Ramón Amaya Amador
Ramón Amaya Amador was a Honduran journalist, author, and political activist, known for his most recognizable works "Prisión verde" and "Cipotes".
Biography
Amaya was born in Olanchito in the department of Yoro. After being educated in La Ceiba, he worked on the banana plantations along the Northern Caribbean coast of Honduras. He published his first work in 1939. He became a journalist in 1941 for El Atlántico, a La Ceiba newspaper. In October 1943 he founded a weekly magazine in Olanchito called Alerta.A leading Honduran communist, he moved to Guatemala in 1944 fleeing political persecution, where he worked on the Nuestro Diario newspaper and was very supportive of the left-wing government of Jacobo Árbenz. In his 10 years in Guatemala he also worked for the Diario de Centro América, El Popular Progresista and Medioía. It was at the beginning of this period that he wrote what is considered his finest novel, Prisión verde, which for many years was banned in Honduras, and described life on the banana plantations in the Bajo Aguán valley of northern Honduras, and the consequences of a labor strike there.
When the Árbenz government fell in June 1954, Amador sought refuge in the Argentine embassy before being granted asylum in Argentina where he worked for Sarmiento, a popular educational newspaper. While there, he married an Argentinian, Regina Arminda Funes, with whom he returned to Honduras in May 1957. He began working for El Cronista, and founded the magazine Vistazo in Tegucigalpa. Soon afterwards, he left Honduras with his family and his two small children to move to Prague, Czechoslovakia where he worked on a magazine called Problems of Peace and Socialism until he died at 50 years of age in a plane crash in 1966 in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia. In September 1977 his remains were returned to the Honduran capital Tegucigalpa.