Lilian Díaz Sol, writer and former Salvadoran deputy dies | El Salvador News

The death was confirmed in El Diari d’Avui by his cousin, the mayor of Santa Anna, Milena de Graó, of ARENA.

As a very hardworking woman, empathetic and dedicated to culture and the defense of women’s rights. So remember the mayoress of Santa Anna, Milena de Graó to his “distant” cousin Lilian Diaz Sol, who died at the Social Security hospital.

“She was my mother’s cousin, I had a lot of love for her, she was a hardworking woman, in the cultural part, she was in the academy, a very active woman in the life of the Salvadoran woman,” de Graó explained.

According to her, Díaz Sol was a deputy for the PCN in the 1990s. Speaking of her, Milena de Graó recalls the great physical resemblance they both have, while confusing them as sisters, the mayoress recalls.

“I deeply regret the death of her, by the way, a very beautiful lady, we were told: ‘is that you are sisters’. She was a very hardworking person, she worked hard for women’s human rights,” said De Graó.

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On March 12, 2018 in a publication of “eltarget” she was highlighted as one of the five most influential women in Salvadoran society.

“Known as one of the most elegant women, Lilian Díaz Sol is the founder of the prestigious school Pygmalion, specializing in Personal Image and Label. Among her many successes, she has played a very strong role in country politics, as She was a member of the PCN, where she was chair of the Committee on the Family, Women and Children, among others, and was the producer of several programs, such as ‘Women 2000’, an excellent speaker and speaker. internationally known for her merits.In 2013, she published an autobiographical book called ‘Thanks to Life’, ”the website“ eltarget ”published.

The “Observer” also interviewed her in April 2014, positioning herself as one of the Salvadoran women who most advocated for the legalization of immigrants in the United States.

“The Hispanic community in the United States is very valuable to this country,” Diaz Sol told interviewer Mario Jimenez Castillo at the time.

“She confesses to us that in the 1960s and 1970s, women in her country could not aspire to important positions and for this reason she set herself the task of educating excellent women so that they could venture into the field of politics, economics and the arts, ”he says part of the interview with Diaz Sol.

Her book “Gracias a la Vida” narrates her experiences as a woman “in a difficult time”, especially referring to the armed conflict that took place in El Salvador from 1978 to 1992, reports “L’Observador”.

His residence for many years in the United States earned him the office of Consul General of El Salvador.

“I humbly consider and urge the U.S. government to grant fair legalization to so many valuable, hardworking, brave, and enterprising Hispanics living in the United States,” he told The Observer in 2014.

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