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Elvia Carrillo Puerto

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Children
  
Marcial

Role
  
Politician

Name
  
Elvia Puerto

Died
  
1967, Mexico City, Mexico

Elvia Carrillo P (2)-1.jpg
Born
  
1881
Motul, Yucatan

Occupation
  
Activist, feminist, suffragist

Spouse(s)
  
Vicente Perez Mendiburo

Parent(s)
  
Adela Puerto Solis and Justiniano Carrillo Pasos

Personajes hist ricos elvia carrillo puerto


Elvia Carrillo Puerto (1878 – 1967) was a Mexican socialist politician and feminist activist. Elvia had been married at the age of 13 and widowed by 21. She founded Mexico's first feminist leagues in 1912, including the League of Rita Cetina Gutierrez (Spanish: Liga Rita Cetina Gutierrez) in 1919. In 1923, Elvia became Mexico's first woman state deputy, and elected to the Chamber of Deputies Due to Elvia's contributions to Mexican government and history, she was officially decorated as a "Veteran of the Revolution." Elvia's tireless dedication to the revolution and women's movement earned her the nickname "The Red Nun" (Spanish: La Monja Roja).

Contents

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1912–1922

Elvia Carrillo Puerto Role Models Elvira Carrillo Puerto 18811967 Mexican

Elvia Carrillo Puerto is credited with starting numerous feminist leagues in Mexico, the most prominent being The Rita Cetina Gutierrez League, named after one of Yucatan's greatest educators. The feminist leagues focused on many tasks to promote women's rights, beginning in Merida, Yucatan, where the first were founded in 1912, and eventually spreading through Southeastern Mexico, into Central Mexico in later years. The organization led a campaign against prostitution, the use of drugs, alcoholism, superstition and fanaticism. In attempts to uplift women, the Liga Rita Cetina Gutierrez, founded in 1919, often gave talks on child care, economics and on hygiene for poor women. The league inspected schools and hospitals, and helped to establish a state orphanage. Through the feminist leagues which Elvia founded, family planning programs were instituted with legalized birth control, the first in the Western Hemisphere. Elvia believed large families were a barrier to a better life for the poor and distributed literature by Margaret Sanger, who would later go on to found the American Birth Control League, later known as Planned Parenthood, material Sanger could not distribute in the United States for legal reasons. The leagues also set up prenatal and postnatal care for women.

1923–1925

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Elvia is noted as having devoted herself full-time to touring Southeastern Mexico with the goal of organizing Mayan women into leagues and preparing them for civic responsibility. The leagues would identify women of special aptitude and train them to fill elective posts in the city and state government. Elvia, after her brother and governor Felipe Carrillo Puerto permitted women the right to vote and hold office, was elected in 1923 to the Yucatan legislature, Mexico's first female member of state legislature. Elvia won the election by an overwhelming 5,115 votes. While a member of government, Elvia promoted the issue of land reform, proposing plans that would provide campesinos with farms capable of sustaining their families. In doing so Elvia organized local chapters of women into Gualbertista Central Agrarian Communities for Females, named after he brother, senator and land reform activist, Gualberto Carrillo Puerto.

Elvia Carrillo Puerto El voto femenino aniversario Mujer Inteligente

In 1924 as women's rights were advancing, Felipe Carrillo Puerto was assassinated. Felipe's death signaled a change in the local government, as well as in women's rights. While permitting women's rights in Yucatan, he had not been able to have those rights reflected in the constitution of Mexico, after his death those rights were revoked by the incoming leadership of Juan Ricardez Broca. With a new government in power, women were removed from positions in municipal and state government offices, women's suffrage was revoked, and social programs through women's leagues were no longer supported. Elvia moved to San Luis Potosi following the death of her brother Felipe, the new center of the women's rights movement. In 1925, Eliva was elected to the national Chamber of Deputies as a representative of San Luis Potosi, she was however denied the seat due to suffrage and office holding being restricted to males, while local governments had permitted such roles, they were still not recognized nationally.

Elvia Carrillo Puerto Centro de Documentacin quotClementina Daz y de Ovando
Elvia Carrillo Puerto's 139th Birthday

References

Elvia Carrillo Puerto Wikipedia