Pedro Pablo Cazañas

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Born
Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García

(1902-12-05)December 5, 1902
DiedJune 28, 1978(1978-06-28) (aged 75)
OthernamesDoctor Pedro Cazañas
Pedro Pablo Cazañas
Pedro Pablo Cazañas, Circa 1938
Born
Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García

(1902-12-05)December 5, 1902
DiedJune 28, 1978(1978-06-28) (aged 75)
Other namesDoctor Pedro Cazañas
EducationUniversity of Havana (Doctorate of Law)
OccupationsJudge, politician

Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García (December 5, 1902 – June 28, 1978) was a Cuban judge and politician.

Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García was born December 5, 1902, in Matanzas, Cuba to Francisco E. Cazañas and Enriqueta García Martín.[1] His family was of considerable wealth and he was raised on their Buena Vista estate near Varadero.[2] Cazañas would remain in Cuba for much of his life before emigrating to the United States in the late 1960s as a result of the Cuban Revolution.

Career

Cazañas attended the University of Havana, earning a doctorate in law, after which Cazañas was often referred to as "Doctor Pedro (Pablo) Cazañas" in official documents, journals, and media.[3][4] Cazañas served as a traveling judge, holding court in various locations across Cuba that required a judge on a case-by-case basis before becoming an increasingly prominent politician in the Cuban judiciary as a municipal and then regional judge.[5]

In the 1930s Cazañas married Raquel María Díaz Teresa,[6] thereafter Raquel Díaz Cazañas.[7] The marriage was significant due to the Díaz family's importance in the San José de los Ramos area of Matanzas. Her father, José Lorenzo Díaz, was an administrator in the Cuban judicial system, working in the Juzgado de Primera Instancia (Court of First Instance) of the broader Colón area until his death in 1954.[8] The Díaz family was also regarded for replacing the small chapel in the town center with a grand church.[2] Raquel Díaz and Cazañas had three children - Raquel, Marta, and Eduardo - all born in Havana and raised in the Cazañas family's properties in Matanzas.[9][10]

After the coup d'état of 1952, Cazañas' stature in Cuba's judiciary rose further through the rest of the 1950s during the regime of Fulgencio Batista, with whom Cazañas had ties.[2] Batista had planned to attend and serve as a witness in the wedding of Cazañas’ eldest child, Raquel, to high-profile psychiatrist and Agrupación Católica Universitaria leader Rene de la Huerta, a friend of the Cazañas family.[11][12] However Batista was unable to attend due to his required presence in state visit abroad, therefore a top representative was sent to the ceremony in his place. Cazañas’ support of Batista would be a recurring source of generational tension with his children, each of whom were opposed to Batista.[2] By the end of the decade and Batista's rule, Cazañas would serve as a highly ranked Juez de Instrucción (Judge of Instruction).[13][14]

Later life

The Cazañas family opposed Fidel Castro and, following the Cuban Revolution, some were able to leave the island to take refuge in the United States and seek life in democracy there. The first of his children to leave Cuba was Eduardo, in 1959, who would later join the United States Armed Forces. Cazañas' younger daughter, Marta, was deeply involved in the counter-revolution against Castro and left to the United States with her future husband Jesús Permuy, a leader of the counter-revolution, via Venezuela following the failure of the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion.[2]

Cazañas, his wife, their eldest daughter, his siblings and several other relatives remained in Cuba and were unable to leave for much of the 1960s.[2] When his son Eduardo died in combat during the Vietnam War, the family sought to attend his funeral, however it was difficult for the remaining family in Cuba to participate due to diplomatic strains with the United States. Cazañas and his wife went to Mexico as a simpler way to reach the United States, however Cazañas contracted tuberculosis and was ultimately unable to attend the services and ceremonies.[15] The couple relocated permanently to Miami by 1968 and their eldest daughter's family joined them the following year.[2]

After emigrating to the United States, he lived out the rest of his life in retirement. He died in Miami on June 28, 1978, at the age of 75.[1][16]

Family

See also

References

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