Who is evita
In , she set up the Maria Eva Duarte De Peron Welfare Foundation, which distributed money, food and medicines to those most in need. The result was very popular with the poor masses, but far less popular with the elite. Evita further angered the elite with her active campaign for female suffrage. Suffrage for women was enacted in , largely due to the energy and soul that Evita poured into the campaign. Evita announced that she would be standing for vice-president in the election, on the same ticket as Peron.
Her candidacy was strongly opposed by the military and, while the old Evita might have stood up to this, her bad health, combined with the opposition, caused her to decline the nomination. She died from cancer on 26 July , aged just Public grief was intense, and unprecedented in Argentina. Her precise role in Argentinian politics is still hotly debated, and her supporters and enemies battle it out to write her legacy. She combed the hair, and cleaned it bit by bit, and then blow-dried it.
It took several days. The end of one of Evita's fingers was missing. It is believed this was removed after the coup of because the military wanted to verify these were actually the remains of Eva Peron.
Carlos Spadone also thought the body had been repeatedly hit. In , Juan Peron and Isabel returned to Argentina. Juan Peron was elected president with his wife as vice-president. When he died suddenly the following year, Isabel took over as president and she oversaw the repatriation of Evita's body from Madrid to Argentina. Domingo Tellechea began the restoration of Eva Peron's corpse in a crypt in the presidential residence of Los Olivos on the outskirts of Buenos Aires. The closed coffin of Juan Peron lay close by.
He remembers this was a complicated job. She had one part where there was a wound - I couldn't say if it was made by a weapon, but it was caused by something. That part of the body looked pretty ugly. Domingo thought the remains might have been squeezed into a coffin that was not big enough.
It's an offence against the corpse. But it wasn't my job to say what caused the damage, although it definitely had no bullet wounds. But essentially, the original embalming work had stood the test of time. While he worked on the restoration of Evita's remains, the government of Isabel Peron began to plan the building of a national monument - an Altar of the Fatherland - that would contain both her and the closed coffin of Juan Peron.
It was never to be. When the restoration was complete, the corpse was once again briefly displayed to the public next to her husband's coffin. Photos from the time show a queue outside Los Olivos, but nothing like the two million people who had filed past her coffin when she died in Domingo Tellechea left Eva Peron looking unmarked and serene - as if she was resting peacefully.
But he would not sleep so easily. The country could have soon descended into civil war. The operation had already gained notoriety in the US, as a measure to treat uncontrollable aggression, and impulsive violence. Doctors had to create a make-shift operating theatre in a back room of the palace, she says; the security for the secret operation was so tight that an armed guard over-looked the proceedings.
Clearly, he wanted his wife to survive the operation. Peron addresses a crowd of women in Credit: Getty Images. In the end, the operation did succeed in silencing Evita — if only by accelerating her decline.
After the lobotomy, she simply stopped eating. She died on 26 July Poppen, his acquaintances claim, later regretted his involvement and the pain it brought. We can never know for certain the exact motives for the operation.
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