There's still hope
1 2023-06-03T13:45:18-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2 42723 5 Family members march through the streets with pictures of their loved ones who have not been found till this day. plain 2023-06-03T14:35:32-07:00 February 25 15.7835° N, 90.2308° W Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2This page has annotations:
- 1 2023-06-03T14:32:17-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2 A march to commemorate the dead Paola Chavarria 2 Guatemalan survivors and relatives of victims of civil war-era crimes against humanity gather on February 25 to commemorate the dead and to demand justice plain 2023-06-03T14:32:27-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2
- 1 2023-06-03T14:25:51-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2 Sebastian Ventura Paola Chavarria 2 Sebastian Ventura another victim who was killed during the genocide. plain 2023-06-03T14:26:26-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2
- 1 2023-06-03T14:27:13-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2 Inocente Lopez Ramirez Paola Chavarria 2 Inocente Lopez Ramirez one of the many indigenous people who disappeared on July 10th of 1982 or 1983. plain 2023-06-03T14:29:40-07:00 Paola Chavarria 5f8100958653707124d6e7eca289a43139a83ef2
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Revisiting the Past
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This page brings attention to a grim period in Guatemalan history, specifically what may be known as the Guatemalan genocide, the Mayan genocide, or the Silent Holocaust. Highlighting the permanent damage left on the Mayan community and the numerous lives that were lost during the Guatemalan War. Its purpose is to serve as a stark reminder of the degree of brutality that this community faced.
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During the Guatemalan Genocide, indigenous communities became the primary targets of extensive human rights abuses, forced disappearances, torture, sexual violence, and mass killings carried out by the government and military forces. This included men, women, children, and the elderly. Although this took place during the Guatemalan War which began in the 1960’s, it wasn’t until 1981 that this horrific attack against the Mayan peoples occurred. This resulted from the war shifting from the urban areas of Guatemala to the rural areas of the country because the Guerrillas wanted to change their strategies and attack the government while obtaining popular support from indigenous communities. In an effort to exterminate the Guerrillas or “communism”, the Guatemalan state sent their Army to rural areas to “remove the water from the fish”, Guerrillas being the fish and the water being the indigenous communities.
Unfortunately, the annihilation of indigenous peoples resulted from the Guatemalan state’s efforts, bringing about the Mayan genocide. It is believed that over 200,000 Guatemalans were victims of these atrocities. According to The Historical Clarification Commission (CEH) 83% of those who were massacred were indigenous/Mayans and 17.3% were of Ladino/Mestizo. It is said that 90% of those deaths were caused by the army and paramilitary forces, 4% were brought on by the Guerrilla groups, and 6% cannot be allotted. To better understand the brutality that this event brought upon the Mayan community it is important to note that 626 villages were destroyed, an estimated 50,000 rapes occurred (the exact figure is unknown) – 86% being Mayan women, and various Guatemalans were forcibly displaced.
It wasn’t until Rigoberta Menchú a Mayan activist and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, brought international attention to the Guatemalan genocide in 1996 that a peace accord between the Guerillas and the government ended the Guatemalan civil war. The attention that was drawn to this act of cruelty allowed people from various fields to become interested and offer help to survivors so that they could find long lost relatives whether dead or alive), proclaim their stories, and attain justice. One of the scholars that aided these individuals was Freddy, the founder and director of the Guatemalan Foundation of Forensics Anthropology (Fundación de Antropología Forense de Guatemala). He was able to exhume 1,450 graves and discovered the remains of 6,500 victims. It became his mission to embark on a journey to uncover the truth buried beneath layers of pain and suffering. As time progressed more specialists came to the aid of the Mayan community, offering various services that would allow them to find some peace after the trauma that they had endured.
However, despite the support of these multidisciplinary professionals and activists there are still numerous Guatemalan citizens who search for answers as to the whereabouts of loved ones, family members, and friends.“We are still seeking justice” Julia Payon, a Maya Kaqchikel survivor of the massacre who lost her father after the military took him away, stated after a ceremony that took place in the grounds of a former military base in San Juan Comalapa, which is now home to a memorial for victims of enforced disappearances. Like Julia, many others are waiting to see those who were involved in the genocide be brought to justice.