated Peron’s popularity. On October 16, Peron’s release was

successfully bargained for. On October 17, he was back in Buenos Aires.

However, he would not make and appearance to the public. The ‘descamisados,’ or

’shirtless ones,’ still filled the streets.

The President needed Peron to speak to the people. Having little choice,

he met Peron’s extreme demands. This included a new cabinet, and everyone in it

would be a Peron supporter. After terms were settled, Peron made his appearance,

and was cheered like no Argentine before him.8

When Peron ran for President in 1946, he won by the largest electoral

vote in Argentine history.9

Juan Peron and Eva were married on October 21, 1945. Evita was an

active first lady. She campaigned for women’s suffrage, yet her view of

feminism was different than that of today. Evita believed in a traditional

woman’s responsibilities, a woman who directed her activism toward the cause of

man. “For women, to be a Peronist means, above all, loyalty to Peron,

subordination to Peron, and blind trust in Peron.”10

Speaking on Juan’s behalf to the ‘descamisados,’ Eva is quoted as saying

“He is God for us. . .we cannot conceive of heaven without Peron. He is our sun,

our air, our water, our life. . .”11

Evita was a hero to ‘los descamidos,’ as she herself had been poor and

knew what poverty meant. She had her own court for them. The poor would

disclose their troubles to Evita. If money was their problem, they were handed

at least a 100 peso note. Any problem would be dealt with. Jobs would be found

for the unemployed. Evita’s strong men would seek a husband who had left his

wife (he would rarely refuse to return). She truly was a saint to them, Santa

Evita.12

Evita developed a strong following with women. She gave them the right

to vote, set up homes for single working girls, and introduced the idea of a

career woman.

Santa Evita was now more popular than Peron himself. Evita attempted to

use this popularity to run for Vice President. However, major army officers

feared she would succeed the President, and stopped her nomination. The

military still hated her, and could not stand for her to be thought of as

commander-in-chief.13

In January of 1951, surgeons noticed the beginnings of uterine cancer.

Eva rejected medical advice and refused to undergo a hysterectomy. Her health

worsened rapidly, and finally had surgery. It was too late. Eva Duarte de

Peron died on July 26, 1952 and Argentina wept. Hundreds of thousands lined the

streets. Peron himself was shocked. “I did not know they loved her so much.”14

Newspapers could use all the paper they desired in reporting the life

and death of Evita, despite a paper shortage. The news of her passing was

rebroadcast at 15-minute intervals. The country came to a halt.15

Evita’s tomb was planned. It would be lined with 16 statues of her. A

140-foot tall statue of a ‘descamido’ would tower along the Buenos Aires skyline.

While the tomb was being erected, Evita’s temporary resting place was

the Labor Confederation Headquarters. In 1955, agents of the new President,

Pedro Arambulu, stole the corpse, placed it into the army lorry, and drove away.

The remains of Eva Peron could be used as a powerful symbol against any

government, and the location of them became a primary concern of Argentines.

Rumors stated that she had been incinerated, that her body was in Chile with her

mother and sisters, that she was not in fact dead, but living in exile with

Peron. For years rumors circulated, until, in time, Evita became a memory, a

lost symbol of hope to the poor of Argentina.

* * *

On September 2, 1971, Juan Peron was reunited with the body of his

second wife, Evita. He openly wept. “She is not dead. She is sleeping. . .

Only sleeping!”

Evita’s blonde hair had been cut off at the neck. Further examination

showed that cuts were present all over her body, her nose was broker, both knees

broken, and the chest was marked with six holes.

Later repaired, the body was placed in a new coffin, upstairs in Peron’s

cottage.

Evita had been missing seventeen years.

The embalmed body was put on display in December of 1974, beside General

Peron’s sealed coffin. Twenty-four years after Eva’s death, In October 1976,

the body of Maria Eva Duarte de Peron was returned to the family, and now lies

in an armored private vault fifteen feet underground, in Buenos Aires.

Evita’s body should not be stolen again. It is not in the actual vault,

but one underneath the family tomb. Beneath three steel plates, each locked

with a different combination, in total silence and darkness, in another chamber

lies the corpse of Eva Peron.

“I will return. And I will be millions.”16


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