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sergeant made US soldiers indiscriminately shoot innocent women and children crossing a bridge. He worked as a New York Times correspondent and participated in the Cuban revolution along with Fidel Castro and Che
Guevara. He had seen firsthand how the imperialist ‘amerikan’ empire dropped bombs on Vietnam. He met Ho Chi Minh and Vo Nguyen Giap who were both head of the revolutionary forces which defeated ‘amerika.’ In ‘amerika,’ he was active in fighting against the police riot in the ’68 Democratic National Convention at a time when all people of color in this country and worldwide were fighting for their liberation. He earned his battle scar when a cop hit him with a baton in his lower spine. From then on, Tito lost his sense of touch on his soles and hands
630:
extensive written correspondence and letters with George
Jackson were published posthumously in "Blood in My Eye", four months after George Jackson was murdered during an alleged attempted escape from San Quentin prison. In Blood in my Eye, George acknowledged the depth and relevance of Tito's historical, ideological and lived experience in advancing the liberation of peoples throughout the world from imperialistic exploitation and oppression and cites excerpts from "Overview: The Future Is Revolution" from The Coming of the New International: A Revolutionary Anthology.
596:
throughout Latin
American and the world. As a professor of political science at San Francisco State in 1968, he participated in (and was arrested during) the student strikes, which were led by the Black Student Union. Initiated in response to suspension of a radical Black Panther graduate student instructor, these strikes escalated into violent protests resulting in police confrontations and occupation and a complete four month long shut down of the university. During that period, Tito was also a co-founder and contributor to Ramparts Magazine.
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intention was to help the world better understand Sartre's contribution to cultural and political thought beyond the realm of elite intellectuals and academics. He continued to teach
American Foreign Policy at the University of Vincennes, where following the 1968 political uprising in Paris, its campus had been abandoned to various left wing factions debating the failure of the 68 revolution and American expatriates hoping to better understand U.S. imperialism and ways to oppose it.
466:, the couple's best friend who recently arrived from his professorship at Le Havre, was the only sober member of the group and came in time to check on Stépha, who named the newborn Jean-Paul in his honor. When Fernando came to lucidity, he protested against the middle name, so Jean-Paul became Jean, John or Juan in Spanish, which was shortened to Juanito and then to the nickname Tito. Sartre became Tito's godfather, or "non-god father" because of his
38:
629:
The early 1970s were also significant for Tito's continued developing relationship with black nationalist leadership in the U.S. During this period, he maintained a dialogue with the various competing ideological factions that had developed within the Black
Panther Party leadership. A portion of his
604:
His revolutionary convictions, worldviews and beliefs were steeled by what he had seen in his life. As a youth he witnessed one of the most horrible crimes, the lynching of a black youth. When telling us this story in class, he would burst in tears. During his service in the Korean War, he saw how a
625:
With Tito's termination from San
Francisco State, he was black-listed from other college teaching positions in the U.S. He subsequently moved to Paris in the early 70s, where he had an established a relationship with Jean-Paul Sartre and began conducting a series of interviews with Sartre. His
599:
One of his students from Queen's
College shared these stories about Tito's activism in the 1960's in the Knight News, the Queens College's student-run newspaper. This anonymous student chose to spell ‘America’ with a ‘k’ to verbalize his opinion that the U.S.A has a white supremacist nature.
595:
Tito was one of the most important and influential thinkers and participants in the U.S. and
International Left movements throughout his lifetime. As a New York Times correspondent he became a supporter of the Cuban revolution, a friend of Che Guevara and a voice for revolutionary movements
504:. Fernando later became wary of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and of the prospect of a new war, and went to Paris to insist on the establishment of Spanish Republican refugee divisions to fight the Germans. Rebuffed by the French government, when
520:
to secure passports and visas for his friends and 8,000 Spanish refugees. After assuming the role of diplomats on behalf of the
Dominican Republic after the flight of Rubirosa and his embassy, the family fled first to
571:, and lost his best friend during the conflict, which, in addition to the conduct of American forces there, only formented his radicalism. He spent a decade in journalism, worked as an editor for
493:. After Lukacz's death, Fernando was promoted to a general. Fernando later served later as the inspiration for the figure of Gomez, the artist and revolutionary in Sartre's trilogy "
988:
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artistic hub in Paris, Tito's parents belonged to a cosmopolitan circle of artists and intellectuals who congregated in cafes to argue art and politics, and counted
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TBC: List of
Collections: audio recordings, letters and correspondence, news reportage and documentary footage - video/film/photography
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333:. Tito also utilized his close ties to figures to construct biographies, creating the only authorized biography of Sartre,
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at 11:30 pm on July 26, 2012, watched over by two of his students. He died half an hour after the anniversary of the
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professor, journalist, author, scholar, political activist, and revolutionary. At birth, Tito's parents, artist
726:
The Premature Antifascists: North American Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-39 : an Oral History.
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341:
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Personal Journals and Correspondence, Janice E. Cohen 1970-74 Paris, France; New York, New York; Nice, France
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536:(OSS), serving in Latin America and later Spain and North Africa, earning a medal and commendation from
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735:, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1989. According to WorldCat, the book is in 807 libraries
349:
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became a reality, Fernando was assigned as a colonel to defend the Franco-German frontlines in the
661:. Gerassi was survived by two daughters. At the time of his death, he was the senior professor of
485:
forces under the International Brigade, and after distinguishing himself, was assigned by Colonel
855:
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583:. He left journalism at one point to pursue a career in academia and earned his doctorate at the
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329:, exposing the persecution of homosexuals in the city that was carried out under the guise of a
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544:. After Fernando left the OSS, the Gerassi family was harassed by the office's successor, the
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The situation for the Loyalists became untenable, but Fernando continued fighting until the
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NYU Special Collections, John Gerassi Oral History Collection, Historical Biographical Note
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As the family were technically diplomats, Fernando was pressed into service for the
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French-American author, journalist, professor, and political activist (1931–2012)
525:, and after an assassination attempt from Franco's agents, finally arriving in
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on September 3, 1941, as political refugees disguised as Dominican diplomats.
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After the family's emigration, Tito was raised in New York City and attended
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548:(CIA), who questioned the family in disguise as immigration agents into the
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Tito also spent his life as an educator, teaching at institutions including
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512:. Returning to Paris with his battalion, Fernando used his friendship with
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422:), a writer and feminist and daughter of Klymentyna Avdykovych, a famous
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Popkey, Dan (August 8, 2012). ""The Boys of Boise" author dies at 81".
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petitioned the government on the family's behalf and attorney general
951:
George L. Jackson, Blood in My Eye, Random House, Inc., New York 1972
459:
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462:. Fernando was eventually coaxed into drinking until he passed out;
683:
680:
The Great Fear: The Reconquest of Latin America by Latin Americans.
576:
634:
467:
1055:
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science,
989:"John "Tito" Gerassi, l'ami américain de Sartre, mort à 81 ans"
712:
The Coming of the New International: A Revolutionary Anthology.
638:
522:
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The Boys of Boise; Furor, Vice, and Folly in an American City.
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as close friends. At his birth, Fernando was socializing with
705:
Venceremos! The Speeches and Writings of Ernesto Che Guevarra
382:
58:
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360:. At the time of his death, he was the senior professor of
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and Ukrainian feminist Stépha Gerassi, were members of the
754:
Unrepentant Radical Educator: The Writings of John Gerassi
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https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/187296
888:
Diva Bay area Video Archive, John Gerassi interview
385:on July 12, 1931 at the Clinique Tarnier to father
279:circle of artists and intellectuals that included
733:Jean-Paul Sartre: Hated Conscience of His Century
637:care in June 2012. He died at the age of 81 from
560:apologized to the family and made them citizens.
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793:. Archived from the original on October 30, 2016
477:broke out in Spain in 1936, at the agitation of
747:Talking with Sartre: Conversations and Debates.
714:New York: The World Publishing Company, 1971{8)
259:(July 12, 1931 – July 26, 2012), also known as
579:before serving as a foreign correspondent for
1217:American military personnel of the Korean War
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843:(Interview). Interviewed by Tony Monchinski.
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667:Queens College, City University of New York
657:, an event which signaled the start of the
366:Queens College, City University of New York
348:(XII, Vincennes), the JFK Institute of the
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749:New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009
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1197:21st-century American non-fiction writers
1192:20th-century American non-fiction writers
1177:American people of Turkish-Jewish descent
856:"The American Empire's Terrorist Network"
669:, where he had been teaching since 1978.
621:Returning to His Roots at Home and Abroad
368:, where he had been teaching since 1978.
313:and analyzed the American policy against
1172:American people of French-Jewish descent
707:, New York: The Macmillan Company, 1968.
682:New York: Macmillan, 1963. According to
287:. Initially working as a journalist for
1157:French people of Turkish-Jewish descent
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633:John "Tito" Gerassi was admitted into
321:. In 1966, Tito would investigate the
294:and later a foreign correspondent for
1147:French emigrants to the United States
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787:"Fernando Gerassi - His Art and Life"
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721:London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1971
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1107:Monchinski, Tony (January 1, 2009).
961:Mohsin, Meher (September 12, 2012).
756:, Rotterdam: Sense Publishers, 2009.
742:Cambridge: Black Apollo Press, 2006.
426:candy factory owner. Moving between
1187:Jewish American non-fiction writers
837:"Living History: Talking with Tito"
567:. Tito was drafted to fight in the
13:
1207:20th-century American male writers
1202:21st-century American male writers
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987:Contat, Michel (August 10, 2012).
920:
879:
870:
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752:John Gerassi and Tony Monchinski,
700:Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1968.
14:
1228:
1162:20th-century French Sephardi Jews
945:
902:"Remembering John 'Tito' Gerassi"
610:Remembering John ‘Tito’ Gerassi,
540:for his efforts in assisting the
19:For other people named Tito, see
1081:The Journal of American History,
1042:The Pacific Northwest Quarterly,
653:, led by Gerassi's acquaintance
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854:Gerassi, John (June 29, 2011).
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641:in the hospice careunit at the
550:presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson
335:Hated Conscience of His Century
319:The Great Fear in Latin America
217:Hated Conscience of His Century
202:The Great Fear in Latin America
686:, the book is in 883 libraries
651:attack on the Moncada Barracks
342:San Francisco State University
1:
763:
698:North Vietnam: a Documentary.
408:-born mother Stépha Gerassi (
1109:Unrepentant Radical Educator
938:Review by Robert C Robinson
534:Office of Strategic Services
481:Fernando Gerassi joined the
417:
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371:
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1182:Jewish American journalists
546:Central Intelligence Agency
323:Boise homosexuality scandal
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1212:21st-century American Jews
1083:v74 n1 (19870601): 217-218
1070:v13 n3 (19670701): 473-474
693:New York: Macmillan, 1966.
585:London School of Economics
413: Stephania Awdykowicz
212:The Premature Antifascists
134:London School of Economics
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1167:American male journalists
940:Political Studies Review,
811:: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
381:John Gerassi was born in
377:Early life and background
350:Free University of Berlin
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1079:Review by Douglas Little
1068:Crime & Delinquency,
1057:v373 (19670901): 284-285
1053:Review by Joseph Bensman
728:New York: Praeger, 1986.
267:, was a French-American
1142:American Sephardic Jews
643:Mount Sinai Beth Israel
1111:. Brill Academic Pub.
942:v10 n2 (20120504): 242
835:Gerassi, John (2001).
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542:North African campaign
1066:Review, by R N Baird
1044:v95 n1 (20031201): 39
1040:Review by Beth Kraig
963:"John "Tito" Gerassi"
602:
21:Tito (disambiguation)
908:. September 12, 2012
591:Leading the Vanguard
495:The Roads to Freedom
1093:WorldCat book entry
1030:WorldCat book entry
1016:The Idaho Statesman
791:fernandogerassi.com
719:Towards Revolution.
565:Columbia University
346:University of Paris
128:Columbia University
1152:French journalists
581:The New York Times
538:William J. Donovan
456:Simone de Beauvoir
452:Alberto Giacometti
440:Simone de Beauvoir
297:The New York Times
283:and his godfather
162:political activist
1117:978-90-8790-799-0
740:The Anachronists.
663:Political Science
518:Porfirio Rubirosa
502:fall of Barcelona
475:Spanish Civil War
362:Political Science
327:The Boys of Boise
317:in his 1965 book
301:he grew close to
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273:Fernando Gerassi
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182:Fernando Gerassi
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673:Bibliography
655:Fidel Castro
645:hospital in
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506:World War II
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432:Montparnasse
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358:Bard College
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307:Fidel Castro
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277:Montparnasse
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261:Tito Gerassi
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257:John Gerassi
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241:Battles/wars
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104:Tito Gerassi
75:(2012-07-26)
30:John Gerassi
1137:2012 deaths
1132:1931 births
998:December 1,
972:December 1,
912:December 1,
797:December 1,
420: 1989
394: 1974
331:moral panic
309:during the
303:Che Guevara
144:Occupations
136:(Doctorate)
109:Citizenship
93:Nationality
1126:Categories
764:References
569:Korean War
554:Abe Fortas
245:Korean War
231:Allegiance
153:journalist
116:, American
51:1931-07-12
516:diplomat
514:Dominican
460:Joan Miro
428:Barcelona
406:Ukrainian
372:Biography
354:UC Irvine
337:in 1989.
150:Professor
114:Dominican
993:Le Monde
807:cite web
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