Historian José Ignacio López Soria outlined fascism in Peru, focusing on its main emergence during the 1930s.[1][2] López Soria organized Peruvian fascism into three groups; aristocratic fascism as promoted by José de la Riva-Agüero y Osma, mesocratic fascism as supported by Raúl Ferrero Rebagliati, and finally popular fascism as espoused by Unión Revolucionaria (Revolutionary Union).[1][2]
Another main outlet for fascism became the Peruvian Fascist Brotherhood, formed by ex-Prime Minister
Catholicism in 1932, believing, according to López Soria, that Peru should "return to the medieval, Catholic, Hispanic tradition as embodied now by fascism"[1][2] and he used the teachings of Bartolomé Herrera and Alejandro Deustua to support his ideology.[3] The Fascist Brotherhood initially enjoyed some prestige but it receded into the background after Peru entered the Second World War on the side of the Allies.[4] Moreover, the group's credibility was damaged by its leader becoming increasingly eccentric in his personal behaviour.[4]
Fascist governments
The most popular fascist faction in Peru was Revolutionary Union (UR),
authoritarian fascist regime from 1933 to 1939.[1][2][7] During his government, Benavides built a strong relationship with Peru's business leaders.[7]
fascist salute at events, which was described as being similar to the Nazi salute.[13][14][15][18][16][19] La Resistencia has denied its support of fascism.[20]
References
^ abcdefLópez Soria, José Ignacio (1981). El Pensamiento fascista, 1930-1945 (in Spanish). Mosca Azul Editores.
^Castillo-García, César (2022). The crooked timber that bore fruit: Peruvian fascist intellectuals of the 1930s and the echoes of their influence nowadays. The New School for Social Research.
. As a number of authors have noted, Victor Raúl Haya de la Torre, who had founded the party and was responsible for its organization, had been heavily influenced by the discipline and order of fascist and communist parties during his trip to Europe in the 1920s.
. In the elections of 1939 APRA stood ready to ally with ... the fascist Union Revolucionaria (UR) whose leader, Luis A. Flores, described himself as a "fascist by temperament and conviction" ... APRA allied itself to Manuel Prado, ... Apristas who had already voted for Prado, and his triumph was due to this support and to the electoral fraud effected by Benavides. In 1944 APRA formed part of the reformist Frente Democratico Nacional (FDN) ... including the fascist UR, ... The triumph of the FDN made Dr. Bustamante y Rivero the new President; he belonged to the ultra-conservative sector ... In the elections called in 1950 ... the Aprista Party supported the candidacy of the ultra-conservative General Ernesto Montagne, an ex-minister in the Sanchez Cerro and Benavides dictatorships.
^ abMitrovic, Mijail (2021). "At the fabric of history: Peru's political struggle under (and against) the pandemic". Dialectical Anthropology. 45 (4): 431–446. The deaths of the two young men led to a dispute over public space that prefigured the following months: the memorials erected spontaneously by citizens were repeatedly razed to the ground by the pro-Fujimori group La Resistencia, a far-right shock troop that months later would boast of shouting "no to communism" with the fascist gesture of the raised right arm during the second round between Keiko Fujimori (Fuerza Popular) and Pedro Castillo (Perú Libre).
^Drinot, Paulo (17 March 2022). "Peruvian Stasis". New Left Review. Retrieved 21 May 2023. neofascist groups like La Resistencia, with close ties to the fujimorista movement, have sought to intimidate government ministers, independent journalists and feminist activists.