The texts of General Antonio Maceo

compilations that today are used across different levels of the country’s education system and accessible to anyone who wants to consult them.

“This is one of the important points of this work. Publications of this kind facilitate scholars of Cuban history and, in particular, of Maceo’s political and revolutionary work, on offering a finished product that brings together a wealth of information that would otherwise be dispersed in vaults, archives and libraries, both inside and outside the country,” the ICH vice president emphasizes.

When referring to Cuba’s independence struggles, it is difficult to find a battle or military action that is not associated with the name of Maceo. However, his character is not only explained based on this military career, but on the ethical and political bases that can only be found in such documents.

“To the extent that we can learn in depth about that thought, both in the military and political-ethical senses, we will be in better conditions – researchers, teachers, students – to offer a much more pluralistic approach to the life of Antonio Maceo and a fairly broad perspective on the thought of the broadest groups, sectors and strata of society regarding war and revolution.

“It is a task for the teacher, the pedagogue and anyone who wants to have a product of this magnitude. It is also important for political work, because we are talking about founding men in the history of the Revolution and Maceo is an inherent part of that legacy,” Dr. Yoel Cordoví Núñez concludes.

Although this is still an ongoing project, the Cuban Institute of History is already preparing the first volume of the many books that will be published on Maceo. This will bring together the correspondence between Antonio Maceo and General Máximo Gómez, Dominican by birth and Cuban by heart, as Martí described him. Once more, the pages of Cuban history expand, this time with the texts of General Antonio Maceo.