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The Body Politic: Memoir of a
Sandinista revolutionary
By V.A. Otis
The Country Under My Skin: A Memoir of Love and War By Gioconda
Bell; Alfred A. Knopf

Two years ago, at the invitation of the UN Population Fund, I traveled
to Nicaragua for a few weeks to learn firsthand about some of the reproductive
health programs that had been set up for women living in rural areas.
I went expecting to see poverty after all, Nicaragua had been embroiled
in a civil war until 1979, and then a vicious power struggle between the
socialist Sandinista government and the US-supported Contras well into
the 80s.
But I didnt expect to find so many women living in appalling, oppressive
conditions. Domestic violence is present in almost every household, and
even the most basic health and reproductive care is largely inaccessible
outside Managua. Women still need their husbands written permission
for any surgical procedures affecting fertility, such as tubal ligations.
I spent the entire trip wondering: What had become of the progressive,
post-dictatorship agenda that had touted full equality for all? Where
were the gains that so many women had fought and died for during the Sandinista
Revolution?
More recently, I came across a new book by acclaimed Nicaraguan poet Gioconda
Belli, The Country Under My Skin: Memoir of Love and War. There,
encrypted within the authors typically luminous prose, were the
answers to many of my questions. Unlike her best known novel, La Mujer
Habidata (a thinly veiled story of a young Nicaraguan debutante whose
burgeoning feminist sensibilities awaken her to the larger economic and
racial injustices in her country under the Somoza dictatorship), Bellis
latest work is a passionate recounting of her years as a Sandinista revolutionary.
Shes as brutally honest about the failings of her politically party
as she is about some of her own choices.
Belli has often written about her body as a metaphor for her country,
and now she describes in frank detail the degree to which she lived that
metaphor. At every stage of her journey, theres a new passion. Her
husband, whom she married at 19 in her haste for adult life to begin
and with whom she had two daughters was quickly replaced in her
affections, first by a poet who introduced her to bohemian Managua, then
by a guerrilla fighter who was killed by Somozas National Guard.
Before the Sandinista victory, she worked underground, using her day job
in an advertising agency as a cover for collecting information and filing
reports to the Sandinistas on prominent citizens. She worked as a courier,
ferrying money and weapons. She had to flee into exile, was tried in absentia
and sentenced to seven years in jail, then flew back to Managua the day
after the fall of the dictatorship bearing the first edition of the new
governments newspaper.
But theres plenty more to the book than Bellis emotional ups
and downs. Personal anecdotes complement rather than dominate The Country
Under My Skin. Two particularly great chapters touch upon Bellis
tours of the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc. Libya and Algeria.
Then there were the crude propositions she got from Omar Torrijos, the
dictator of Panama, and the more subtle come-ons by Fidel Castro.
Some purists of the political memoir genre might decry the inclusion of
such salacious details, but, as Belli points out, being sexualized even
while in full battle garb was (and still is) a reality for women in progressive
movements. And, to give Belli further credit, shes willing to go
where few feminists will and admit she had a role in creating that dichotomy:
I had exposed myself to bullets, death; I had smuggled weapons,
given speeches, received awards, had children so many things, but
a life without men, without love, was alien to me, I felt I had no existence
unless a mans voice said my name and a mans love rendered
my life worthwhile.
Bellis own disillusionment with the Sandinistas, concealed at the
time, is also frank in this account. The growing authoritarianism of the
Ortega brothers, Humberto and Daniel (later accused by his stepdaughter
of sexual abuse), as well as the recklessness with which they cultivated
ties with the Soviet bloc, made them an easy target for the Reagan administration,
and brought their own revolution down in flames.
The Ortegas could certainly have been wiser, but it would probably have
made no difference. The Sandinistas came to power when Jimmy Carter was
president and benefited from Carters perception that US aid to Nicaragua
could keep the Sandinistas out of the Soviet camp. It might have worked
had the next administration shared Carters vision. But in
Reagan, the Sandinistas encountered an enemy as ideologically determined
as Fidel, and one who was not prepared to tolerate either support for
El Salvador or anti-Yanqui posturing.
And its worth noting, as Argentinas economy continues to falter
and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavas staves off attempts to oust him,
that many of those who brought down the Sandanistas are back in power:
Otto Reich, John D. Negroponte, John Poindexter, even Ollie Norths
being recycled these days. It would behoove all Americans to remember
that these were the men behind the Cold War millstones that ground Nicaragua
and its once progressive revolution into powder.
Source: In These Times
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