Civic ImaginationMain MenuThe Big Map: an Overview of the Civic ImaginationThe Big Map of Civic Imagination all over the worldNon FictionReal World Instances that inspire Civic ImaginationPopular Culture/FictionalCharacters, stories and fictional universes that resonate with communities and inspire actionMyth and FolkloreStories from cultures around the world that inspire Civic ImaginationReligiousStories based in faith and religionsMigrating the StoriesExplore the Big Map and then remix Imagination by migrating stories to new localesContributorsPeople who contributed stories to the projectGabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0Emilia Yang0306ec8482b0946a4ad881acf758effb11741533
Arlen Siu
12016-06-08T20:06:03-07:00Emilia Yang0306ec8482b0946a4ad881acf758effb1174153391991Carlos Mejía Godoy - El Zenzontle Pregunta Por Arlen (Nicaragua) "You cannot do a revolution without women's participation"plain2016-06-08T20:06:03-07:00YouTube2013-08-16T22:16:36.000Zdr-lmKTB9wQHALKLARIN DEĞİL COĞRAFYANIN MÜZİĞİEmilia Yang0306ec8482b0946a4ad881acf758effb11741533
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1media/ArlenSiuFSLN.jpg2016-06-08T20:10:58-07:00Arlen Siu3First female martyrs of the Sandinista revolutiongoogle_maps2016-06-20T17:12:39-07:0012.226706, -86.213290 Arlen Siu Bermúdez (15 July 1955 – 1 August 1975) was a Chinese Nicaraguan who became one of the first female martyrs of the Sandinista revolution. Siu was 18 when she joined the Sandinistas. She had already attained a level of national celebrity as a talented songwriter, singer, and guitarist by the time she joined the movement. She was killed August 1, 1975 during an ambush near El Sauce, Leon, Nicaragua, by soldiers from the Dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle's National Guard. She was twenty years old. She is considered by many in Nicaragua to be one of the earliest martyrs of the revolutionary movement. Her artistic works and critical essays on Marxism and feminism served as an inspiration to both the Sandinista movement and the Nicaraguan Women's movement. Her picture was often displayed at FSLN celebrations throughout Nicaragua. Managua and El Rama have neighborhoods named after her, and a park in León is also named after her.
My family was very close to Arlen’s family and I am friends with most of her nieces so her story is very close to my heart. I think I choose her because I love symbols of popular and feminist resistance. Her example has sparked many other references in popular culture and social change.