Like Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, Peruvian Victor Raul Haya de la
Torre (1895–1979) was one of Latin America's key
revolutionary leaders, well known across national boundaries. Inigo
Garcia-Bryce's biography of Haya chronicles his dramatic political
odyssey as founder of the highly influential American Popular
Revolutionary Alliance (APRA), as a political theorist whose
philosophy shifted gradually from Marxism to democracy, and as a
seasoned opposition figure repeatedly jailed and exiled by his own
government. Garcia-Bryce spotlights Haya's devotion to forging
populism as a political style applicable on both the left and the
right, and to his vision of a pan-Latin American political
movement.
A great orator who addressed gatherings of thousands of Peruvians,
Haya fired up the Aprismo movement, seeking to develop
"Indo-America" by promoting the rights of Indigenous peoples as
well as laborers and women. Steering his party toward the center of
the political spectrum through most of the Cold War, Haya was
elected president in 1962—but he was blocked from assuming
office by the military, which played on his rumored homosexuality.
Even so, Haya's insistence that political parties must cultivate
Indigenous roots and oppose violence as a means of achieving
political power has left a powerful legacy across Latin
America.