Mamá Tingó (born Florinda Muñoz Soriano; November 8, 1921 – November 3, 1974) was a Dominican activist leader and defender of the rural farming community in
Dominican Republic
The Dominican Republic ( ; es, República Dominicana, ) is a country located on the island of Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles archipelago of the Caribbean region. It occupies the eastern five-eighths of the island, which it shares with ...
. She was assassinated fighting against the unjust plunder of the resident farmers’ land in Hato Viejo in
Yamasá
Yamasá is a municipality (''municipio'') of the Monte Plata province in the Dominican Republic. It includes the municipal district (''distrito municipal'') of Los Botados.
Yamasa is north of the capital city of Santo Domingo. The Rio Ozama, on ...
during the second government under
Joaquín Balaguer
Joaquín Antonio Balaguer Ricardo (1 September 1906 – 14 July 2002) was a Dominican politician, scholar, writer, and lawyer. He was President of the Dominican Republic serving three non-consecutive terms for that office from 1960 to 1962 ...
one of the presidents of the Dominican Republic.
Biography
Mamá Tingó was born in
Villa Mella, Dominican Republic, on November 8, 1921. She was the daughter of Eusebia Soriano and was baptized in the Parroquia Espíritu Santo, the Holy Spirit Church, in 1922. She married a farmworker named Felipe at the age of 30. She worked on her farm for decades with her husband, until a landholder reclaimed her land. Although she was illiterate, it did not limit her and she fought for others like her who had lost their land.
In the beginning of 1974, the landholder Pablo Díaz Hernández reclaimed the lands that were occupied for more than half a century by the farmerworkers of Hato Viejo. Díaz Hernández claimed that he had bought the land. Mamá Tingó belonged to the Federation of Christian Agrarian Leagues and headed the fight to obtain benefits for the farmworkers of Hato Viejo, who believed they deserved them because they had occupied and worked the land for more than half a century. Despite her advanced age, she participated fiercely in directing the farmworkers movement.
Death
The landholder Pablo Díaz Hernández enclosed 8,000 acres of land with barbed wire and uprooted the farmers’ crops. On November 3, 1974, the farmworkers of Hato Viejo appeared in front of the Tribunal of
Monte Plata
Monte Plata is a town and municipality (''municipio'') and the capital of the Monte Plata province in the Dominican Republic. It includes the municipal districts (''distritos municipal'') of Boyá, Chirino, and Don Juan
Don Juan (), also ...
where the case was held, but the landholder Pablo Díaz did not attend the hearing. When Mamá Tingó returned to her farm, she discovered that the foreman Ernesto Díaz (Durín), employee of the landholder, had released her pigs. She went to gather them, but the foreman was hidden and took advantage of the moment and shot her with a shotgun. Mamá Tingó tried to defend herself with a machete, but two shots, one in the head and one to the chest, killed her. She died in Hato Viejo at 51 years old.
Contributions, legacy, and honors
Member of the Federation of Christian Agrarian Leagues, through which she fought for the rights of the farmworkers. She won the rights of more than 300 families to own their lands.
She is considered a symbol of the fight for land and an example of a rural woman; because of this,
one of the stations on the
Santo Domingo Metro
The Santo Domingo Metro ( es, Metro de Santo Domingo) is a rapid transit system in Greater Santo Domingo. Serving the capital of the Dominican Republic, it is the most extensive metro system in the insular Caribbean and Central American region by ...
system is named in her honor.
She was honored by the town council of Monte Plata with a statue that describes her work as an activist and fighter for the rights of agriculturalists.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mama Tingo
Dominican Republic activists
Dominican Republic women activists
20th-century rebels
Dominican Republic revolutionaries
1921 births
1974 deaths
Assassinated activists
Assassinated Dominican Republic people
People from Santo Domingo Norte