http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1779

Blood in the Streets of Santiago: Forty Years Since the Coup in Chile
By Richard Pithouse <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=20> · 9 Sep
2013
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[image: Picture credit: Former President of Chile, Salvador Allende,
courtesy Browse Biography.] <http://sacsis.org.za/s/story.php?s=1779>
Picture credit: Former President of Chile, Salvador Allende, courtesy
Browse Biography.

Pablo Neruda, the great Chilean poet, was awarded the Nobel Prize for
Literature in 1971 for “a poetry that with the action of an elemental force
brings alive a continent's destiny and dreams". In his acceptance speech in
Stockholm he cited Arthur Rimbaud, the wild teenage poetic genius of the
Paris Commune of 1871: "In the dawn, armed with a burning patience, we
shall enter the splendid Cities." Neruda declared that “my duties as a poet
involve friendship not only with the rose and with symmetry, with exalted
love and endless longing”, but also a “taking sides” with the “organized
masses of the people” in struggle against the “the condemnation of
centuries” and for “justice and dignity”.

Neruda was not just speaking as a poet. In 1970 he had been appointed as
the ambassador to France when Salvador Allende led a coalition of left
parties to victory in a bitterly contested election in Chile. As a teenager
Allende had formed a close friendship with an anarchist shoemaker, Juan
Demarchi, and their discussions, and shared reading, opened his political
horizons. For the rest of his life Allende’s politics remained more
democratic, more pragmatic and more generous in the face of organisational
and ideological diversity, than was, and still is, more usually the case on
the left. But this was not only a matter of ideas. His work as a doctor
rooted his politics in a concrete understanding of the day to day lives of
ordinary Chileans.

Neruda, who had first been the Communist Party’s candidate for the
Presidency, had campaigned for Allende’s attempt to rally the left under a
single banner insisting that “our people must be elevated to the life of
human dignity that they deserve”. To the horror of Chilean elites, Catholic
intellectuals, American business and political interests Allende won the
election. His victory speech promised a “second independence – economic
independence” and he symbolically opened the doors of the Presidential
Palace, La Moneda, to the people.

Allende was and remained committed to a democratic and non-violent path to
a more just society. But from the beginning it was clear that he faced
forces that didn’t share these scruples. Before he was even sworn into
office the American ambassador in Santiago reported to Henry Kissinger, a
powerful figure in Richard Nixon’s administration, that: "Once Allende
comes to power we shall do all within our power to condemn Chile and the
Chileans to utmost deprivation and poverty."

In office Allende, at first moving cautiously, began to make small but
significant reforms. Wages were increased, children provided with milk,
houses built, effective literacy programmes put in places, libraries
developed in trade union offices and shanty towns, literary classics
published and distributed and child care facilities and public laundries
set up. Then the mines and banks were nationalised. Allende’s share of the
vote escalated dramatically in the April 1971 municipal elections.

But demands for change were also escalating outside of the electoral arena
and representative politics. There were rural and urban land occupations
and then, in the same month as the municipal elections, workers seized
control of a textile mill. Allende was rattled and insisted that “The
masses cannot go beyond their leaders, because the leaders have an
obligation to direct the process and not to leave it to be directed by the
masses.” In the end, unwilling to repress the occupation of the mill, he
let it stand. In the next two years there were more than 500 factory
occupations. They, and the self-governing neighbourhoods in the shanty
towns, became centres of increasingly confident popular power. Some
commentators called this, in a phrase that carries a certain resonance in
contemporary South Africa, “a radical third force”.

The backlash from elites in Chile and the US began to gather real
intensity. At the same time Allende’s government, and popular struggles in
Chile, won increasing international support. Stevedores in Rotterdam and
Marseille refused to unload any copper in protest at an attempt by American
corporate power to boycott Chilean copper.

In late 1972 Neruda returned to Chile from Paris. In November he was
honoured at the National Stadium and declared that “This land has passed
from the hands of the glutted to the hands of the hungry.” But by the end
of that year it was clear that the democratic road to a more equal society
was being blocked by the alliance of Chilean and American elites. Allende
refused to arm the peasants, workers and shack dwellers who had been
driving social change from below and from outside of the state. In December
he refused an offer of Soviet protection in exchange for Chile becoming a
client state of the Soviet Union on the Cuban model. When the coup that put
an end to this experiment in democratic socialism came on 11 September 1973
it came with the tanks and jets of the Chilean army under the command of
Augusto Pinochet and the full backing of the US state.

Allende gave his final speech, a defiant speech, over the radio. Then there
was military music and, in Santiago, the sound of the air force attacking
both the shack settlements in the hills and the Moneda Palace. The next
morning Allende’s body, wrapped in a Bolivian poncho, was carried out of
the smoking ruins of the Presidential Palace which, Neruda noted, had “for
centuries been the centre of the city’s civil life”. People started to
disappear. Forty thousand were taken to the National Stadium where some
were tortured and murdered. Homes were raided and books seized and burnt.
When the soldiers come to desecrate Neruda’s home he famously declared that
“there's only one thing of danger for you here—poetry”. They burnt his
books in his garden. He died twelve days after Allende in circumstances
that remain highly contested.

Thousands of people came out for Neruda’s funeral. Workers on the job stood
to attention. A line from one of Neruda’s poem’s about the Spanish Civil
War was taken up by the swirling crowd – “Come and see the blood in the
streets”. It became the last open demonstration in support of the deposed
government. Elections and trade unions were suppressed, books, music and
curricula were censored, the country was thrown open to American
corporations and economic policy making shifted from the parliament in
Santiago to the University of Chicago.

Eduardo Galeano summed up the result of the coup that brought Pinochet to
power and replaced democracy with military rule in a simple but enduring
formula: “Business free as never before, people in jail as never before”.
Coups followed in other countries across Latin America. As Isobel Allende –
a daughter of Salvador’s cousin who became a fabulously successful novelist
in exile - wrote in 1997 “soon half the continent’s population was living
in terror”.

In 1983 a series of protests emerged from the shanty towns. Some raised
photographs of Allende as their banner. They were savagely repressed by the
military. But although Pinochet would hang on to power till 1990 these
protests are now often seen as the beginning of the end of his brutal
reign. The policies developed for Chile in Chicago, policies premised on
the radical subordination of society to the market, would be exported to
countries around the world, beginning in the global South, before they
started to infect the North too. They continue to leave social and
political catastrophe, catastrophe presented as hard economic rationality,
in their wake.

In the last pages of his autobiography, completed sometime between the coup
and his death twelve days later, Neruda wrote that “Once the thirty pieces
of silver had been exchanged, everything returned to normal.” There have
been moments when we could say the same. The difference for us is that
those who took their pieces of silver in exchange for returning things to
normal did not come from outside the struggle and they did not come in
tanks. They came in the name of the struggle. They came as heroes. We all
know their names. We shouldn’t be surprised that patience is burning up on
our streets.
*Pithouse* teaches politics at Rhodes University.

Read more articles by Richard
Pithouse<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=20>
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