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Oswaldo Aranha

Brazilian diplomat and politician (1894–1960)

Oswaldo Aranha

Summary

Brazilian diplomat and politician (1894–1960)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixHis Excellency
imageOsvaldo Euclides de Sousa Aranha, Ministro das Relações Exteriores..tif
captionAranha in 1940
office1President of the United Nations General Assembly
term_start128 April 1947
term_end120 September 1948
1blankname1Secretary-General
1namedata1Trygve Lie
predecessor1Paul-Henri Spaak
successor1José Arce
office2Minister of Foreign Affairs
term_start215 March 1938
term_end223 August 1944
president2Getúlio Vargas
predecessor2Pimentel Brandão
successor2Pedro Leão Veloso
contyes
titlestyleborder:1px dashed lightgrey;}}
embedyes
office3Minister of Finance
term_start316 June 1953
term_end324 August 1954
president3Getúlio Vargas
predecessor3Horácio Lafer
successor3Eugênio Gudin
term_start416 November 1931
term_end424 July 1934
president4Getúlio Vargas
predecessor4José Maria Whitaker
successor4Artur de Sousa Costa
office5Minister of Agriculture
term_start58 June 1954
term_end528 June 1954
president5Getúlio Vargas
predecessor5João Cleofas
successor5Apolônio Sales
office6Brazilian Ambassador to the United States
term_start618 October 1934
term_end611 December 1937
nominator6Getúlio Vargas
predecessor6Rinaldo de Lima e Silva
successor6Pimentel Brandão
office7Minister of Justice and Internal Affairs
term_start73 November 1930
term_end721 December 1931
president7Getúlio Vargas
predecessor7Afrânio de Melo Franco
successor7Maurício Cardoso
office8Governor of Rio Grande do Sul
term_start89 October 1930
term_end826 October 1930
nominator8Getúlio Vargas
predecessor8Getúlio Vargas
successor8Sinval Saldanha
office9Secretary of the Interior and Exterior of Rio Grande do Sul
term_start925 January 1928
term_end912 October 1930
governor9Getúlio Vargas
predecessor9João Pio de Almeida
successor9João Simplício Carvalho
office10Member of the Chamber of Deputies
term_start1026 May 1927
term_end1025 January 1928
constituency10Rio Grande do Sul
birth_date
birth_placeAlegrete, Brazil
death_date
death_placeRio de Janeiro, Brazil
partyPRR
otherparty
spouse
children4
alma_materFree Faculty of Law of Rio de Janeiro
signatureosvaldo Aranha signature.svg
module

| honorific-prefix = His Excellency | Further offices held Oswaldo Euclides de Souza Aranha (, 15 February 1894 – 27 January 1960) was a Brazilian politician, diplomat and statesman, who came to national prominence in 1930 under Getúlio Vargas.

He is known in international politics for lobbying for the creation of the State of Israel as head of the Brazilian delegation to the UN and President of the UN General Assembly in 1947. As head of the Brazilian delegation, he was President of the United Nations General Assembly in 1947 during the UNGA 181 vote on the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine, in which he postponed the vote for three days to ensure its passage. For his efforts on Palestine, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1948.

Early life and career up to 1942

Oswaldo Aranha was born in the city of Alegrete in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. Aranha obtained his bachelor's degree in Law and Social Sciences at the Law School of the now-called Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in 1916. After his graduation, he returned to Rio Grande do Sul and practiced as a lawyer for eight years, establishing a personal and professional contact with Getúlio Vargas, who also was a lawyer. His first public office was that of Assistant Police Commissioner in his native state.

Aranha fought the insurrection of 1923, deflagrated by sectors that opposed the fifth consecutive re-election of Borges de Medeiros as governor of Rio Grande do Sul. By personally commanding an irregular armed force consisting of civilians, Aranha fought new uprisings promoted by the opposition in the years that led to the Revolution of 1930.

In a speedy political career, Oswaldo Aranha ran for his first elective office in 1926 and was elected Mayor of Alegrete, but soon became a member of the state legislature and later elected to the National Congress in 1928.

When Vargas ran as opposition candidate for president of Brazil in 1930 and lost, Aranha joined the tenentes to convince Vargas to organize a revolt. When the revolt succeeded, Aranha took the first of several positions in the Cabinet of Brazil under now-President Vargas, heading the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Justice, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, among other positions.

Aranha also served as ambassador to the United States in 1934 where he gained recognition as a strong supporter of Pan-Americanism. In 1937 he returned to Brazil to head the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Aranha played a large role in the 1942 Rio de Janeiro Conference of Ministers of Foreign Affairs.

Support for the Allies in World War II

While serving as Minister of Foreign Affairs, Brazil took part in the first three consultative meetings of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics which defined Pan-American policy during the early stages of World War II and worked out the recommendation for the collective severance of diplomatic relations with the Axis Powers. During the 1942 Rio conference, he announced that Brazil had cut all diplomatic ties with Nazi Germany, thereby siding with the United States and the Allies. Eventually, most Central and South American states did the same with the exception of Argentina and Chile.

At the first Special Session of the UN General Assembly held in 1947, Oswaldo Aranha, the head of the Brazilian delegation, began a tradition that has remained in which the first speaker at the major international forum is always a Brazilian.

Attitude toward Jews during WWII

A book by the historian Maria Luiza Tucci Carneiro argues that Aranha was aware of secret circulars asking that Jews be denied entry visas to Brazil and did little to change that. Jeffrey Lesser's Welcoming the Undesirables: Brazil and the Jewish Question questions that conclusion by showing that Jewish entry rose notably after the secret circulars were circulated, with the active collaboration of many Brazilian diplomats and businesspeople.

The circular asking for the denial of visas to Jews, however, was not written by Oswaldo Aranha, and it was not made during his term as Minister of Foreign Affairs for Brazil. Mário de Pimentel Brandão was responsible for signing the secret circular in 1937 during his term as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Brazil.

During Oswaldo Aranha's term as Minister of Foreign Affairs, from 1938 to 1944, many Jews were granted visas to Brazil despite the circulars. In 1939, Jews were granted 4,601 permanent and temporary resident visas to Brazil. That year, 9% of all permanent residency visas and 14% of temporary Brazilian visas were issued to people of Jewish origin. In 1940, 2,500 Jewish immigrants were given visas to Brazil.

Considered a moderate by many in and outside of Brazil, he argued that communism was the result of "the Judaism which created and maintains this ambience, capable of sending this civilization into an abyss".

Albert Einstein asked Oswaldo Aranha for help in obtaining a visa for his friend who was a German Jew, Helene Fabian-Katz. Einstein had previously appealed to the U.S. government for help, but it denied Fabian-Katz a visa. Fabian-Katz was granted a visa to Brazil and joined her brother, who already lived in São Paulo.

Partition of Palestine vote (1947)

Oswaldo Aranha arriving from the United States to Rio de Janeiro, in 1947.

Aranha supported and heavily lobbied for the partition of Palestine toward the creation of the State of Israel. Streets in Israeli cities such as Beer-Sheva and Ramat Gan, and a square in Jerusalem are named after Aranha.

The photobiography of Oswaldo Aranha published by Pedro Corrêa do Lago in 2017 shows how Oswaldo Aranha, in his position as president of the United Nations General Assembly in 1947, was highly instrumental for the assembly's approval of the partition of Palestine insofar as he was able to postpone the voting by two days, as Corrêa do Lago explains: "[Aranha] was skillful and when he saw that the partition would not obtain 2/3 of the votes on time he got its allies to stretch their speeches to the max to prevent the vote from being taken that day. The decision was postponed [by Aranha] and as the next day was a holiday in the United States [Thanksgiving], this move bought the time needed to get the [additional] votes".

A plaque commemorating Aranha in Aranha Square, [[Jerusalem

In 2007, a street in Tel Aviv was named in his honor at a ceremony attended by his relatives and Brazil's ambassador to Israel.

References

  1. In modern spelling "Osvaldo Euclides de Sousa Aranha".
  2. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5221/is_2005/ai_n19134592 oswaldo Aranha],''U·X·L Newsmakers'', via Find articles.
  3. (March 2018)
  4. [https://www.un.org/en/ga/president/index.shtml United Nations list of GA Presidents]
  5. [[Muhammad Zafrulla Khan]], 1983 [https://books.google.com/books?id=KzPOYgEACAAJ Servant of God: a personal narrative], Pakistan's representative: "At about lunch time [on 26 November] a rumour was heard that the president [of the Assembly] did not intend to proceed to the vote that day… His excuses were flimsy, but he was adamant. At the end of the afternoon sitting he adjourned the session to Friday morning. On Thursday President Truman put through personal telephone calls to certain heads of state and persuaded them to shift their position on the question of the partition of Palestine from opposition to support."
  6. "Oswaldo Euclides de Sousa Aranha". Nobel Nomination Database.
  7. [https://web.archive.org/web/20101116223034/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,860806,00.html Strong Arm's Strong Arm], a June 1954 article from ''[[Time (magazine). Time]]'' magazine
  8. [https://www.un.org/ga/55/president/bio02.htm Oswaldo Aranha] from the [[United Nations]] website
  9. Ministry of External Relations]] website
  10. Carneiro, Maria Luísa Tucci. (2007). "O Anti-Semitismo nas Américas: Memória e História". EdUSP.
  11. Lesser, Jeffrey. (1995). "Welcoming the Undesirables". UC press.
  12. [http://educacao.uol.com.br/historia-brasil/ult1689u31.jhtm "Estado Novo (1937–45)"], Educação: História do Brasil, UOL.
  13. Lesser, Jeffrey, 1995. [http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft367nb2gm/ Welcoming the indesirables: antissemitism in Brazil] Berkeley: University of California Press, via CD lib.
  14. "Tel Aviv Street Named for Brazilian", ''Dateline World Jewry'', [[World Jewish Congress]], September, 2007.
  15. [https://www.uai.com.br/app/noticia/artes-e-livros/2017/07/11/noticias-artes-e-livros,209469/pedro-correa-do-lago-lanca-a-fotobiografia-do-avo-oswaldo-aranha.shtml "Pedro Corrêa do Lago lança a fotobiografia do avô, Oswaldo Aranha"], ''UAI'' 7/11/2017. Retrieved Jan. 17, 2018. {{in lang. pt
  16. [http://www.correiobraziliense.com.br/app/noticia/diversao-e-arte/2017/07/15/interna_diversao_arte,609838/quem-foi-oswaldo-aranha.shtml "Fotobiografia revela aspectos inusitados de Oswaldo Aranha"], ''Correio Baziliense'' 7/15/2017. Retrieved Jan. 17, 2018. {{in lang. pt
  17. Pedro Alexandre Sanches, [https://www.cartacapital.com.br/revista/958/um-file-chamado-oswaldo-aranha "Um filé chamado Oswaldo Aranha"] {{in lang. pt ['A fillet called Oswaldo Aranha']. {{Webarchive. link. (2018-01-17 ''Carta Capital'', June 30, 2017. Retrieved Jan. 17, 2018.)
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