'De l'audace, encore de l'audace, toujours de l'audace - Boldness, and again boldness, and always boldness!’ (Danton, speech to the French Legislative Committee of General Defense, Paris, 1792).
'Always do what you are afraid to do' (Old and well-known saying popularized by R. W. Emerson in his Essay 'Heroism', 1841).
In Memory of my Most Loved Father, Simeón Alner Sánchez Sandoval (San Cristóbal August 3, 1939 - San Cristóbal February 10, 2023). His very wise spirit, his showed humanity, charities and his words of encouragement are always with me.
Written by Samir A. Sánchez-Sandoval (2016)
Photographs by Jesús R. Blanco, Rafael de Nogales, A. Arenas, Santiago X. Sánchez and Samir A. Sánchez
Written by Samir A. Sánchez-Sandoval (2016)
Photographs by Jesús R. Blanco, Rafael de Nogales, A. Arenas, Santiago X. Sánchez and Samir A. Sánchez
Thought or Action
Sir Winston Churchill once wrote that 'A man's Life must be nailed to a cross either of Thought or Action' (The Story of my Early Life - A Roving Commission, Charles Scribner's Book, New York, 1951, p. 113). General Rafael de Nogales Méndez's choice was clearly the active life. Prompted by an old spirit of swashbuckle, too largely on the favours of
fortune, life and heyday made of this man the most Tachiran universal of all times. He was
reputed to be a man of intrepidity, bravery and a thorough master of his
profession: adventure and war.
Eighty years after his death, few of us know his exploits -while not new to his personal history-, but conscientiously reviewing his life, he has earned a new nickname, a new descriptor of his personality: The Wadi of Desert. For almost eighty years, he is still seen as ‘strange’ by many Tachirans and Venezuelans, and ‘mercenary’ by a higher percentage of Western readers. Perhaps that’s why I was particularly moved to make a contribution to understanding his memoirs of life, adventures and military exploits -even so, it is really necessary a critical biography about our personage or historical figure-. We, the Tachiran people, still await a biography that satisfies sophisticated canons of scholarship.
A historical figure can be studied in myriad ways, thus, one of the best ways to examine the spreading history of the General Rafael de Nogales Méndez is to consider the most influential facts that shaped him and his great global adventures. As American essayist and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) wrote, ‘There is properly no history; only biography. Every mind must know the whole lesson for itself.... In like manner, all public facts are to be individualized, all private facts are to be generalized. Then at once History becomes fluid and true, and Biography deep and sublime.' (Essays: First Series, 1841, Essay I, History)
This thematic essay—worked towards a comprehensive learning experience, is only an overview of his life, times and labours, in as much as Lacotte expressed, 'les petites histoires font la grande Historia.' (Les Petites Histoires de la grande Histoire, Paris, 2009)
General Rafael de Nogales Méndez was born in the city of San Cristóbal (on the 'calle de la Libertad' or Liberty Street, present-day 3th Street in San Cristóbal Downtown), Táchira State (Venezuela) on
October 14, 1877. Born within earshot of San Cristóbal's Cathedral bells and he was a military, adventurer, rebel, journalist (war correspondent), voyager, fighter
against the dictatorships, and author. After that, he was baptized by the name of Pedro Rafael Inchauspe Méndez (Mach 19, 1878), into the Christian faith in the Roman Catholic Church. Maternal grandparents, Luis María Méndez and Ana María Brito de Méndez, were his godparents.
Now a question arises: who is Nogales really? The question had a direct answer and here, we peer directly into the Nogales’s mind: He once said, 'I am a caballero andante (Knight-errant), a knight who seeks out adventure.... I consider myself a citizen of the world in all places where something is projected.' (Memoirs of a Soldier of Fortune: General Rafael de Nogales, 1932) More prosaically, one would say today that literary diversion of his youth may well be reading The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha and 'tales of chivalry.'
Now a question arises: who is Nogales really? The question had a direct answer and here, we peer directly into the Nogales’s mind: He once said, 'I am a caballero andante (Knight-errant), a knight who seeks out adventure.... I consider myself a citizen of the world in all places where something is projected.' (Memoirs of a Soldier of Fortune: General Rafael de Nogales, 1932) More prosaically, one would say today that literary diversion of his youth may well be reading The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha and 'tales of chivalry.'
He was the first of four children of General Pedro Felipe Inchauspe Cordero (b. 1840 - d. December 25, 1890) [the scion of a wealthy family of the Spanish Colonial Period] and
his wife, María Josefa Méndez Brito de Inchauspe (b. 1851 - d. 1893), married on May 6, 1875. The other siblings were Juana
Josefa (b. June 7, 1880), Magdalena (b. November 19, 1881) and Ana María (b. September 2, 1883).
Pedro Rafael Inchauspe Méndez had changed his original Basque paternal family name ('Inchauspe', Walnut trees) with its equivalent in Spanish (de Nogales), and he only used his first name. The change of the family name from ’Inchauspe’ to ‘de Nogales’, and name to Rafael, during his time in Europa was not only a conscious Castilianization of Basque family name, but also a symbol that he wanted to make a name for himself.
Pedro Rafael Inchauspe Méndez had changed his original Basque paternal family name ('Inchauspe', Walnut trees) with its equivalent in Spanish (de Nogales), and he only used his first name. The change of the family name from ’Inchauspe’ to ‘de Nogales’, and name to Rafael, during his time in Europa was not only a conscious Castilianization of Basque family name, but also a symbol that he wanted to make a name for himself.
Admitted into German-speaking school at San Cristóbal, of Theodor Messerschmidt (from Hamburg), he there obtained a first European primary education. In the same manner, the Tachiran elite tradition was to send children away–far from the Andean village described by Fr. Pedro de Aguado OFM (16th-century) as ‘de alegre cielo y apacible temple' (cheerful-sky and peaceful-atmosphere), at a young age to be educated.
Thereby, Nogales came to identify himself as a person trained and disciplined in the strict and dominant Prussian education system of the late 19th-century (or ‘Zeitgeist’), in view of the fact that he has lived in Germany since April 1886, thus, he studied in Europe and attended Military Academies and Universities in Germany, Belgium, Spain and late Ottoman Army War College (‘Erkân-ı Harbiye Mektebi’), and spoke Spanish, French, English, German, Turkish and Italian fluently.
There was just one thing which surprised him—that was the position of difficulty; in short, where there was a difficulty, riskiest or taking the right risk, he was seeing it as a potential personal challenge, perhaps because he 'never lost sight of the forest among countless trees.'
This idea was his philosophy-of-life, ‘Untying the Gordian knot, that's what I like most of all’ (referred to all situations in which a difficult problem or choice is solved by a quick and decisive action) he wrote (Memoirs of a Soldier of Fortune: General Rafael de Nogales, 1932). Presumably, he may be agreeing with a favorite Shakespearean apothegm, ‘There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.’ (Shakespeare, Hamlet, act I, scene V)
A Spartan warrior and modern military, he (too young for a historic war) fought for Spain against the Americans in the Spanish–American War (Cuba, 1898. He received his baptism of fire at the San Juan Hill battle or ‘batalla de las Lomas de San Juan’). He was fighting for Spain with intelligence and, above all, rock-like obstinacy. Moreover, he was like the British infantry in defence, it never gives in. Thus, 'Alférez' or the Second Lieutenant Nogales Méndez was recipient of the 'Cruz al Mérito Militar' or Spanish Military Cross for his prompt and effective action during the war. He saw ended the Spain’s colonial empire in the Western Hemisphere and the Pacific -and Spanish imperial gloria- and the start of the United States of America as a superpower, when the British Empire was still the world's greatest power, imbued with the prevailing ethos of Victorian imperial grandeur.
Thereafter returning to home in Venezuela, he came into Caracas and the Andes Mountains, and vast areas of the Llanos but Nogales continued to be unpredictable—a dissatisfaction with General Cipriano Castro and General Juan Vicente Gómez governments, his fellow state, he formed one of several ‘alzamientos’ or underground groups that plotted to overthrow the Venezuelan dictatorial regimes and attempted a political destabilization (1900-1901 and 1911-1914). Hence, Castro and Gómez secured his banishment from Venezuela, until 1935.
At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Nogales joined the Ottoman Empire Army in İstanbul (formerly 'Konstantinye' or Constantinople). He was an officer of Expeditionary Persian Forces and Ottoman Empire Army Officer (as Mensil Comandane or Ottoman Military Governor of Sinai Peninsula) and Official of the German Empire and of Prussia.
He too had participated in the Mexican Revolution (1906) and
Nicaraguan Revolution (1927) with Sandino against the ‘Dollar diplomacy’ or the United States interventions, in the Caribbean and
Central America, especially with measures undertaken to safeguard American
financial interests in the region.
And thereby, Nogales previewed the dichotomy or duality principle referred to 'Estados ordenados' (industrialized countries or advanced countries) versus 'Estados desordenados' (non-developed countries or emerging and developing countries) and he has given us an unfailingly lively, accessible and vividly written portrait of the world and wars of the early 20th-century.
And thereby, Nogales previewed the dichotomy or duality principle referred to 'Estados ordenados' (industrialized countries or advanced countries) versus 'Estados desordenados' (non-developed countries or emerging and developing countries) and he has given us an unfailingly lively, accessible and vividly written portrait of the world and wars of the early 20th-century.
As a result of participation in the those wars, he received the title of Knight Commander of the Ottoman Order of the Medjidie, the Ottoman War Medal (‘Harp Madalyası’) or the Gallipoli Star, The Ottoman Order of Osmanieh, the Ottoman Imtiyaz Distinction Medal (‘Nişan-ı İmtiyaz’), Ottoman Liyakat Medal in silver with swords and Sinai campaign clasp, the Military Merit Cross with Golden Swords (Austria-Hungary), Knight of the Order of the Crescent of the Ottoman Empire, Commander of the Elite Personal Army of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed V Reşâd (1917-1918) and he was awarded the Iron Cross (First Class and Second Class) by Kaiser Wilhelm II.
Nogales was the first Ottoman Military Governor over the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem (‘Kudüs-i Şerif Mutasarrıflığı’), Nablus, Sinai, Gaza and Acre, and he had visited the holy sites for Christians, Samaritans, Jews and Muslims (The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Church of the Nativity, Mount Tabor, Church of the Annunciation, the Western Wall, Cave of the Patriarchs, the Dome of the Rock and the Tomb of Lazarus) and these visits were interestingly chronicled in his memoirs (Four Years Beneath the Crescent, 1926).
Furthermore, his skill rides or precise control over his horse while riding it, soberly uniformed and impetuous, similar in appearance to 'wadi of desert'*, earned his the affection of the soldiers, Bedouin, and officers, the nickname and Ottoman title of respect 'Nogales-Bey'**, however, he saw the extermination and deportations of Armenians (Siege of Van, 1915. Nogales Méndez, after the siege, wrote one of the best accounts of the battle and its consequences), and he had perceived and been at the decline of the Ottoman Empire (31 October 1918, the Armistice of Mudros), an ending in accordance with the Anatolian proverb, 'the fish begins to stink at the head.' Defeat in World War I (1914-1918) sealed the empire's fate.
Moreover Nogales faced the Russians on the Liaodong Peninsula, in the Empire of the Great Qing (China) during the Russo-Japanese War (1904, where he was wounded). Equally, adventuring in the West Indies, he was imprisoned on the fortress near Cap-Haïtien called Citadelle Laferrière (Haiti), and sentenced to death on the firing squad, but afterwards he escaped from his captors to Santo Domingo city, last night.
All his war-horses and mares were named with Spanish words, a longing for their distant Venezuelan Andean homeland [in this specific case Tachiran Andean homeland], namely, ‘Zamuro’ (American Black Vulture), ‘Proscrito’ (Outlaw), ‘Cristalina’ (Crystalline) and ‘Dulcita’ (Sweetie).
Crossed boundaries and frontiers and nothing could break his spirit of adventure, he hunted wild beasts in Sumatra and Sunda Islands [the antipodes of Táchira State, his native land]; he was in the Spanish Protectorate in Morocco, West Portuguese Africa, French Equatorial Africa (Congo), the Khedivate of Egypt, British India, Afghanistan, British Province of Baluchistan (a region in southwestern Pakistan and southeastern Iran), Yemen Vilayet and Hejaz Vilayet (Ottoman Arabia), British Hong Kong and Macau Free Port, Italy, Switzerland, Britain, Ireland, Australia, Brazil, Argentina, Lesser Antilles (Curacao, Saba, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Martinique, Saint Lucia, Grenada, Trinidad) and Canada. He participated in the Alaskan Gold Rush, and he worked deep in the Nevada Second Mining Boom, was a cowboy in Texas and Arizona, as well as a whale fisherman in Alaska. We found him in Hollywood (California), early 1936, when he received a letter of thanks offering from Kaiser Wilhelm and his wife Empress Hermine, princess of Schönaich-Carolath.
There is a legend which says... 'On one occasion during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign, he came face-to-face with T. E. Lawrence on the frontier. He and Lawrence looked at each other, then without speaking he and Lawrence parted with nothing to say.' Nogales has been compared with T. E. Lawrence due to their works in Arabia despite their different uniforms.
True or feigned -relata refero- or mixture of facts, fiction and unverifiable popular stories, a Prussian World War I storyteller reported that British Field Marshal Edmund Allenby, 1st Viscount Allenby, sent an officer by land to demand the surrender of the legendary Tachiran commander Rafael de Nogales Méndez. Undaunted, Nogales's stinging response was 'I have no reply to make to your general except from the mouths of my cannons and by gunshots.' Apparently, Nogales Méndez repeated the French commander Louis de Buade, Comte de Frontenac's original words to English forces in the winter of 1690, in Quebec.
He
was the only Latin American soldier who fought at the World War I -one of the
most violent and destructive wars in European history- with Central Powers (German,
Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria) without oath of loyalty to the flag or leave or renouncing
to his Venezuelan citizenship; only under the
pledge allegiance of his Parole
d'Honneur (word of honor).
As was said before, highly educated, Nogales Méndez was also a member of American Geographical Society, the oldest Geographical Society in the Western hemisphere; the Royal Geographical Society (United Kingdom) and Die Gesellschaft fuer Erdkunde zu Berlin (the Geographical Society of Berlin).
‘Out, out, brief candle! /Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player'
As was said before, highly educated, Nogales Méndez was also a member of American Geographical Society, the oldest Geographical Society in the Western hemisphere; the Royal Geographical Society (United Kingdom) and Die Gesellschaft fuer Erdkunde zu Berlin (the Geographical Society of Berlin).
‘Out, out, brief candle! /Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player'
As a return of the warrior, he
made his last trip to his birthplace San Cristóbal (Táchira State), during the second fortnight of March 1936; he came to that which was his own, but his own did not know him. Those days
visit to his homeland, to familiar domains, are also a nostalgic trip down
memory lane for the dauntless and lordly General.
General Nogales Méndez died as result of a post-surgical infection, in Panama City on July 10, 1937, at the age of
59. Again, at that moment, inexorable march to return to dust, perhaps he had remembered to Shakespeare’s tragedies, ‘The way to dusty death. Out,
out, brief candle! /Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor
player, /That struts and frets his hour upon the stage/And then is heard no
more: it is a tale/Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, /Signifying
nothing.’ (Shakespeare, Macbeth, act V, scene V)
He was in Panama on a Venezuelan official mission. The body of Nogales was brought back to Venezuela and the Funeral was on Monday, August 2, in Cementerio General del Sur (South General Cemetery of Caracas), then forgotten, he was devoid of military funeral and full burial honors to his military rank of Brigadier-general ('Tuğgeneral' of the Ottoman Empire Army).
On 30 August 1937, Wilhelm II, the last German Emperor (or Former Kaiser), his friend, sent a bronze wreath to the Cemetery in Caracas, by means of Captain Max Friedrich Graf Westerholt Gysenberg, husband of Ana María Inchauspe Méndez and brother-in-law of General Nogales. The wreath bears an embossed German inscription translated as, 'To Rafael de Nogales Méndez, Generalissimo in the Great War, one of the most courageous and noble knights that ever I have known.'
He was in Panama on a Venezuelan official mission. The body of Nogales was brought back to Venezuela and the Funeral was on Monday, August 2, in Cementerio General del Sur (South General Cemetery of Caracas), then forgotten, he was devoid of military funeral and full burial honors to his military rank of Brigadier-general ('Tuğgeneral' of the Ottoman Empire Army).
On 30 August 1937, Wilhelm II, the last German Emperor (or Former Kaiser), his friend, sent a bronze wreath to the Cemetery in Caracas, by means of Captain Max Friedrich Graf Westerholt Gysenberg, husband of Ana María Inchauspe Méndez and brother-in-law of General Nogales. The wreath bears an embossed German inscription translated as, 'To Rafael de Nogales Méndez, Generalissimo in the Great War, one of the most courageous and noble knights that ever I have known.'
Just trying to dig into the final transcendence of this extraordinary human being...
General Rafael de Nogales Méndez becomes a Tachiran legend whose name is
spoken with respect; a truly reminiscent of that of Harold Glen Borland who brought back, 'When
the legends die, the dreams end./When the dreams end, there is no more
greatness.' (When the
Legends Die, Philadelphia, 1963)
Robert Bontine Cunninghame Graham (1852-1936) wrote, 'He is the D'Artagnan of this century' (early 20th-century), and Peter Englund, Swedish author and historian, wrote, ‘If
anyone deserves the title “international adventurer”, he does.’ (The Beauty and the Sorrow, An Intimate
History of the First World War, translated by Peter Graves, New York,
2011)
To sum up, what exactly did the Nogales complete works say? And Jasmina Jäckel de Aldana, Freie Universitaet Berlin contemporary scholar, answers, ‘He was an original thinker.’ (Estudios de Asia y África, vol XXXV, Núm. 1, enero-abril-2000, pp. 101-130). In my opinion, in this sense, Nogales Méndez is not dead.
_________________________________
On the whole, General Rafael de Nogales Méndez wrote several books about his experiences:
Four Years Beneath the Crescent (1926, original in Spanish).
A Brave Enemy, now a Trusty Friend (1924, prologued by British Field Marshal Edmund Allenby, 1st Viscount Allenby, his former brave enemy. Original in English).
The Looting of Nicaragua (1928, original in Spanish).Memoirs of a Soldier of Fortune: General Rafael de Nogales (1932-1934, and announced by Lowell Thomas, U.S. traveler, writer, broadcaster and best known as the man who made Lawrence of Arabia famous. The prologue to the English edition was written by Robert Bontine Cunninghame Graham, Scottish politician, writer, journalist and adventurer, the first-ever socialist member of Parliament of the United Kingdom. Original in English).Silk Hat and Spurs (1934, original in English).
* Wadi: Semitic-speaking peoples term, traditionally referring to a dry (ephemeral) riverbed desert or steep-sided watercourse, in dry regions of North Africa through which water flows -a flood-, only after heavy rainfalls.
** Bey: Governor or Prince, a title and respectful form of address used for various high-ranking officials in the Ottoman Empire, especially the governor of a province distinguished by his own flag (sancak).
Monument aux morts de la Grande Guerre - Memorial Park Grande Guerre, Hendaye (France) [Photograph by Samir A. Sánchez, Boulevard du Général De Gaulle, Hendaye, 2013]. |
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