SANTIAGO, Chile, Jan. 15 – Michelle Bachelet, who was elected
Sunday as president of this male-dominated, prosperous and deeply religious
nation of 16 million, is a woman and an agnostic, a guitar-strumming child of
the 60’s, a former exile who spent part of her childhood in the United States,
and a physician who has never before held elective office.
Running as a Socialist on a platform that promised “change with continuity”
and showcased her warmth and affinity with ordinary people, Ms. Bachelet, a
fair-haired, vibrant 54-year-old, won more than 53 percent of the vote,
according to the official tally. She made few promises beyond “social inclusion”
– vowing to better meet the needs of women and the poor – and preserving Chile’s
economy, the most dynamic in Latin America, and the country’s close ties with
the United States.
But Ms. Bachelet has other qualities that explain how, in barely a decade,
she has gone from being a pediatrician at a humble, underfinanced clinic here to
the first woman to be her country’s chief of state, and one of only a handful of
women elected to lead any country in the Americas.
Some of those qualities are personal, while others stem from her real and
symbolic connections to Chile’s recent history. She is a toughened survivor of
the Pinochet dictatorship, which was responsible for her father’s death and her
imprisonment, torture and exile, and she embodies for many Chile’s painful
reconciliation with those dark years.
“Violence ravaged my life,” Ms. Bachelet said Sunday night, in an impassioned
victory speech to a jubilant crowd gathered on the main downtown avenue here. “I
was a victim of hatred, and I have dedicated my life to reversing that
hatred.”
Verónica Michelle Bachelet Jeria was born in Santiago on Sept. 29, 1951, the
second child of an air force officer who rose to a general’s rank and a
housewife who became an archaeologist. Her early years were spent in the
restrictive but sheltering environment of the Chilean Armed Forces, moving from
one military base to another around the country.
In 1962, her father, Alberto Bachelet Martínez, was assigned to the military
mission at the Chilean Embassy in Washington. For almost two years, the family
lived in Bethesda, a Maryland suburb, where Ms. Bachelet attended middle school,
learned to speak English fluently and developed a lifelong love of pop and folk
music.
“It was hard for her in the beginning,” Ms. Bachelet’s mother, Ángela Jeria,
recalled in an interview here last week. “For the first three months, she cried
when she came home from school, because she didn’t understand any of what was
being said. But after six months she was fully integrated, and so we were able
to travel around and get to know the United States and Canada and visit places
like Niagara Falls and Rehoboth Beach.”
Friends and relatives recall that the pre-adolescent Ms. Bachelet was shocked
by the racial segregation she saw in America and by the assassination of John F. Kennedy. She returned to Chile with her family
at the end of 1963, and encountered many other influences that would mark the
60’s generation, from the Beatles to the debate over the war in Vietnam and the
May 1968 uprising of students in France.
“We were teenagers immersed in the political and social movements that were
transforming Chile and the world,” said a cousin, Alicia Galdames, with whom Ms.
Bachelet formed a folk duo whose repertoire included songs of Joan Baez and Bob
Dylan. “The seeds of her ideals were planted in this period.”
Ms. Bachelet’s enrollment in college coincided with the start here of the
left-wing Popular Unity government of Salvador Allende. She studied medicine at
her father’s urging and joined the youth wing of the Socialist Party. Colleagues
remember her as holding views that were moderate for an era that became the most
polarized in Chilean history.
“She was really studious, very disciplined and responsible and sure of
herself, but with a tremendous capacity for empathy,” said Gladys Cuevas, a
fellow student and close friend. “It was a time of black and white, but she
managed to get along with everybody, no matter what their political persuasion.
She wasn’t one to look for fights; on the contrary, she was the one who was
tolerant, always looking for consensus.”
With food shortages growing in Chile and a black market developing, her
father was lent by the air force to the Allende government and put in charge of
food rationing and distribution, where he worked closely with the Socialists and
other leftists. When Gen. Augusto Pinochet led the coup that overthrew the
Allende government on Sept. 11, 1973, the military viewed General Bachelet with
suspicion. Spurning a chance to go into exile, he was jailed, and in March 1974,
after months of torture, died in prison of a heart attack.
Months later, both Ms. Bachelet and her mother were detained and sent to
Villa Grimaldi, one of the most notorious of the Pinochet dictatorship’s secret
prisons. While there, Ms. Bachelet was also subjected to physical and
psychological torture – being hit during interrogations, blindfolded and tied to
a chair for long periods, and told that her mother would be executed. She
minimized those experiences in an interview in 2002, saying, “There were others,
even in my own cell, who had it much worse than I did.”
“I haven’t forgotten,” she said. “It left pain. But I have tried to channel
that pain into a constructive realm. I insist on the idea that what we
experienced here in Chile was so painful, so terrible, that I wouldn’t wish for
anyone to live through our situation again.”
Ms. Bachelet and her mother were freed within months, thanks to the lobbying
of an Air Force general who was a relative. They went into exile in 1975, first
in Australia, where her older brother Alberto had moved, and then, after a few
months, to East Germany, at the request of the Socialist Party directorate,
which wanted them to take part in Chile solidarity campaigns in Europe.
Initially, Ms. Bachelet worked as a hospital orderly and lived with her
mother in Potsdam. But she resumed her medical studies at Humboldt University in
East Berlin, after she became proficient in German.
While in exile, Ms. Bachelet married Jorge Dávalos, an architect and fellow
exile, and gave birth to the first of her three children, Jorge Sebastián
Alberto, now 27. The marriage ended in the mid-1980’s, after a second child,
Francisca, 21, was born here. Ms. Bachelet has not married again, though she has
a third child, Sofía, 13, from a now-lapsed relationship with a doctor.
Upon her return to Chile in 1979, as the expulsion order against her mother
was being lifted, Ms. Bachelet finished medical school, specializing in
pediatrics and public health. Though she graduated near the top of her class,
her family name and political affiliations made it difficult for her to find
employment. She ended up working at a clinic financed by Sweden that treated
children from families that had been victims of torture and political
repression.
She remained there through the rest of the Pinochet dictatorship, which ended
in 1990 after elections put in power the center-left coalition that still
governs Chile. In 1994, after having worked in AIDS and epidemiological
programs, she became an adviser to the Ministry of Health. But she retained her
familial fascination with military affairs, and in 1996 enrolled in a program in
strategic studies at the national war college.
Ms. Bachelet excelled there, and was invited to study at the Inter-American
Defense College in Washington. She did so in 1997, and after her return, she
went to work in the Defense Ministry and was also elected to the political
commission of the Socialist Party, specializing in defense and military
issues.
Six years ago this month, Chile elected a Socialist president, Ricardo Lagos,
for the first time since the fall of Mr. Allende. Mr. Lagos appointed Ms.
Bachelet minister of health. In that capacity, she became identified with a
partly successful campaign to reduce waiting time for patients and emerged as a
familiar figure at hospitals and clinics all over Chile.
After two years, Ms. Bachelet was shifted to lead the Defense Ministry,
becoming the first woman to hold that post, and she became nationally known,
photographed in an armored vehicle, inspecting troops and wearing army
camouflage or an aviator’s leather jacket on her official rounds.
The symbolism of her leadership of the institution that had killed her father
appealed greatly to Chileans trying to reconcile with their bitter
past.