Julio Antonio Mella was one of the most important pioneers of Marxism in Latin America. In the course of his brief life, Mella was a notable leader of the Cuban student movement, a founder of Cuba’s Communist Party, and the driving force behind various popular and revolutionary organizations. He also won wide recognition as a daring and provocative intellectual.
Born in Havana in 1903, Mella spent his youth studying at schools in Cuba as well as one in New Orleans. Before finishing high school, he had already read works by José Enrique Rodó, Manuel González Prada, José Ingenieros, and Emilio Roig de Leuchsenring, but he was mainly influenced by the ideas of José Martí, one of the key figures in Cuba’s struggle for independence.
In 1921, he joined the University of Havana as a student of law, philosophy, and letters. It was from this moment that Mella’s career as a revolutionary activist and intellectual really began. Several events would mark the new generation, including the reverberations of the Mexican Revolution, the economic and political crisis after the end of World War I, and the influence of the Russian Revolution.
The Argentine university reform of 1918, which gradually spread to other parts of Latin America, also played a fundamental role in stirring up the spirits of Cuban youth. It was through his involvement in the student movement that Mella began to stand out. He was one of the founders (and later president) of the Federation of University Students, an organization created in December 1922 on his initiative, as well as…
Auteur: Luiz Bernardo Pericás

