ĭe la Torre was one of the founding members (with Virginia Larenas, Raquel Verdesoto, Matilde Hidalgo and Nela Martínez) of the Ecuadorian Women's Alliance in 1938. In 1937 she, with other colleagues, founded the Syndicate of Professors of Mejía and in 1946 expanded this into the Ecuadorian Teachers' Union. Four years later, de la Torre formed the Club of Professors of Mejía. ![]() With these connections, she participated in the 1926 founding of the Socialist Party of Ecuador. In the political arena, de la Torre is considered one of the pioneers of the political left in Ecuador along with Guayaquileñas Aurora López, Isabel Herrera, Ana Moreno and Quiteñas Nela Martínez and Laura Almeida. She also worked with the Indigenista Dolores Cacuango to found bilingual ( Quecha and Spanish) schools to bring literacy to the indigenous peasantry in the countryside. In 1944, she participated in the creation of the first indigenous peoples' rights organization, called the Ecuadorian Federation of Indians (FEI). Luisa Gómez de la Torre Paez was born on to parents Joaquín Gómez de la Torre Álvarez and Francisca Páez Rodríguez. She was the first woman to serve as a teacher for boys in Quito. She was a pioneer in the struggle for the rights of the indigenous peoples and peasants in Ecuador. ANA MATILDE GOMEZ RUllOBA l ' 'Todos los delitos, por diferentes que puedan ser sus causas de origen, deben ser penal mente perseguidos, sancionados o cuando menos desaprobados por el Estado ello es una exigencia de la paz jurdica. 1976) was an Ecuadorian feminist, educator, and activist. ![]() Joaquín Gómez de la Torre Álvarez (father).
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