Jose Lopez on Oscar Collazo Lopez video por Jose Rivera 1:19:14 # 3
Jose Lopez on
Oscar Collazo Lopez, Collazo (birth name: Oscar Collazo
López [note 1]) was born in what is now
Florida, Puerto Rico. In
1920, Collazo's father died and his mother sent him to live with his brother in
Jayuya. His brother was a member of the
Liberal Party which had independence beliefs. When Collazo was 14 years old, he participated in a student demonstration, which the government had made illegal, commemorating the birth of
José de Diego, a known advocate for
Puerto Rican independence who had died two years before.
In 1932, when Collazo was 18 years old, he participated in another demonstration commemorating José de Diego. This time the main speaker was
Pedro Albizu Campos, the president of the
Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. That day Collazo was so impressed by
Albizu Campos' leadership that he joined the
Nationalist Party and devoted himself to it.[
1][2]
Collazo heard Albizu talk about the abuses of
American imperialism, as symbolized by
Cornelius P. Rhoads, an
American doctor who had written a controversial letter claiming to have killed
Puerto Ricans in experiments.
Outraged, Albizu had complained to the governor and gained an investigation. (This eventually cleared Rhoads of any crime.)[2]
Move to
New York City and political career
In
1941, Collazo moved to New York City, which had a large
Puerto Rican community. There he met and married
Rosa Cortez, a divorcee. The couple had a total of three daughters from previous marriages: Rosa with two and Collazo with one. He worked in a metal polishing factory and led a normal family life[3]
He met and became friends with Albizu Campos when the latter was hospitalized for a time at the
Columbus Hospital. Collazo had become the secretary and later served as president of the
New York branch of the Nationalist Party. After he met
Griselio Torresola in New York, the two men soon became friends.[3]
Plot to assassinate
President Truman
Main article:
Truman assassination attempt
On
October 30,
1950, Torresola and Collazo learned that the
Jayuya Uprising in
Puerto Rico, led by the nationalist leader
Blanca Canales, had failed. Torresola's sister had been wounded and his brother
Elio was arrested. Believing they had to do something for their cause, Collazo and Torresola decided to assassinate
President Harry S. Truman, in order to bring world attention to the need for independence.[1][3]
On
October 31, 1950, Collazo and Torresola arrived at
Union Station in
Washington, D.C. and registered in the
Harris Hotel. On
November 1, 1950, with guns in hand, they attempted to enter the
Blair House, where the President was living during renovation of the
White House. During the attack, one White House police officer,
Private Leslie Coffelt, was killed and multiple others were wounded. Torresola was killed by the mortally wounded Coffelt, and Collazo was shot in the chest and arrested.[4]
In prison, Collazo was asked why he had targeted
Truman, who was in favor of self-determination for Puerto Rico and who had appointed the first native-born Puerto Rican governor. Collazo replied that he had nothing against Truman, saying that he was "a
symbol of the system. You don't attack the man, you attack the system."[5] He said he had been devoted to the Nationalist Party since 1932 and hearing Albizu talk about the Rhoads' letter and
US imperialism.[2]
In
1952, Collazo was sentenced to death, but President Truman commuted his sentence to life imprisonment. He was sent to the federal prison at
Leavenworth, Kansas.
More than two decades later, on
September 6,
1979,
President Jimmy Carter commuted his sentence to time served, after Collazo had spent 29 years in jail.
President Carter also commuted the sentences of Collazo's fellow
Nationalists:
Irving Flores,
Rafael Cancel Miranda, and
Lolita Lebrón, convicted in a later attack on
Congress. Collazo had been eligible for parole since
April 1966, and
Lebron since July
1969. Cancel
Miranda and Flores became eligible for parole in July 1979. However, none had applied for parole because of their political beliefs.[6] Upon their return to Puerto Rico, they were received as heroes by the different independence groups.[4]
Collazo's wife, Rosa, had been arrested at the time of the assassination attempt by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (
FBI) on suspicion of having conspired with her husband. She spent eight months in federal prison.[1] Upon her release from prison,
Rosa Collazo continued to work with the Nationalist Party. She helped gather
100,
000 signatures in an effort to save her husband from the electric chair.[1]
Later years and legacy
Plaque honoring the women of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
In 1979, Collazo and the other nationalists were decorated by
Cuba's President
Fidel Castro. In the Puerto Rican
Cultural Center of
Chicago, Illinois is a mural honoring
Puerto Rico's independence leaders; it includes the images of Collazo and Torresola.[7]
video # 3 by
Jose Rivera 1:19:14