{"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