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| Photo-essay on health work with Guatemalan Refugees in Chiapas, Mexico |
It has prospered in peace since, and is either a shining example of peaceful democratic struggle or an embarrassment, depending upon whom you ask...
The Guatemalan Army, controlled by the powerful, and a power unto itself
(owning businesses, large tracts of land, communications, and banks - the
"Bank of the Army" being one of the biggest in the country), insinuates
itself into the daily life of most villages in this country. The army is
blamed for disappearances through forced conscription (many boys are picked
up at local soccer matches) or more surreptitiously through middle-of-the-night
abductions. Those "desaparecidos" (disappeared) are either never seen again
or are found tortured and killed. It is a widely understood truth that
"there are no political prisoners in Guatemala" - this said as black humor
by potential victims of the government. The army created civilian patrols
and sent them after anyone deemed an "enemy of the people" or a communist.
This list often includes church workers, health workers, community leaders,
priests, and those who refuse to join or cooperate with the civilian patrol.
For this reason hundreds of thousands fled into neighboring Mexico in the
early 1980's, and approximately one million (out of six million) are "internal
refugees" within their own country.
Santiago Atitlan suffered its share of hardship - hundreds killed or
disappeared. Estimates range up to about 800, and photos in the town hall
attest to at least 300 disappeared. A favorite priest, father Stan Rother,
from Oklahoma, was gunned down by soldiers in his study next to the church
in 1981. His study remains a shrine to this day. [Note - you may be able
to get a copy of The Shepherd Cannot Run - the letters of Stan Rother
at your library]
On a cool evening of December 1, 1990, several soldiers from the nearby
garrison were in town drinking and becoming out of control. After harassing
some local women, some villagers threw stones at them. The soldiers pulled
their weapons and fired, killing one. The townspeople, outraged, gathered
in the town square, ringing the church bells to assemble the town. They
marched, thousands strong, in the early morning hours, to the garrison,
to demand an end to harassment by soldiers stationed there. When they arrived
at the gates of the garrison - men, women, and children, they were met
with gunfire, and 11 were killed and 40 injured.
Since Santiago Atitlan is only across the lake from a popular tourist
area, the press arrived by sunrise. The Guatemalan government found it
a little difficult to deny responsibility for this massacre, with photos
of dead victims lying literally at the gate of the garrison. Community
leaders demanded a meeting with the government human rights ombudsman (previously
a mostly token position created because of international pressure) and
the president. With the weight of international attention the demand for
an investigation and punishment of responsible parties was agreed upon.
The shock was that the third community demand - for the immediate and permanent
removal of the army from the community - was also agreed upon.
The community, reacting to the governments' concern for "security" in
the area (and their desire to send the army back in), rapidly created the
Committee for Security and Development. They instituted the traditional
Mayan "ronda" - nightly rounds or patrols by groups of volunteers armed
with flashlights and whistles. A "Peace Park" was created by the townspeople
with paths lined with the stones painstakingly removed as they disassembled
the garrison stone by stone. This park consists of markers commemorating
the martyrs (including an 11-year old) at the exact places they fell. The
letter from the president promising to remove the army and to investigate
the incident (that part never happened...) has been copied on eight-foot
high marble and placed in the park as a constant reminder to any future
governments. During the process of creating the park a mass grave was found.
Guatemalan military officials said that if any further digging took place
the army WOULD return. Complying with that threat all digging stopped,
but a large hole is left as a reminder.
Every year the anniversary of the massacre is marked by eleven days
of ceremony honoring those who died. These ceremonies culminate with a
catholic mass at the site of the massacre. The government has grudgingly
kept its promise to keep the army out of the area. The community feels
that it is very important to maintain their aggressive positivity about
the future and their remembrance of the events of 1990. International representation
at the annual ceremony is very much appreciated to remind the government
that the international community DOES indeed remember the massacre and
does expect the government to keep its promises. When I attended several
years ago the MacNeil-Lehrer news hour sent a representative to cover the
ceremonies, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights also often makes
a brief appearance.
This community is the most involved, together, and optimistic that I
have ever encountered. Everyone is invested into its' success. Walking
up the volcano behind town one morning I met Nicolas, coming down with
a three-foot bag of avocados on his shoulders. He was surprised to see
a gringo there, and said a pleasant "hola" and asked were I was going (suspecting
that I was lost, I am sure). When I said I was just taking a walk and was
in town for the ceremony, his face simply lit up. He exclaimed that it
was wonderful, that before 1990 if I were to go past that very point I
would not return, but that now, thanks to God and all of their very hard
work, I could be free to walk wherever I wanted unmolested.
Members of the community are working in so many different ways to make
a difference. I met Diego Chiquival, whose training is in Social Work but
who now helps the local coffee growers learn to grow coffee organically.
Through his efforts an organization in California visited to certify the
coffee as meeting the standards required for organically-grown. Eventually
they hope this will help them get a better price for their product. The
local AM radio station broadcasts town meetings and educational programs
in both Spanish and Tzutuhil. The widows sell their weavings in a shop
by the central plaza. Juan Queju teaches orphans to weave. "Chepe" Reanda
Sosof, a Tzutuhil Mayan elder, taught us about their creation beliefs and
of Moshimon, one of the Mayan dieties which looks out for them. Maria Sisay
is a busy midwife in the community. When the army patrolled the town she
could not even walk through town at night - now there is nothing interfering
with her ability to provide her services to the women of the community.
For site with further information and photos of the human rights situation in Guatemala please see the Mayan Struggle. For other general human rights information see derechos.
http://www.travelhealth.com/hmnrts.htm
-- Revised: 8 March 1997
Copyright © 1996 Travel
Health information and Referral Service
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