Ugly History: The El Mozote murders - Diana Sierra Becerra

236,145 views ・ 2022-05-17

TED-Ed


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In 1984, a group of radio broadcasters and operators
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walked into the abandoned village of El Mozote in El Salvador.
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Fireflies illuminated the remnants of a massacre
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that had taken place three years earlier.
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Led by Colonel Domingo Monterrosa,
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government soldiers had tortured, raped, and murdered 978 people,
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including 553 children.
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The youngest victim, Concepción Sánchez, was just three days old.
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Both the US and Salvadoran governments denied the massacre had taken place,
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and the slaughter left few people alive to tell their story.
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But with the help of Radio Venceremos, one of those survivors, Rufina Amaya,
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shared her testimony—
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exposing both Monterrosa and the governments funding his crimes.
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This massacre was one in a long line of atrocities
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committed against El Salvador’s farmers.
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Since the 1800s, a handful of oligarchs
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had controlled nearly all the country’s land,
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forcing laborers to work for almost nothing.
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In 1932, Indigenous farm workers led an insurrection,
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but the dictatorial government responded by committing genocide
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against these communities.
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From then on, one military dictatorship after another ruled the country
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in concert with wealthy landowners.
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Their power only grew in the 1960s,
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when the United States began supplying the regime with military aid.
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The US wanted to stop the spread of reformist and revolutionary movements,
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which they saw as threats to capitalism.
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So they spent huge sums of money training Salvadoran soldiers and “death squads”—
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fascist military units versed in brutal counter-insurgency methods.
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Throughout the 1970s, these forces slaughtered farmers
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who organized to demand basic rights,
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such as living wages, food, and clean water.
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Finally, in 1980, farmers and urban workers formed
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the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front.
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This coalition of guerrilla groups fought to overthrow the dictatorship
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and build a socialist society that met the needs of laborers.
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These revolutionaries were attacked from every direction.
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Colonel Monterrosa led a special battalion intent on destroying the FMLN,
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using tactics he’d learned at an American military school.
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State forces terrorized farmers to stop them
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from joining or aiding the guerrillas.
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But one group of rebels would not be silenced:
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the operators of Radio Venceremos.
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This clandestine guerrilla radio began in 1981,
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and its broadcasters Santiago and Mariposa became the voice of the revolution.
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They transmitted news from the front lines
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and reported military abuses that no other source covered.
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The station’s politics and popularity made it a high-profile target.
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And because they operated in a relatively small area,
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its broadcasters had to move constantly to evade capture.
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To communicate undetected, the group modified two radios into telephones,
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linked together through kilometers of barbed wire covering the countryside.
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This secret telephone line helped the rebels
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stay one step ahead of their pursuers.
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In addition to reporting news,
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the radio broadcast educational programs in areas under guerrilla control.
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Here, farmers organized democratic councils to govern themselves,
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alongside cooperatives, schools, and medical clinics.
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Organizers also encouraged civilian women to participate in these councils
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to ensure the revolution overthrew both capitalism and patriarchy.
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Women made up roughly a third of the guerrillas,
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working in a huge variety of roles.
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Colonel Monterrosa was obsessed with destroying Radio Venceremos.
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In October 1984,
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government soldiers finally captured their radio transmitter.
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Monterrosa himself went to retrieve the equipment
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and held a theatrical press conference celebrating
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his “decisive blow to the subversives.”
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But in reality, the radio team had outsmarted him once again.
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The transmitter was boobytrapped.
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Once Monterrosa’s helicopter left the press conference,
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radio members detonated the device over El Mozote,
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killing the colonel near the village he had massacred.
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Monterrosa’s death was one victory in a much larger conflict.
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The civil war raged on for 8 more years before concluding in 1992,
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when peace accords dissolved the oppressive National Guard
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and allowed the FMLN to become an electoral party.
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But these accords didn’t address problems of deep, structural inequality.
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In 1993, the UN Truth Commission
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reported that over 75,000 people died during the war.
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Yet the Salvadoran legislature prevented the prosecution of war crimes
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and continues to obstruct justice to this day.
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As of 2021, no participating American officials have been put on trial,
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and only one individual from the Salvadoran government
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has been sentenced for war crimes.
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Historical erasure exists in the US as well,
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where these and other stories of US intervention in Central America
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are rarely taught in public schools.
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But the victims refuse to be forgotten.
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Rufina Amaya continued to share her testimony until her death in 2007.
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And survivors of other massacres still organize to denounce state violence.
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They map old massacre sites, exhume and bury loved ones,
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and build sanctuaries and museums,
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all in the hope of pollinating a more just future.
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