In Memory of Raul de Aguila Hidalgo

Raúl de Águila Hidalgo, General Manager of Equal Exchange’s trading partner COCLA and a leader in the international fair trade movement, died suddenly on February 13.  EE’s Tom Hanlon-Wilde...

Raúl de Águila Hidalgo, General Manager of Equal Exchange’s trading partner COCLA and a leader in the international fair trade movement, died suddenly on February 13.  EE’s Tom Hanlon-Wilde shares this memory:

Raul de Aguila and Tom Hanlon-Wilde welcome EE buyers Megan Thompson, Sanya Brown, Judy Harper, Larry Crabb

Raul de Aguila and Tom Hanlon-Wilde welcome Equal Exchange’s Food Co-op buyers Megan Thompson, Sanya Brown, Judy Harper, Larry Crabb

This is how I remember Raúl – kind and patient as in the photo, intelligent and inspiring as in the video.

I first met Raúl in 1998 in Quillabamba, Cuzco, Peru.  He had recently left a comfortable, important government job for an uncertain and quixotic task — re-building the Agrarian Cooperative of La Convención and Lares.  COCLA, the acronym the organization is known by, was founded by farmers who had been among the first sharecroppers in South America to revolt against the fedual conditions on the large plantations.  When they had won land rights, those farmers organized COCLA and and by the 1970′s grew it into one of the four largest co-operatives in Peru. But in the economic chaos of the 1980s, the organization had disintegrated.  Village by village, farmer by farmer, Raúl re-built trust and encouraged differences of opinion to re-engerize the coop. Within a decade, COCLA was once again one of the top coffee exporting organizations in Peru.  As other co-ops sought to learn from COCLA, Raul spurred the creation of the National Coffee Board of Peru to bring together all the coffee co-ops in Peru to advocate for political change.  Within half a dozen years, that group forced changes in two laws to benefit co-operatives.  Working internationally, Raul was a leading voice of the Coordinating Body of Latin American and Caribbean (CLAC) fair trade organizations, eventually helping to create a separate farmer-controlled fair trade certification organization (FUNDEPPO and the Small Farmer Symbol – SPP).

Today when small-scale farmers meet in villages across the Global South, they have a more resources to use thanks in part to Raúl.  When parishioners discuss social justice in church basements across the Global North, they have a few more options thanks in part to Raúl.  I will miss Raúl’s kindness, patience, and intelligence but will carry his inspiration into tomorrow.

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