Ernesto Madero Vázquez

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

José Joaquín Ernesto del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús Madero Vázquez (born November 26, 1913 in Morelia , Michoacán ; † 1996 ) was a Mexican journalist and ambassador .

Life

Ernesto Madero Vázquez's father died before he went to school. At the Colegio de San Nicolas , he studied four years Engineering . In his youth he worked with José Rubén Romero in a publishing house with a print shop in Morelia . Madero was a member of the “Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios”. As such, he delivered a greeting address on August 20, 1936 at the first Congreso Latinoamericano de Estudiantes Socialistas in Guadalajara , Jalisco . Among other things, he designed the image of the heroic struggle of the Cuban people against the octopus arms of treacherous militarism, which bears the head of Fulgencio Batista .

Héctor Pérez Martínez, the editor-in-chief of El Nacional, the organ of President Lázaro Cárdenas del Río , sent Madero in 1937 as a correspondent to the second Spanish republic to report on the Spanish civil war . His chronicles were also published in the Ruta, the organ of the juventudes socialistas de México and the Grito . Madero traveled as a representative of the Universidad Obrera de México and other revolutionary youth organizations. In a press card from February 1937, he was granted access to all sections of the central front for ten days according to the instructions of the respective commanders of the sectors. At the front he saw himself as an assistant to Colonel David Alfaro Siqueiros of the 82ª brigada mixta des Ejército Republicano Español in Teruel . In Spain he interviewed André Malraux . Returning to Mexico in April 1937, Madero wrote a brochure entitled 'México, Tribuna de la Paz' at the suggestion of the Confederación de Trabajadores de Méxicodes . Lázaro Cárdenas appointed Madero consul in Barcelona in 1938 .

On March 1, 1939, Madero was sent to the embassy in Havana as third degree chancellor . He was granted $ 45.33 for the facility in Havana . On March 31, 1939, he came to Habanna on a Ward Line steamer, accompanied by his wife and mother, and submitted to the instructions of Ambassador José Rubén Romero . Luis Padilla Nervo was also accredited at the Mexican embassy in Habanna at that time . When the putschists of the Unión Militar Espanola were victorious in Spain in April 1939, hundreds of supporters of democracy fled through Cuba. These included Niceto Alcalá Zamora , José Giral Pereira Manuel Altolaguirre and María Zambrano . Romero was accredited in Havana from 1939 to 1944, where in 1940 Fulgencio Batista, whom he characterized as the octopus head in 1936, was elected president.

After the war, he returned to the diplomatic service, which took him to the Soviet Union. There he rose to the position of second embassy secretary before he was called back to Mexico in 1962.

Because of his invaluable experience, Ernesto Madero was sent as ambassador to Ghana in September 1966 , where he presented his credentials to President Addo in February 1967. At the same time, he should represent his country as ambassador to the governments of Morocco and Senegal. In 1968 he was accredited as ambassador to Morocco and in 1970 as ambassador to Senegal . His official residence remained in Accra until he went to Manila as ambassador in 1972.

Publications

Ernesto Madero Vázquez published several writings:

  • El Politico Indalecio Prieto ”. Ed. Carteles, May 25 de 1941
  • La última Carta escrita en Veracruz; “Martí en México. Primicias del Apóstol ”(Ed. Carteles, 1st February de 1942)
  • Vals Sobre las Olas, on the composer Juventino Rosas,
predecessor Office successor
José Maximiliano Alfonso de Rosenzweig Díaz Mexican Ambassador to Moscow
December 28, 1959 to December 11, 1961
Gabriel Lucio Argüelles
Rafael Fernando Fuentes Boettiger Mexican Ambassador in Rabat
September 20, 1968 to August 2, 1972
José Joaquín Bernal y García Pimentel
Pablo Padilla Ramírez Mexican Ambassador to Manila
December 15, 1972 to March 1, 1974
Roberto Molina Pasquel
predecessor Office successor
Celso Humberto Delgado Ramírez Mexican Ambassador to Algiers
September 13, 1974 to April 5, 1977
Óscar González César
Celso Humberto Delgado Ramírez Mexican Ambassador to Havana
April 27, 1977 to April 10, 1980
Gonzalo Martínez Corbalá
Daniel Galán Méndez Mexican Ambassador in Warsaw
June 3, 1980 to March 2, 1983
José Carlos Manuel González Parrodi

Individual evidence

  1. Aniversario del Natalicio del Embajador Ernesto Madero (1913-1996) , Ghana, Morocco and Senegal from page 35 of the PDF file 2.37 MB
  2. ^ Embajador Ernesto Madero (1913-1996). Breve Síntesis Biográfica: Una Vida al Servicio de México ( Memento of September 7, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  3. Embajadores de México
  4. Embajadores de México
  5. Embajadores de México