Obituary: Fernando Gasparian

Fernando Gasparian

Publisher and industrialist

The Independent
26 October 2006

Fernando Gasparian, industrialist and publisher: born São Paulo,
Brazil 27 January 1930; married (three sons, one daughter); died São
Paulo 7 October 2006.

The industrialist Fernando Gasparian was a defender of democracy and
the most distinguished publisher Brazil produced in the late 20th
century.

He was born in 1930 to parents of Armenian extraction and to the
considerable prosperity the family textile business ensured. After
studying engineering, he and his friends Rubens Paiva (who became a
federal deputy and was later assassinated by the military), Almino
Afonso and Marcos Pereira took over the periodical Jornal de Debates
in 1953. It pursued a Brazil-centred line opposing much foreign
investment and the privatisation of the state oil company Petrobras.

Early in 1964 Gasparian bought America Textil, a substantial Rio de
Janeiro textile company, which had got into difficulties and was being
supported by the Banco do Brasil. After the US-supported military
putsch against the civilian government of President João Goulart later
that year, he was a target for the new dictatorship as a founder of
the opposition Brazilian Democratic Movement, the MDB. The military
cut off bank funding for his company. After the dictatorship lurched
further to the right in 1969 Gasparian found it politic to leave
Brazil, for exile, eventually finding a teaching post at St Antony’s
College, Oxford.

He returned to Brazil in 1972 to found Opinião, a hard-hitting
magazine which upset the dictatorship, also acquiring the publishing
house Paz e Terra. Over the years this became a powerhouse of
political and social thought and liberation theology. Alceu Amoroso
Lima, Celso Furtado, Helio Jaguaribe, Fernando Henrique Cardoso,
Octavio Paz, Torcuato di Tella, Alain Touraine, Brian Van Arkadie,
Dudley Seers and Paulo Freire were among the imprint’s authors.

Gasparian returned to Oxford for a few months in 1973 before going
home to launch the monthly Cadernos de Opinião. Its second number
enraged the military by carrying the text of a lecture by Hélder
Cmara, the irrepressible archbishop of Olinda and Recife. Gasparian
was charged with offences against "national security" by a regime
which was obsessed by that slippery concept. In the event he was
acquitted. Unabashed, the dictatorship had a bomb placed in his
editorial offices in 1976.

When dictatorship gave way to constitutional government Gasparian
devoted more time to politics, in 1985 becoming treasurer for the
campaign of his friend Fernando Henrique Cardoso for the mayoralty of
São Paulo. In 1986 he was elected to the constituent assembly framing
a new constitution, on which he served until 1988. There he pushed for
a limit of 12 per cent on bank lending rates, financial support for
agrarian reform, limitations on foreign investment in mining and a ban
on capital punishment.

>From 1993 to 1995 he was active in the Latin American Parliament. He
was increasingly at odds with Cardoso after the latter won the
presidency and in 1995 publicly criticised what he saw as Cardoso’s
excessive reliance on foreign banks attracted to Brazil by high
interest rates.

Talking to Fernando Gasparian last month, I found him as eager for new
projects and ideas as when I first met him in 1970. With his death,
comments Bernardo Kucinski, "it can be said that a generation of
patriotic businessmen committed to a scheme of national development
has become extinct".

Hugh O’Shaughnessy

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS