Brazilian Communist guerrilla Helenira Rezende was summarily executed in the field on this date in 1972.
“Preta” to her comrades, she was a silver-tongued student activist at the University of Sao Paulo who had been clapped in prison by the dictatorship.
Rezende was amnestied in December 1968 and went underground, eventually joining the guerrilla movement in the Araguaia River basin.
The 80 or so guerrillas operating in the eastern Amazon aspired to run that Che Guevara rural-insurgency playbook, as it announced in a May 1972 manifesto. It didn’t work: the Brazilian military successfully suppressed the revolution in a series of campaigns over the next two-plus years. Only about 20 of the guerrillas survived.
One of those lucky ones, Angelo Arroyo,* gave an account of her death:
On September 29, there was an ambush that resulted in the death of Helenira Resende. She, along with another companion, was on guard at a high point in the woods. On that occasion, troops came along the road. As they found the passage dangerous, they sent scouts to explore the side of the road, precisely where Helenira and the other companion were. The latter, when he saw the soldiers, fired the machine gun, which did not work. He ran and Helenira did not realize what was happening. When she saw the soldiers were already in front of her. Helenira fired a 16-round shotgun. The other soldier gave a blast of machine-gun fire that struck her. Injured, she pulled out the revolver and shot the soldier, who must have been hit. She was arrested and tortured to death.
Her bayoneted body was secretly buried by sympathetic campesinos and has never been recovered; officially, she’s still considered a fugitive. Her unit adopted the tributary name Destacamento Helenira Rezende; more recently, the University of Sao Paulo’s postgraduate association has been named in her honor.
* He wasn’t lucky for long: Arroyo was assassinated with a fellow Communist leader by military officials in Sao Paulo in 1976.
On this day..
- 1832: William Hodkin, child rapist
- 1995: Navarat Maykha, accidental smuggler
- 1848: Harris Bell
- 1554: A false coiner and a masked dummy
- 1891: Ed Leeper and James Powell
- 1469: Humphrey and Charles Neville, Lancastrians
- 1893: Scuffletonians in Mt. Vernon, Georgia
- 1939: Pete Catalina and Angelo Agnes, Colorado murderers
- 1915: Thomas and Meeks Griffin, ancestors of Tom Joyner
- 1941: Babi Yar massacre begins
- 1503: Anacaona and the caciques of Xaragua
- 1979: Francisco MacĂas Nguema, President for Life