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Hugo Blanco MSmithsonian
Hugo Blanco MSmithsonian
28 March 2018
''I have taken the term 'Indian' as the title of the book. It is the pejorative term used against
us. The whip they use to hit our faces. I have picked up the whip. I find it more appropriate
than using terms that soften or diminish the oppression''. - Hugo Blanco
We the Indians is a collection of essays by Peruvian peasant leader and indigenous activist
Hugo Blanco. In eleven chapters, Blanco discusses the struggles of indigenous people for
land and self-determination and develops his ideas on what an ecological, liberated
socialism could look like.
In the early 1960s Blanco was a leader of the uprising of Quechua peasants in the Cuzco
region of Peru. He was captured and sentenced to 25 years of prison, during which he
wrote Land Or Death: The Peasant Struggle in Peru. After an international solidarity
campaign, he regained his freedom in 1976, subsequently living in Sweden, Mexico and
Chile. He returned to Peru in 1978 and again became active in leftist politics. He was later
elected to the senate before being once again forced into exile after the 'autogolpe' of
Alberto Fujimori in 1992. Now living in Peru, Blanco is a director of the newspaper Lucha
Indígena, member of the editorial board of Sin Permiso and remains an activist for
indigenous liberation and eco-socialism.
''Hugo Blanco has walked this country from end to end, from the snow-covered mountains
to the dry coast, through the rain forests where the tribes are hunted like beasts, and,
wherever he went, on the way he helped the fallen to get up and the silent ones to speak'' –
Eduardo Galeano
The book costs 18 euros plus postage, and can be ordered through our website.
Table of contents:
A brief synopsis
Chapter 10. Indigenous culture and neoliberalism. Jose Maria Arguedas and Mario Vargas
Llosa
Note by the first Latin American editors, Manuel Martínez and Néstor López
Glossaries
Notes