Argentine poet, junta critic Juan Gelman dies in Mexico

Argentine poet, junta critic Juan Gelman dies in Mexico

MEXICO CITY - Reuters

Author of the most delicate poems and beautiful human being, Gelman passed away far from his land in a self-exile in Mexico. REUTERS photo

Juan Gelman, the celebrated Argentine poet and fierce critic of the South American nation's "dirty war" against leftists, died Jan. 15 in Mexico City, Mexico's national art council said. 

Gelman, who was born in Buenos Aires but lived in the Mexican capital for more than 20 years, died after being hospitalized, the council said in a statement. 

Local media reported that he suffered from myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), a group of bone marrow and blood diseases. 

The poet and political analyst's writings won some of the highest awards given to Spanish writers, including the lifetime achievement Miguel de Cervantes Prize. 

Gelman fought against impunity and injustices under Argentina's military junta, which "disappeared" thousands of suspected leftists from 1976 to 1983. One of Gelman's own sons was kidnapped and murdered during the so-called "dirty war."