Letter from Jamaica, Letter written by Latin American soldier, revolutionary, and statesman Simón Bolívar in 1815 while in exile in Jamaica in which he articulates his desire for Latin American unity and his vision of republican government. One of Bolívar’s most important pieces of writing and a landmark of Latin American political theory, the Letter from Jamaica revealed both Bolívar’s passionate commitment to independence for Spain’s Latin American colonies as well as an illiberal proclivity for oligarchical rule.
In August 1813 Bolívar had led expeditionary force that wrested control of Venezuela from royalist hands, earning himself the sobriquet “the Liberator” in the process and assuming political dictatorship. Most Venezuelans, however, remained opposed to the forces of independence. A civil war erupted in which Spanish and royalist forces—most notably the llanero (cowboy) cavalry led by José Tomás Boves—retook Caracas in 1814, ending the second attempt at forming a Venezuelan republic and forcing Bolívar flee elsewhere in New Granada. After failing to unite revolutionary forces during a siege of Cartagena, Bolívar fled again, this time to self-imposed exile in Jamaica, then a British Colony.
During the months he spent on the island, Bolívar sought to win British support for the independence movement. He also survived an assassination attempt by a servant who it was suspected had been hired by Spanish agents to take his life. Responding to a missive from an unidentified Jamaican who had shown empathy for Bolívar’s struggle to gain independence (possibly the governor of Jamaica), on September 6, 1815, Bolivar penned the lengthy Letter from Jamaica, formally titled “Reply of a South American to a Gentleman of this Island.” Despite the repeated defeats experienced by Bolívar and his fellow patriots, his letter expressed an undying faith in the cause of independence. The document sharply criticized Spanish colonialism, but it also looked hopefully to the future. “The bonds that united us to Spain have been severed,” Bolívar wrote. He was not discouraged by the Spanish retrenchment. “A people that love freedom will in the end be free. We are,” he added “a microcosm of the human race. We are a world apart, confined within two oceans, young in arts and sciences, but old as a human society. We are neither Indians nor Europeans, yet we are a part of each.”
For Bolívar the only path for the former colonies was the establishment of autonomous, centralized, republican government, and he outlined a grandiose panorama that stretched from Chile and Argentina to Mexico. He proposed that constitutional republics be established throughout Hispanic America. Anticipating a day when representatives from throughout Latin America would convene in a central location such as Panama, he wrote, “How ineffable it would be if the Isthmus of Panama should become for America what the Straits of Corinth were for the Greeks. May God grant that we can some day enjoy the good fortune of opening a congress of representatives of the republics, kingdoms, and empires that would discuss peace and war with the rest of the nations of the world.” For the Viceroyalty of New Granada in particular, he imagined a government modeled on that of Great Britain, with a hereditary upper house, an elected lower house, and a president chosen for life. The last provision, to which Bolívar clung throughout his career, revealed an authoritarian bent that constituted the most dubious feature of his political thinking