Unit 4. Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Sophie Germain Aung San Suu Kyi Rigoberta Menchú.
I, Rigoberta Menchú The Cultural Wars. 2 Guatemalan Historical Background See “I, Rigoberta...
-
date post
21-Dec-2015 -
Category
Documents
-
view
229 -
download
4
Transcript of I, Rigoberta Menchú The Cultural Wars. 2 Guatemalan Historical Background See “I, Rigoberta...
I, Rigoberta Menchú
The Cultural Wars
2
Guatemalan Historical Background
See “I, Rigoberta Menchú and the “Culture Wars”
Historical Background on Guatemala
Altiplano/
El Quiche
3
Number
of Massacres
by Department
4
Testimonio Literature A form of collective autobiographical
witnessing that gives voice to oppressed peoples
Told in 1st person, by a supporter or witness It supports human rights & liberation
struggles Rigoberta: “The history of my
community is my own history”
5
David Stoll 1999 Rigoberta Menchú and the Story of
All Poor Guatemalans
A fabrication of lies?
6
Stoll confuses testimony with testimonio
Instead he is overly concerned with empirical accuracy & discounts testimonio… where advocacy is more important than strict
factual reliability
7
The Civil War Does Stoll deny the civil war? “The army demonstrated its willingness
to slaughter 100s of men, women, & children in a single day”
8
Conflicting versions of history Rigoberta’s account brought
international attention to the violence & human rights abuses
Stolls’ book attacked those who were fighting against a repressive government & placed into question the truth about Guatemalan history
9
Rigoberta: “Peasant” Revolutionary Leader?
“In a peasant society ruled by elders, where girls reaching puberty are kept under close watch…”
10
Conflicting accounts Stoll: “Other survivors gave me a rather
different picture” “There are enough conflicting versions,
& enough gaps in my information…” Stoll does reject essentializing
11
Stoll’s Arguments:Was Rigoberta illiterate?
“Prestigious Belgian nun’s boarding school”
12
Did Rigoberta work on the fincas?
“Peasants had found better kinds of work”
“This left the seasonal workers the most precarious & exploited of the finca workforce”
13
Did Rigoberta’s brother Nicolás die of malnutrition? Naming siblings of deceased children
=
Antonio Nicolás Cotojás
Tum
=
Vicente Juana
Menchú Tum
Patrocinio Nicolás Nicolás Rigoberta
14
Was Rigoberta’s brother Patrocinio burned alive?
“They burned a body, but he was already dead”
15
How did Rigoberta’s mother die?
“Visualizing her mother’s death so graphically might be the only means of closure”
16
What really happened at the Spanish embassy?
The occupiers were guerrillas, not peasants
They are the ones who set the embassy on fire
Selection among different accounts that best fits Stoll’s agenda
17
The land dispute: Family feud over land?
Land disputes are common in rural peasant communities
18
The land dispute: Rich peasants? Public land – 2753 has. Laguna Danta – 800 has. forested land
(Rigoberta’s maternal grandmother -Tums- bought 360 has., including disputed land)
Disputed land – 151 has. claimed by 221 homesteaders (.68 has. each)
“Small Kingdom”
19
20
Abundant, available land? Brol, Martínez, García ladino families “My evidence is fragmentary…someone
burned the judicial archive…before I went looking for it…many of the officials tending to reticence…bystanders were confused about who was doing what to whom”
21
Did Rigoberta’s father Vicente collude with the guerrillas?
“That Vicente hoped guerrilla muscle would help him against the Tums is only a hypothesis.”
22
What was Ríos Montt’s role in the civil war? “A restraining influence”
1980-85 50,000 Killed 440 Villages destroyed
23
Guerrillas appear 1979 1954 Arbenz overthrown 1966-76 20,000 killed by death squads 1970-74 Ríos Montt – Army Chief 1978 Army machine guns crowd
demonstrating for land rights 1978-82 Lucas García 1982-83 Ríos Montt
24
19821982
Rios Montt edges closer to escaping accountability for genocide
November 14, 2013, Aljazeera America Despite Ríos Montt being found guilty in May
for genocide and crimes against humanity—a watershed since this was the first time a former head of state was convicted of genocide in a national court—the short-lived celebration was extinguished 10 days later when Guatemala's Constitutional Court annulled the verdict.
25
26
How Reliable is Stoll’s Account? “My interviews with survivors…as for
the factuality of my conclusions…some issues lead only to more and less likely scenarios”
If what results is more reliable than Rigoberta’s account, it encompasses a wider range of versions
27
Stoll on Guerrillas Not an attack on Rigoberta, but on the
militant left Instead of portraying the military as evil,
he portrays the guerrillas as evil
28
Stoll’s central argument CUC was a guerrilla front that used peasants
like pawns The EGP lured peasants into confronting the
army & that led to more army repression Violence followed the appearance of guerrilla
groups “By the time the guerrillas arrived in
Uspantan, the army was an experienced killing machine”
29
30
31
Rigoberta’s Role—Marxist Tool?
“Her 1982 story becomes a parable about learning to trust the left”
“For Marxists the Menchú-Burgos collaboration became a classic text”
“It was all too obvious that her first loyalty was to the Marxist International”
32
Criticism of “Leftist Academics” “Scholars have been tempted to heap all
blame on the army, arguing that the guerrillas were an inevitable reaction to oppression…exonerating the guerillas”
33
REMHI PEACE ACCORDS 1996 The Recovery of Historical
Memory Project Interviewed 6000 VICTIMS Documented systematic campaign of
genocide & ethnocide
1998 Bishop Juan Gerardi assassinated
34
Mayan woman giving Truth Commission report “Memory of Silence” to UN Assistant Secretary General
35
Exhuming the Past 1996
36
Mother witnesses exhumation of son’s remains
37
1997 Exhumation near 16th C. Church
38
A woman cries over an open coffin at the reburial of 20 victims of Guatemala's civil war. In 1982, the army and civilian patrols massacred 20 people and dumped their bodies in a church latrine. For 16 years, the victims' relatives were too scared to say anything about it, and too frightened to
remove the bodies
39
Reclaimed bodies that had been dumped inside the church
40
Forensic expert Dr. Clyde Snow
Body of a young boy exhumed from a mass grave. His hands were tied behind his back with a rope that reached around his neck. He, like a dozen others, were shot in the back of the head
41
Evangelical priest gives eulogy behind black trash bags containing the skeletal remains of eight people murdered in the early 1980’s.
42
35 Bodies Linked to Guatemala Army Sweep in 1982, New York Times
43