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Biography
LEE CUESTA reveals his
rare ability to seemingly view the future based upon
the logical conclusions of his own research with the
appearance of his novel, Once:Once. Cuesta combines the skills
of a storyteller and investigative reporter to penetrate the
historical, social and spiritual dimensions of this convincing
tale.
As a bilingual writer and journalist who worked in Mexico City,
the author has been published extensively in periodicals such
as Northwest, Eternity, World Pulse, Indian Life, Interlit,
The Fresno Bee, Evangelical Missions Quarterly, Christian Life,
Prisma, El Faro and Apuntes Pastorales. To date, Cuesta has
published more than eighty (80) articles and other pieces. The
articles receive international response from readers. So significant
are his articles, in fact, that they are often reprinted or
adapted for other magazines. For example, his three-part series
exposing the religious persecution against evangelicals in Chiapas
was first published by World Pulse. This series was subsequently
reprinted in Indian Life, an international newspaper based in
Winnipeg, Manitoba. Another article, written in Spanish for
the Mexican magazine El Faro, was adapted for the international
magazine Apuntes Pastorales, and then reprinted again in Consejero
Bíblico. For this reason, Cuesta is known cordially as
a mexicologist a student of Mexican culture,
history and society (in the same way, for instance, that an
anthropologist is a student of human culture, origin, and relations).
Cuestas research, including on-site interviews and investigation
in the Mexican state of Chiapas, spans ten years. In fact, his
first article on the troubling situation in Chiapas appeared
in January, 1994, where he reported two recent events in which
approximately 350 evangelical Christians of the Tzotzil ethnic
group were brutally beaten, put in jail and expelled from
their communities of origin, taking away all their belongings
and burning some of the houses, quoting one Mexican leader.
All this occurred in spite of a new religious freedom law, adopted
in 1992, which ostensibly guaranteed that each individual shall
not be the object of discrimination, compulsion or hostility
as a result of his religious beliefs.
Cuestas second article about this issue appeared on May
5, 1995, where he pointed out that Mexicos preoccupation
with the Zapatista guerrilla army, both by politicians and the
media, has overshadowed the other side of the Chiapas crisis:
the 20,000 to 30,000 believers in Chiapas exiled for professing
the Protestant religion.
As a result of the persecution in the Chiapas highlands, several
refugee settlements have sprung up around the city of San Cristóbal
de Las Casas. Cuesta acquired firsthand experience by traveling
to both San Cristóbal de Las Casas and Tuxtla Gutiérrez,
Chiapas, where he conducted on-site investigation and interviews,
including a trip to San Juan Chamula, the renowned headquarters
of such persecution. The result of this research was his three-part
series, first published in June and July of 1998. Cuesta provided
not only the articles, but also the photographs.
Cuesta received his first international assignment even before
graduating with his degree in journalism. He traveled to Thessaloniki,
Greece, for a three-month internship, during which time he experienced
and reported on a major earthquake that rocked the city; his
reports were published in Cable magazine. He also lived in Leptokarya,
on the Aegean coast, with trips to Athens, Philippi and Corinth.
While a university student, Cuesta was awarded membership in
the Kappa Tau Alpha (journalistic honor) Society; received two
scholarships; and also was featured in The National Deans
List.
Cuesta launched a newsletter called Desafío Transcultural,
which was highly influential among its readership throughout
Central America, and he participated as a member of the Asociación
Cristiana de Periodismo in Mexico City. Cuesta also has been
a member of the Society of Professional Journalists. As he lived
and worked in Mexico, he traveled broadly throughout most of
the Mexican republics 37 states, usually by way of public
transportation, with engagements in cities such as Veracruz,
Monterrey, Guadalajara, Morelia, Querétaro, Matamoros-Brownsville,
and Acapulco, as well as several trips to Guatemala.
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