{"id":5562,"date":"2011-09-07T09:00:59","date_gmt":"2011-09-07T08:00:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=5562"},"modified":"2011-09-07T09:00:59","modified_gmt":"2011-09-07T08:00:59","slug":"revolting-women-the-fight-for-the-missing-and-the-mothers-of-the-plaza-de-mayo","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/09\/07\/revolting-women-the-fight-for-the-missing-and-the-mothers-of-the-plaza-de-mayo\/","title":{"rendered":"Revolting Women: The Fight for the Missing and the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo"},"content":{"rendered":"
This post is part of a series on the theme of women and protest. The full
series is collected under the
tag “Revolting Women”<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n
Argentina, during the period from 1976-1983, was not a good place to look
even remotely like a dissident. The era, known as the \u2018Dirty War<\/a>\u2019,
saw widespread violence carried out by Jorge Rafael
Videla\u2019s<\/a> military junta<\/a>
against those it perceived as enemies of the state \u2013 students,
journalists, trade unionists and Peronist guerillas (see the Night of
the Pencils<\/a>, Ezeiza
Massacre<\/a>, Margarita
Bel\u00e9n Massacre<\/a> and Luis Mendia\u2019s
death flights<\/a> for examples). Assaults, assassinations and kidnappings
were rife, and somewhere between 9,000 and 30,000 people were forcibly
disappeared, leaving no official trace of their fates.<\/p>\n
This set the stage for the formation of a group known as the
Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo<\/strong>, named for the plaza in central
Buenos Aires where they first gathered. The Mothers are one of the more
interesting protest movements of the late 20th century, and also a bunch
of remarkable badasses. <\/p>\n
Formed in 1977, the Mothers set out to pressure the government into
admitting the fates of their disappeared children, the Desaparecidos<\/a>.
On the 30th of April that year sixteen women gathered outside the
presidential palace to stage a demonstration, demanding to know what
had happened to theirs sons and daughters. Consider that this was
right in the middle of the Dirty War, when state-sponsored death
squads were meting out harsh discipline pretty much with impunity. How
staggeringly brave and determined do you have to be, at a time like
that, to march up to the presidential palace and demand answers? This
isn\u2019t a movement that formed years later, in safety under a
civilian government \u2013 they stood up to the military junta right
from the start, despite the risks.<\/p>\n A poster of the missing<\/p><\/div>\n
In a time when the government sought to isolate individuals, to
separate and control people through application of terror, the Mothers
gave a unified voice. They acted publicly, sharing their stories,
gathering others to their cause. It was by no means a safe or easy
course of action (fully one quarter of the founding Mothers were also
disappeared before the junta left power in 1983), but they managed to
grow a movement that is still going.<\/p>\n
The ongoing work of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo has not gone on
unnoticed. It has earned them international awards from bodies such
as UNESCO and the European Parliament. It has also been met with
harassment and repression. Three of the organization\u2019s founding
members have joined the ranks of the disappeared since its work
began.<\/p>\n
\u2013
Bruce
Allen<\/a><\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Since the fall of the junta and the return to civilian
government, the pressure exerted by the Mothers has resulted in
several hundred of the missing being identified, or their
remains found. Many younger children turned out to have been
given to adoptive loyalist families, and the Mothers have acted
as intermediaries to help these children come to terms with
their pasts and interact with both their adoptive and birth
families.<\/p>\n
Beyond just finding the missing, many of the Mothers have seen
it as their duty to carry on the dreams of their children, to
live for the causes that got them taken in the first place. To
this end the group has grown to encompass other political
causes, including the founding of a university, libraries and
bookshops, and the provision of healthcare subsidies.<\/p>\n
What makes the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo particularly
interesting is the boundary-crossing nature of their protest. A
lot of activist movements and protest campaigns become
unfortunately mired in divisions, locking out valuable voices
(see the refusal by key female American activists to accept the
black suffrage movement in the early 20th century, or the
frequent erasure of trans* and non-white issues among a lot of
modern groups). The Mothers, by contrast, brought together
several spheres of Argentinean culture. <\/p>\n One of the early demonstrations by the
Mothers, outside the Presidential Palace.<\/p><\/div>\n
Active in the central business areas of Buenos Aires, and by all
accounts an urban movement, they nevertheless counted many rural
Argentinians amongst their number. Age divides were crossed too,
with a Grandmothers division of the group who continued the work
of their kidnapped children, and looked after the offspring of
disappeared Mothers.<\/p>\n
Following the return to civilian government in 1983, and the Trial
of the Juntas<\/a> in \u201985, the Mothers went international.
Argentina hadn\u2019t been the only South American country to
disappear dissidents during that time (see: Operation
Condor<\/a>), and the Mothers sought to bring international
pressure down on countries that still hadn\u2019t come clean
about their activities, particularly the Pinochet regime in
Chile.<\/p>\n
\n\u201cOne of the most beautiful things that came out of my
work with the Grandmothers was learning that there was so much
interest and solidarity from people in other parts of the
world. It was an extraordinarily positive experience. We have
had support from the women\u2019s movement, from the CHA
[Comit\u00e9 Homosexual Argentino], and from the transsexual
groups.\u201d <\/p>\n
–
N\u00e9lida de Navajas<\/strong>, quoted in Rita
Arditti’s
Searching for Life<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
The Mothers are still active today, still working for
answers about the fates of the thousands who remain
unaccounted for, and still promoting the ideals and
social changes their children were kidnapped for. They
still march through the Plaza de Mayo every Thursday, in
addition to a larger annual March of Resistance. <\/p>\n
For further reading:<\/p>\n
(Note:<\/strong> This post is primarily
concerned with the Founding Line branch
of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. The
Association faction, who split off in
1986, are more radical in their
politics. They also do some very good
work, but have publicly expressed some
views that are difficult to
endorse.)<\/p>\n<\/a>
<\/a>
\n