Omar Dengo
Omar Dengo Guerrero was a Costa Rican teacher, journalist, writer, lawyer and anarchist. He is considered a major figure in the history of Costa Rican education.
Biography
Born in San José on 9 March 1888. He graduated from with a degree in humanities from the Liceo de Costa Rica in 1908, and gained a degree in law by 1911. He worked as a journalist while studying, founding the newspaper Sanción in November 1908 that advocated against the Costa Rican oligarchy and in favour of workers.He helped organised the first Labor Day celebrations in Costa Rica. He was notable for his criticism of the United Fruit Company and manufacture of liquor by the Costa Rican state. He helped found the Centro Germinal and became a teacher by 1913. He was later named director of the Costa Rican Normal School and was a professor of pedagogy. In 1917 he married fellow teacher María Teresa Obregón Zamora. The couple would have four children, Jorge Manuel, Omar, Gabriel and María Eugenia and raised them in the city of Heredia.
In 1920 he rejected an offer by President Julio Acosta to serve as Undersecretary of Education and later rejected an offer to be the Minister of Foreign Affairs. During the Coto War with Panama he enlisted as a soldier with the Costa Rican military and in 1923 supported the political campaign of Ricardo Jiménez. Later in 1926 and 1927 he engaged in disputes with the United Fruit Company.