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Dr. Carlos Julio Arosemena Monroy once used a sentence to describe people born in Guayaquil: “To be a Guayaquileno is to have an attitude towards life and a determination to face death.” This sentence is correct. Guayaquileno people are brave, enterprising, helpful and happy.
The Guayaquileno doesn’t wait long for something, he just does it, takes risks, learns from his mistakes, and continues to improve his efforts. He’s a hard worker, he’s a businessman, he’s enterprising, and he’s adventurous.
Yes, that’s the guy from Guayaquil, but he was also naive, he was shocked by the election proposals, and when it came to the choice, those who offered him “gold and Moors”, who gave him his vote at the polls, and even with the disappointment, he chose it. Sometimes he chose some serious insults, who, thank God, are a thing of the past. He chose the great thieves, who obviously continue to cast a shadow on their ancestors, who were men of honor and full of patriotism.
Guayaquil firefighters turn on sirens and lights during parade to honor the city
The Guayaquileno is a “warrior wood”, a citizen who loves his city and who also loves his country. However, there are those who do not fully understand our history and who describe us in a way that is bizarre and very different from who we are, or rather, disqualifies us.
This will be Guayaquileno always, always, and forever. Any other adjective to attribute to it would be wrong and grotesque.
According to history or legend, the heroes of Huancavilcas, represented by Guayas and Quill, preferred to burn themselves to death before they submitted and accepted the rule of strangers from other latitudes of the Earth, depriving them of their property and wealth. First the conquistadors, then the pirates, then the Antigua Yaquileño government, who permanently centralized their revenues and only half-heartedly returned them, and of course the traitors, who hoped from afar that some enemy country of Ecuador and some international institution would punish us so that they could come back to “get more”.
Children and seniors trained in nine CAMIs are part of the parade in Guayaquil
The people of Guayaquil and Guayaquileños have been claiming what has always been theirs: their freedom and autonomy, and they were willing to die, go into exile or emigrate, rather than lower their arms and then their heads, resolutely lashing out at the polls against their new liberators. That’s how we are. (profound)
Sucre Calderón Calderón, lawyer, Guayaquil
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