Hugo Lindo Olivares was a Salvadorian writer, diplomat, politician, and lawyer.
Biography
Hugo Lindo was born in 1917 in the port of La Unión, El Salvador, in a working, middle-class family. He studied in the University of El Salvador where he where he graduated as a Doctor in Jurisprudence and Social Sciences. In 1947, he traveled to Korea as a diplomat. Lindo was El Salvador’s ambassador for the Republic of Chile and for the Republic of Colombia. He became the Minister of Education in 1961 and later returned to diplomatic service as the Salvadorian ambassador to Spain. When he returned to El Salvador, he ran a gallery-bookshop called “Altamar” until the economic crisis in El Salvador forced him to close. He participated in the foundation of Dr. José Matías Delgado University and served as the University’s Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts from until his death. He was married to Carmen Fuentes and had 7 children, among which came the writer, :es:Ricardo Lindo Fuentes|Ricardo Lindo Fuentes, and the historian, :es:Héctor Lindo Fuentes|Héctor Lindo Fuentes. Hugo Lindo died in San Salvador on September 9, 1985 at the age of 68 years. In 2005, the Reading Week VII of El Salvador was dedicated to his memory. In 2010, Dr. José Matías Delgado University commemorated 25 years since his death as a tribute. His books are among the required readings in Salvadorian colleges.
Legal Works
As a lawyer, Lindo obtained the Gold Medal for his doctoral thesis entitled El divorcio en El Salvador , and he published some reflections about the disintegration of the Organization of Central American States in La Integración Centroamericana ante el Derecho Internacional .''
Poetic Works
He published the following collections of poems: Poema eucarístico y otros, Libro de Horas, Sinfonía del Límite, Trece instantes, Varia Poesía, Navigate río, Maneras de llover, Este Pequeño Siempre,, Resonancia de Vivaldi, Aquí mi Tierra, Fácil Palabra. After his death, he published various poems that he left as his living will, written feverishly as he neared his death, namely: Desmesura, Prólogo a la Noche, and Casi en la luz. Additionally, three tomes of his complete collection of poetry were published in the name, Mañana Será el Asombro,'' the first in 2006, the second in 2008, and the third in 2010.
Narrative
He published the El Anzuelo de Dios, his best known work, ¡Justicia, Señor Gobernador!, Cada día tiene su afán, and Yo soy la Memoria''.