Abstract
During the last decades of the 20th century, Shining Path conceived Indian culture mainly as part of feudalist-capitalist alienation. Consequently, this insurrectionist organization aimed to mobilize the indigenous communities around a class-oriented revolutionary project. Although the academic literature has acknowledged and studied this process, its historical roots in the intelligentsia of the early 20th century remain under-examined. To contribute to their research, this article first analyzes the “neo-indigenist and indigenist discussion” of the first decades of the century, mainly through the works of Manuel González Prada, Luis Eduardo Valcárcel, and José Uriel García. The article will then focus on José Carlos Mariátegui and Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre to explore the discussion around the implementation of socialist thought in Peru. Finally, this research analyzes the influence of the previous authors on the configuration of Shining Path’s ideology,
Introduction
The confrontation between the Shining Path (
Thus, the radicalism of Shining Path is evidenced not only by its military tactics but also by the organization’s conception of the revolutionary subject, which led to the preponderance of the
Extensive academic work has tried to analyze and understand every aspect of Shining Path’s existence, including its emergence, internal organization, deployment, and expansion across Peru (Degregori, 1990; Starn & La Serna, 2019). Numerous authors have also focused on various related areas, such as the ideological configuration of the party (Krehoff, 2006; Starn, 1995), the movement’s impact on Peruvian society (Mallon, 1995; Rénique & Lerner, 2019), the peasant armed response through
In a complementary approach, the main goal of this article is to analyze the key contributions of several Peruvian thinkers to demonstrate that the emergence of Shining Path’s
Following this line of thought, the present article argues that Shining Path’s ideology was highly influenced by three tendencies developed by several leftist Peruvian authors in the 20th century: (a) the need to assist Indians in the development of an effective political discourse, (b) the legitimation of violence in the political agenda, and (c) the hegemony of the bourgeoisie in the leadership of the Peruvian cause.
The article first explores the influence of Maoism on Guzmán’s
This article analyzes both primary and secondary sources, relying specifically on the works of Peruvian authors González Prada, Uriel García, Valcárcel, Haya de la Torre, and Mariátegui. These authors were selected for their relevance and influence on the development of the Peruvian leftist thought, as well as for their individual contributions to the study of indigeneity (i.e., the Indian problem and the role of the Indian in Peruvian society). Nonetheless, they should not be regarded as a homogeneous group as they had considerable differences that led to relevant discussions and political struggles. This article states that, despite these differences, they shared key points that can be traced back to the beginning of the 20th century and influenced Shining Path’s
The article first explores
In conclusion, the article argues that Shining Path’s ideology is not a
All in all, the article contributes to building a better understanding of the Shining Path conflict in Peru in its relationship with the land problem and the Indian problem. It examines how these conceptions permeated the political intelligentsia’s developing comprehension of the country’s reality, paving the way for the emergence of a violent political movement entrenched in this very discussion.
The Relevance of Pensamiento Gonzalo in the Configuration of Shining Path
Shining Path in the Face of the Land Reform and the Indian Problem
During the 1980s and until the 2000s, Peru was immersed in a cruel civil conflict that affected the entire country with different levels of intensity. The main subjects in the struggle were the Peruvian government and Shining Path—Maoist guerrillas who sought to defeat the official government and establish a communist political system by declaring a “popular war” in 1980. Rural areas, in which the majority of the indigenous population resided, were the most affected, especially during the first stages of the civil conflict. Indigenous people were the target of Shining Path’s attempts to recruit fighters for their rural militias and of violent repression. These behaviors were rooted in
This conception is based upon notions developed in the context of the land problem and the historical processes undergone by Peru. Although Shining Path exacerbated the conception of indigenes as peasants, the issue dates back centuries in Peruvian history. Méndez-Gastelumendi (2001) has studied how the fixation on the European conquest as the panacea of historical explanations has denied historicity to Andean peoples, construing them as “remnants” and, ultimately, “ethnic” (p. 158). The Peruvian Revolution, which took place between 1968 and 1980, when a branch of the Peruvian army overthrew President Belaúnde Terry for nonfulfillment of his campaign promises and established a socialist-leaning military government, is of special interest. Among other policies, this government nationalized the oil wells and implemented a particularly intense land reform, which jeopardized the oligarchic system. The Decree Law No. 17716 lowered the ceilings on landholding to a maximum of 150 hectares, expropriated any land beyond that threshold, and eventually distributed it between peasant cooperatives and societies (Albertus, 2020; Degregori, 1990). Nonetheless, inspired by Western socialism, this revolution also declared the ”social death” of Indians. From that moment, Peruvian Indians were encouraged to refer to themselves as “peasants” (Yashar, 2005, p. 258). Moreover, their culture suffered a process of appropriation whereby a rhetoric glorifying the Inca past coexisted with a condescending judgment of the Indian. This apparently contradictory situation officialized an indigenous discourse and neutralized its potential political connotations (Méndez-Gastelumendi, 1995).
Although the study of this issue exceeds the aim of this article, it is necessary to point out how the Indian problem, as well as the national problem, refers to a long-standing problematic situation incorporating a myriad of subjects at different temporal stages. For example, De la Cadena (1998) distinguishes three main periods during the 20th century, which reflect the progressive abandonment of the concept of “race” and its replacement by an analysis based on “culture” and “class” (p. 144). Nonetheless, this author evidences that under an apparent ethnic conflict—which, in fact, had socioeconomic features—lay a regional conflict between Lima and the provinces, a political struggle between the traditional elites and the emerging intelligentsia, or even with the establishment of masculine roles in the political arena (De la Cadena, 1999).
The Consolidation of Shining Path’s Pensamiento Gonzalo
Based on the cultural consequences of the issues surrounding the Indian problem, the main tenets of Shining Path’s ideology,
The main characteristics of
Consequently,
More concretely, Guzmán fostered a sense of superiority of the Marxist ideology and understood that the party had an undeniable goal: the instauration of a communist government through a “popular war” (Degregori, 1990, p. 158). To reinforce this idea, the individual agency of the militants was often represented as capable of defeating death or, alternatively, dying for the revolution. According to Guzmán (1988), party members should be fearless, committed to the party’s ideals, and willing to serve whenever necessary. Thus, the official fanatical discourse suggested that contemporary Peruvian society could be split into two: those who support the revolution and those who oppose it. This leads to the defense—in absolute terms—of the ideology under a dogmatic and messianic logic. Further interpretations of the Peruvian reality are “justified” by authors such as Mariátegui, who Guzmán maintains would have been a
The defense of Maoism within It [Maoism] is an ideology but it is also science [. . .]. To sum up, it is the ideology of the proletariat, Marx’s biggest creation [. . .] it is a scientific ideology that has given men a theoretical and practical instrument to transform the world. (p. 6)
Owing to these Maoist influences, anti-revisionism became a key aspect of Shining Path. Guzmán himself identified it as one of the most important factors in starting a revolution, adding that even the criticism, within the Bolshevik party, of Stalin’s excessive cult of personality should be rejected as all revolutionary processes must have strong leaders. This constitutes a self-legitimation of Guzmán’s role in the Shining Path organization and in the implementation of the popular war.
The popular war and the use of violence are central to
Thus, the main characteristics of
Indigenism in Peru: The “indigenism” and “Neo-Indigenism” Discussion
After centuries of colonialism—a system that distinguished, among Indians, between
Within this context, during the 19th and 20th centuries, several thinkers and artists developed theories on Peru and its indigenous nature, including the “Indian problem,” the recovery of Andean culture, and the role of the Peruvian state within this process (Deustua & Rénique, 1981). These researchers sought to denounce the loss of the
Méndez-Gastelumendi (1995, 2000, 2011) has conducted extensive research to unravel the issues surrounding Peru’s national identity, tracking the ethnic exclusion of Indians down to the process of independence and the following decades, when this tendency crystallized in the
In this sense, discussions on the development of Peru’s national identity focused not only on the role of indigenous communities in the state and their protection from landowners, but also on the nonindigenous population that had embraced Western values and ideas (Kristal et al., 1991).
Despite these commonalities, indigenous thought was characterized by heterogeneity as it included literary approaches to indigenous traditions—for example,
Ivan Degregori (2000) points out that Shining Path originated and developed in the reinforcing authoritarian contexts of Andean peasant–
An alternative theory elaborated by Valcárcel (1981) identified three different moments: “regional indigenism,” developed in Cuzco and Puno; “national indigenism,” which describes the spread of indigenist ideology across the country; and “institutional indigenism,” when indigenism was finally incorporated into the Peruvian political agenda (Valcárcel, 1981, p. 256).
Despite the variety of views and methodologies, the focus of many discussions during the second decade of the 19th century was the essence of the indigenous nature: specifically, “indigenism” (a way back to Inca values) and “neo-indigenism” (the construction of a new concept of the Indian). Some authors differentiated between “indigenism” and “Indianism” depending on the relevance of the Inca past and the importance of the ethnic element within the conception (García, 1973).
On one hand, the “indigenist” theory argued that Indians were the heirs of a very developed and sophisticated civilization level with Western civilization. In Valcárcel’s (1975) words, “Here is the greatest silent tragedy which has been the theatre of Peru for four hundred years, caused by denying a cardinal truth: Peru is an Indian nation” (p. 108). Valcárcel implies that a continuity exists between the citizens of the Inca Empire and the Indians of the 19th century and, although oppressed by the Spanish colonizers, the Indians were the protectors of the Peruvian heritage and therefore the sovereign population of Peru. According to this “restorationist” view, the country should reconsider its Western nature and recover its forgotten Inca values (Kuon Arce et al., 2009, p. 195).
Nonetheless, this continuity cannot be considered in literal terms but concerns the essence and values of Andean culture: It should not be a resurrection of
In this sense, it is necessary to point out the influence of Valcárcel on the socialist thinker José Carlos Mariátegui, who believed in a primitive communism in the Inca The Incan communism and the socialist project do not only share related nature, consanguinity or substantial similarities, but also concrete mediation elements: economic, social, politic and cultural features, solidarity and cooperation habits, and the natural socializing factor existing in the communities. (p. 260)
Focusing again on Valcárcel, the role of the Peruvian intelligentsia involved two important tasks: the recovery of Inca traditions and the education of indigenous communities (Valcárcel, 1975). In the first task, researchers were to rescue the forgotten Incan culture, which was repressed—and often destroyed—during colonization (Mariátegui, 1969). This so-called recovery also incorporated other dimensions of Inca thought, such as traditions, literature, values, religion, and even the organization of the political system. However, it was also deemed necessary to implement pedagogic strategies to put an end to colonial servant culture and further enrich the Inca heritage. Indeed, “if the present Indian remembered his past, ending five centuries of unconsciousness, he would be able to recover his building potentialities” (Valcárcel, 1981, p. 217).
Although this “indigenist” perspective is useful for bringing to light the discrimination and exclusion faced by Indians, authors such as Degregori (2012, p. 43) have stated that indigenism is an external vision that acts as a ventriloquist representation of indigenous people. According to him, it negates the independent agency of indigenous people, often turning them into victims in need of the protection and redemption of the
Alternatively, other authors understood indigenism in a more inclusive manner. The main critics of neo-indigenist theory relied on the relevance of ethnicity and the continuity between the citizens of the Inca Empire and 19th century Indians (Solís, 2001). According to José Uriel García (1973)—the most notorious researcher of this theory—the aim of rebuilding the
Other relevant aspects were developed, bolstered by this affirmation, such as the rejection of the ethnic element of indigenous identity, the active inclusion of
Although this inclusive new identity was aimed at recovering indigenous culture while including nonethnic Indians, in the middle to long term, it would weaken Indian identity, reinforcing the notion of Indians as “alienated peasants.” This process was established through three essential points: the prioritization of the “land problem” in the indigenous agenda, the conceptualization of the Indian as an alienated subject, and the progressive legitimation of the use of force.
On the first point, the new generation of Peruvian researchers (e.g., Haya de la Torre and Mariátegui) argued that the main Indian grievance was the
Despite sharing the purpose of freeing and empowering the indigenous communities,
Second, the cultural colonization suffered by Indians and the subsequent repression of their culture and traditions were increasingly incorporated into the Marxist concept of “alienation.” This further legitimated the Peruvian
Finally, Manuel González Prada, a Peruvian thinker with socialist-anarchist influences, denounced the republican project and the republican leaders as perpetuating the colonialist government (Rénique & Lerner, 2019). In doing so, he provided a relevant element for the transition from indigenism to socialism when defending the legitimacy of an armed response. Although Prada developed an extensive body of work on the role of the Peruvian urban middle class in Pacific indigenous inclusion, he added that an indigenous armed response could be legitimated if the Peruvian population refused to partake in the transition: “If the oppressor’s consciousness does not change, it will be changed by the use of force” (González Prada, 1924, pp. 336–337). In this sense, González Prada reclaimed the belligerent indigenous discourse lost after the repression of the uprising led by José Gabriel Condorcanqui (also known as Tupac Amaru II) in the 18th century.
Although the Peruvian intelligentsia expressed explicit support for the indigenous cause, it was still imbued with paternalism. In particular, for Degregori (2012), the indigenist academic production often put forth a multifaceted essentialist idea of indigenous people: first, through an attempt to “redeem the Indian” by
In summary, the radical indigenism of Uriel, Valcárcel, and González Prada created the necessary context for the development of socialist-based theories of Peruvian Indigenism, namely, the materialist analysis of Peruvian society, the submission of the indigenous movement to the urban vanguard, and the legitimation of the use of force to achieve the revolutionary goal. For example, José Uriel García—one of the main defenders of the “New Indian” concept—approached socialist-communist views, was a member of the
The Socialist Discussion
In the 1920s, the cultural discussion was surpassed by the need for a political movement that could serve as a catalyst for change in Peru. In this sense, the progressive youth of the time, represented by José Carlos Mariátegui and Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, tried to develop a political agenda that could simultaneously respond to the country’s national, regional, and international problems (Castro, 2015).
Both authors, clearly influenced by González Prada and most probably by Valcárcel and Uriel, developed a neo-indigenist conception arguing that Indians should focus on creating a new societal project respecting and integrating their culture and traditions. Following this line of thought, Haya de la Torre promoted a political movement, the APRA has been pictured by its admirers as a grass-roots lower- and middle-class reform movement designed to end foreign and oligarchical domination of the economy, to incorporate the Indian mass into national life, and to democratize the socio-political structure of the country. (Davies, 1971, p. 626)
In the
Nevertheless, the socialist movement comprised two different wings: APRA Pan-American socialism and Mariátegui’s Marxism applied to Peru (Flores Galindo, 1980; Starn, 1995). The characteristics of this divide, such as the revolutionary political agenda, the influence of Marxist views, or the international nature of Haya de la Torre’s project have been widely studied (Coronel & Cadahia, 2018; Germaná, 1977; Soifer & Vergara, 2019). Indians were to play completely different roles in the transformation of Peruvian society and become the vanguard of the revolutionary army—in Mariátegui’s view—or part of the international alliance of oppressed peoples of Latin America—according to Haya de la Torre.
From Mariátegui’s perspective, Indians lacked a political agenda of their own as a result of their alienation during colonization, which explained the failure of indigenous uprisings in past centuries. In addition, the few attempts at a serious reconstruction of indigenous identity based on an idealized return to the Inca empire rejected the benefits of modernization and denied the Peruvian reality of the previous 5 centuries. Concretely, in “
In this context, Marxism was construed as a tool to give a “constructive, modern sense to the indigenous cause”: Through socialism, Indians could understand the origins of their oppression, establish political objectives, and recognize potential strategic alliances (Mariátegui, 1986, p. 249). Specifically, Indians should be included in the revolutionary forces focused on overthrowing the capitalist state and replacing it with a new socialist society capable of putting an end to Peru’s two main problems: imperialist domination and an oppressive political-economic structure (Mariátegui, 1969). In fact, Mariátegui is considered to be the first author to propose a socialist revolution in Latin America, a noncapitalist region that lacked a mature proletarian class (Sosa Fuentes, 2007).
Although socialist thought gained traction, Degregori (2012) argues that the indigenist paradigm continued to permeate Peruvian society: According to Marxist theory, Indians and peasants were the victims of imperialism. In concrete terms, indigenous people were considered “poor peasants” who required the support and leadership of socialist groups often self-denominated as
Although Peru was primarily an agrarian country, Mariátegui’s concept of the Indian was influenced by Western Marxist theory and by authors like Valcárcel, Uriel, and González Prada (e.g., Mariátegui, 1969, 1970). The
Mariátegui’s argument focused on two points: the Indians’ subordination to the proletariat and an increasing hostility toward nonrevolutionary progressive movements. On one hand, the alienation of indigenous communities caused by the feudalist and capitalist governments implied that the leader and architect of the revolution should be the proletariat, given that this group was more conscious of the economic nature of its oppression. On the other hand, the Socialist Party understood that any movement opposing the revolution would be considered an enemy of the Peruvian people. In fact, this element was a breaking point with Haya de la Torre’s APRA, which favored a noncommunist political alliance involving the urban bourgeoisie.
As evidenced in this discussion, Mariátegui adapted Marxist-Leninist theory to the Latin American reality, and thus considered the Indian problem—the national problem—to be a land problem and used the Indian as the revolutionary subject in lieu of the proletariat (Mariátegui, 1970). Therefore, the conception of the Indian as a subject became dominated by the concept of the peasant; indigenous “ignorance” was really an agrarian “alienation.” In this sense, Mariátegui proposed a holistic theory in which Indians, although the national revolutionary subject, required the leadership of the proletarian class. Valcárcel’s and Uriel’s intelligentsia fostered the revolutionary vanguard, which was more conscious of the alienation suffered by Peruvian society and of the threat posed by nonrevolutionary organizations.
Pensamiento Gonzalo : Between Mao and Mariátegui
The irruption of Shining Path in Peru can be better understood through the movement’s ties to Maoism and its peculiar interpretation of the revolutionary subject, which contributed to the emergence and consolidation of its ideology,
Because Shining Path’s ideology was heavily based on Maoism, its practical implementation of the revolution featured several key characteristics in line with the notion of the Peruvian Indian constructed by
Guzmán explicitly recognized the importance of the Russian revolution and stated that the revolutionary process could not continue without first embracing Marxist-Leninist theory. Mao went one step further, affirming that revisionism should be rejected and, ultimately, depurated. According to him, revisionism is normally accepted because it enables opportunists to push their reformist agendas, which encourages the creation of individual factions within the party (Darling, 1969). Thus, revisionism endangers the party and the revolution because bourgeois ideologies can easily infiltrate it: The key point of this movement is to rectify those people in positions of authority within the Party who take the capitalist road. . . Of those people in positions of authority who take the capitalist road, some are out in the open and some are concealed. . . Among those at higher levels, there are some people in the communes, districts, countries [xian], special districts, and even in the work of provincial and Central Committee departments, who oppose socialism. (Mao, cited in Macfarquhar & Schoenhals, 2006, p. 13)
This radical conception of revisionism created a Manichean vision of reality and implicitly rejected any claim beyond the material dimension of the revolution. Indigenous claims could thus easily be assimilated to the revisionism that must be defeated at all costs. Therefore, cultural or political claims related to indigenous identity were received by Shining Path as atavism, peasant alienation, and, on some occasions, the result of bourgeois infiltration (Degregori, 1991). For example, Antonio Diaz Martinez, a high-ranking member of Shining Path, pointed to this alienation when describing peasants as people with so much “love, and [who] feel attachment and gratitude for the Pachamama, becoming unable of breaking their ties with her” (Diaz Martínez, 1969, p. 249).
Hence, even if The socialist doctrine is the only doctrine that can give a modern, constructive sense to the indigenous cause. The indigenous cause, located within its truthful social and economic terrain, and taken to a realist political perspective, is backed up by the will and discipline of a class that has flourished in our historical process: the proletariat. (Guzmán, 1976)
Officially, Shining Path (1988) was acknowledged as a political organization aligned with “Marxism–Leninism–Maoism, though mainly Maoism.” Hence, Mao’s ideology was pragmatically useful for three reasons: First, it recognized the peasantry (not the Indians) as the revolutionary subject in agrarian countries; second, it identified the rural areas as the starting point of the revolution; and third, its anti-revisionist paranoia legitimized high levels of repression, particularly against the Indians and the Mao conceived this type of war [guerrilla war] as passing through a series of merging phases, the first of which is devoted to organization, consolidation, and preservation of regional base areas situated in isolated and difficult terrain. Here volunteers are trained and indoctrinated, and from here, agitators and propagandists set forth, individually or in groups of two or three, to “persuade” and “convince” the inhabitants of the surrounding countryside and to enlist their support. The militia is not primarily designed to be a mobile fighting force; it is a “back-up” for the better-trained and better equipped guerrillas. The home guards form an indoctrinated and partially trained reserve. They function as vigilantes. They collect information, force merchants to make “voluntary” contributions, kidnap particularly obnoxious local landlords, and liquidate informers and collaborators. Their function is to protect the revolution. (Griffith, 1961, pp. 20–21)
Moreover, according to Shining Path, indigenous populations had to be reeducated because they were not aware of their own alienation. This idea of reeducating Indians permeated Valcárcel’s and Uriel’s line of thought. Indeed, both stated that indigenous populations needed a vanguard to help them define their political agenda. Nevertheless, Shining Path took this notion further and, in practical terms, only considered Indians to be the soldiers of the revolution: “the armed fight that we have to develop is an agrarian revolution starred by peasants with the direction of the proletariat” (Guzmán, 1976). Moreover,
In fact, some authors (i.e., La Serna, 2012; Starn et al., 1994) have pointed out that the subordination of the individual to the party aimed not only to erase feudalist-capitalist alienation, but also to promote a cult of personality around Guzmán. In Scott Palmer’s (1992) words: “
Although Maoism insisted on the relevance of the peasantry, Mariátegui’s contribution helped Shining Path articulate a novel conception of the Indian. As previously explained, Mariátegui highlighted the importance of indigenous mobilizations within the socialist revolutions of Latin America and considered Indians to be the proletariat (i.e., the revolutionary subject) of Peru (Mariátegui, 1974). Equating Indians with the proletariat and emphasizing the relevance of the peasantry under Mao’s thought initially contributed to the neutralization of the Indian as an indigenous subject. This would lead to a process whereby the Indian’s identity was based on class, ultimately neglecting his cultural identity and the cultural dimension of his grievances. In fact, Shining Path presented ethnicity—as well as feminism—as a “secondary contradiction,” which should be subordinated to the material class dimension (López López, 2017; Starn et al., 1994, p. 19): The war is directed by the proletariat and is starred by the peasantry. The peasantry is the base of the national democratic revolution and is the base of the popular war. This war is a peasant war or is not a war at all. (Guzmán, 1976)
Although Shining Path emphasized the importance of the Indian in the revolutionary process, its hierarchical structure—always helmed by Guzmán, seconded by a select group of academics—excluded Indians from the most critical political decisions. Shining Path was concentrated around a hermetic central committee perpetually distanced from the military struggle and thus limited to a planning role, leaving the implementation of its decisions to the militants themselves. According to Starn (1995), this behavior reflected a silent racism because, “despite claims of radical upheaval, the new party’s internal organization replicated the colonial stratification of regional society: a privileged elite of white professionals commanded a mass of brown-skinned youth of humble origin” (p. 93).
In fact, even the design of the political education process, which was directed by professors in the rural zones, illustrated the vertical structure of the organization and the apparent separation between Shining Path’s “academy” and its armed wing (CVR, 2003b, pp. 19–21): The revolution in the country, the destruction of the feudal system and imperialism can only be achieved through a democratic national revolution lead by the proletariat. The proletariat, in order to fulfil its historical role, should ally with the peasantry. The peasantry outnumbers the proletariat but it doesn’t lead the process. (Guzmán, 1974)
Marxist doctrine commands that a party must organize and indoctrinate its members. Although Mao’s revolutionary tactics are based on this Marxist conception, he further stated that revolutionary violence is necessary to maintain the purity of the organization and to prevent the emergence of revisionist anti-revolutionary elements (Griffith, 1961). As a result of this unlimited use of violence within and without the movement, Degregori (1988, 1991) labeled Guzmán’s political project as an “authoritarian Utopia” (p. 245).
In any case, this idea promotes violence as central to Maoist thought and, consequently, to Shining Path’s “from the countryside to the city” guerrilla strategy. The actual implementation of this tactic affected indigenous populations in several ways. First, they were exposed to the government’s brutal response as the
Nonetheless, Indians should not be considered passive subjects incapable of developing their own political agency. On the contrary, researchers have studied, for example, the
However, the idea of preserving the purity of the revolution, implementing extreme revisionism, and justifying the use of violence is not entirely new, although it was exacerbated within
This revisionist paranoia would clearly endanger not only indigenous populations, but also Peruvian civil society as a whole. However, indigenous communities paid a particularly high price: As guerrilla warfare started in rural areas, where the majority of Indians lived, these populations were often the victims of the violence targeted at revisionism. For instance, in 1983, 80 peasants were killed in Lucanamarca because they were regarded as collaborators of the Peruvian government (Starn, 1995). In 1993, 55 Ashaninkas were murdered in Satipo after they refused to join Shining Path, who later severed the ears of 14 hospitalized children (“55 indios asháninkas . . . ,” 1993).
Furthermore, the establishment of a “blood quota” by the guerrilla’s leaders left indigenous communities in a vulnerable position as war became the primary revolutionary tool. In fact, Shining Path leaders maintained that the eventual triumph of the revolution could not be achieved without an “inevitable blood bath” (Degregori, 2000).
Thus, Shining Path exploited the indigenous communities’ demands and grievances that aligned with its political project. The organization was particularly successful in attracting youth in the Andean regions, who, as a result of the cultural and political situation, felt unrooted and demanded security against common crime (Degregori, 1988, 1991). In fact, Degregori signals a relevant parallelism in Shining Path’s and Maoist discourses as the insurgent organization became a “good landlord,” which protected the people from bandits and bad local bosses—referring to them as the evil
Although the indigenous communities’ claims to the right to land and autonomy were defended as causes of the peasantry, Abimael Guzmán only initially recognized the existence of an “indigenous” dimension of the revolution: The founder of our party [Guzmán referring to Mariátegui] in “
Despite the rhetorical recognition of the indigenous dimension of the revolution in Guzmán’s discourse, in practical terms, the indigenous population’s demands were excluded from Shining Path’s political programs and Indians were seen as potential cadre members inside the organization. Shining Path exploited one of the indigenous communities’ main grievances, the demand for the fair redistribution of land, and emphasized its material significance in lieu of its cultural dimension: Whereas indigenous people considered their land to be at the center of their identity and way of life, Shining Path saw it as an assertion of the peasantry.
Simultaneously, Shining Path believed that guerrilla warfare should not be reduced to military actions as its ultimate goal was to transform the society in which it developed: [. . .] revolutionary war is never confined within the bounds of military action. Because its purpose is to destroy an existing society and its institutions and to replace them with a completely new state structure, any revolutionary war is a unity of which the constituent parts, in varying importance, are military, political, economic, social, and psychological. (Griffith, 1961, p. 7)
This idea would then be developed and adapted by Abimael Guzmán in his concept of “generated organizations.” These organizations were meant to replace the institutions that remained from the old political order; hence, Shining Path would implicitly neglect any other kind of organization, including indigenous ones. This is especially noteworthy as organizations provided logistical and financial support for
As evidenced by the preceding analysis, Shining Path was the product of a radical application of Maoist principles and the tergiversation of Mariátegui’s analysis of the Peruvian reality. First, the “re-education” of Indians was implemented in a paternalistic manner, neglecting any real participation or inclusion of their identity-related grievances. Whereas Valcárcel, Uriel, and Mariátegui stated that the urban intelligentsia should guide the revolution, Shining Path treated Indians as mere peasant soldiers, obviating their indigeneity. Second, repression and violence were portrayed as necessary to achieve the revolution and maintain its purity: For Shining Path, violent war was the only method for changing the status quo, and whoever challenged this idea was considered an enemy. This created a scenario under which extreme violence was legitimated as a means to obtain the
Mallon (1995) emphasized the continuity between the Peruvian left-wing authors and politicians concerning political relations with the indigenous communities: The lack of dialogue between the opposition political groups and the indigenous traditions and practices would be, therefore, an important characteristic of the Peruvian political process along the 20th Century. The discourse of a classist and militant left wing, reproduced this lack of dialogue during the 60’s and 70’s. During the 80’s, the Shining Path view about popular war would turn this blindness and lack of dialogue in active contempt. In fact, within the Shining Path strategy of the total war and the blood quota, culture and communal politics should be smashed like an insect. (p. 122)
Other authors have gone further, considering that Shining Path’s influences can be tracked down to the very origins of Peru (Stern, 1998). De la Cadena (1998) exposes how Shining Path shared an evolutionist view of Indians with the conservative intelligentsia, sustained by the belief that “the inferiority of indigenous pre-rational knowledge unquestionably and absolutely subordinated ‘that’ society to their intellectual and social paradigms” (pp. 158–159). More concretely, this author affirms that both projects reflected a European form of exclusion called “racism without race,” a continuum that emerged at the beginning of the 20th century (De la Cadena, 1998, p. 160; Stolcke, 1995). Complementarily, Starn (1995) goes a step further and states that Shining Path’s theoretical inspiration was rooted more deeply in “the Enlightenment imperatives of reason and progress” and the Judeo-Christian tradition of salvation than in an original Peruvian experience of Marxism (p. 400).
Conclusion
This article studied the formation and evolution of
The article first examined Valcárcel, Uriel, and González Prada, who recognized the relevance of Indians to Peruvian society and the need for strong leadership by the urban intelligentsia to reeducate Indians and lead them to a political uprising. In the words of Valcárcel (1971), “the Indigenous proletariat awaits its Lenin” (p. 29).
This article subsequently described how Haya de la Torre and Mariátegui were involved in the adaption of socialist thought to a Latin American reality, confronting Pan-American socialism with national communism. Mariátegui considered Indians to be the genuine revolutionary subjects of Peru and therefore the only political actor capable of igniting a socialist eruption. However, he believed that, because of their semifeudal and capitalist alienation, Indians required the leadership of the proletariat, who were more conscious of the socioeconomic structure oppressing the Peruvian population and aware of the revolutionary path leading to socialism.
Finally, Abimael Guzmán’s incorporation of Maoist theory exacerbated the peasant character of Indians, rejecting their indigenous nature and submitting them to a materialist analysis. In addition,
In this sense, this article demonstrated the continuity between the first studies of González Prada, Valcárcel, and Uriel at the beginning of the 20th century and the ideological basis of Shining Path’s
Summary of the Evolution of the 20th-Century Peruvian Intelligentsia’s Attitudes Toward Revolution and the Indian Problem.
Concerning the first characteristic, the indigenous population was unanimously recognized as the key subject in the transformation of Peruvian society. However, the original conception of Indians promoted by Valcárcel and Uriel García was increasingly replaced by the notion of “peasants,” which was better suited to Haya de la Torre’s and Mariátegui’s socialist ideology. This process in turn influenced Abimael Guzmán’s
The second characteristic, closely related to the first, illustrates the relevance of the socialist ideas that were progressively introduced in Peru. In this sense, cultural conceptions of the reconstruction of the Inca Empire or the generation of new, more inclusive identities were replaced by materialist interpretations focused on a revolution capable of overthrowing the semifeudal capitalist Peruvian state. As a result, the Indian problem was gradually replaced by the “land problem.”
Finally, this article demonstrated that the 20th-century Peruvian authors shared a negative—or at least pessimistic—opinion of the Indians’ political vision: Despite being the most relevant subject in the country, the Indians were thought to lack the political mobilization and historical perspective necessary to foster the emergence of the new Peruvian society. As long as they remained unaware of their own oppression and ignored the origins of their problems, they would remain politically demobilized. Therefore, González Prada, Valcárcel, and Uriel García—and, later, Mariátegui and Guzmán—maintained that the first efforts to organize the indigenous communities should be led by a nonindigenous and non-peasant minority which, thanks to its superior understanding of the Peruvian reality, could ignite the indigenous uprising.
Consequently,
Footnotes
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
