Strejilovich’s Poem

This name isn’t mine! it was a hundred a thousand all of them mine it was body and womb and voice it had neighbors it whistled it was diurnal and nocturnal it was a god. 

 

This passage that came from the poem A single Numberless Death. Reminded me greatly of the tango show that we as a group just attended. They danced with such grace, and seemed to be at peace while doing it. I connected the two things because no one that was dancing seemed to be weighed down by the hardness that comes with living life. Like the poem said the voice is not theres, and listening to the woman sing she sounded as if she was singing to the world rather than the people in the room. Overall the show was something to express gratitude, freedom, and the joy of still being on this world. 

 

Argentinian Life

Life in Argentina seems to be pretty normal.  The people that lived through the *Dirty War” are desperate to keep the memory alive so that it never happens again. The younger generation is more interested in their phones and other electronics.  The ones who are supposed to be teaching the younger generations may do it or may not.  We can only control ourselves so I think it is basically up to the parents to try to instill the horror of these human rights violations on their children.  I also thank and praise those who are running and working at the memory sites for doing their part in the attempt for “Nunca Mas”.

Detention center

I was interesting visiting the detention center and getting to see one of many places that held, and diminished people. Still trying to recover many aspects of “Club Athletico” they have ran into many issues that suppress their growth. With things like not having the money or workers to finish persevering this memorial. They spoke about how the main reason for continuing to work on this project was to conduct an archaeological, and documentary type testimony, and I believe this is to make it more personal to people that visit this. Is was also shocking to hear about many of the living conditions that people had to face. Overall a very eye opening place that is full of history. And seeing nunca mas engraved in the ground showed just how fed up many citizen are. 

Women’s March

The murdered women had not belonged to a militaristic organization or even a political one; they were barely a dozen unarmed people whose only link was their kinship to others who had disappeared. From the flight confessions of an Argentine Dirty Warrior. 

 

We will be marching with the Mothers of

Plaza de Mayo. This is a way many women show their strength from their last trauma. I noticed a photo of women that wore the white head scarfs. These women are standing up so they wouldn’t be silenced or feel as if their lives have little meaning. The women looked exhausted and were reading about the Punto Final. Which seemed to be a big issue around the 1980’s. This is a very important movement to many people. So I am very excited to be a part of something that is near and dear to many people’s hearts.

On Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Abya Yala

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Plaza del Mayo in Buenos Aires on the eve of the May 25th demonstrations, in B/W. There are national banners draped over what used to be city hall, and the central "clocktower" ascends in the center. There are ominous clouds gathering in the background.

[I’m not posting this for credit; I just wanted to share with everyone else my thoughts. If you’re reading this, thanks for taking the time for looking.]

I wake up with dark red marks carved into my inner palms, carved by my fingernails as I clench my fists during my sleep. These days, I find myself at odds with the clock: no matter how many more hours of sleep I get, it feels as if I haven’t slept at all. I don’t really remember the dreams I’ve been having, but I get brief images of running, hiding, and loud noises. They aren’t exactly new — my fair share of run-ins with other fun things have brought me to similar bouts of restlessness.

Osvaldo helped reveal truths to me that were previously obscured by (what now seem like) the thinnest of barriers. All of the signs and explanations were there, but I think I unfortunately rely too heavily on the “it’s only true if someone else validates it” model — leaving me to moments like this if I’d like to do any big soul-searching without the help of our fungi-based tools. These times at the memory-sites, I’ve found, are compartmentalized in this part of my mind that’s recently formed. I think it truly began when I first visited an ICE detention center in south Georgia — and has been more recently defined by my trip to New York City. What a radicalizing experience! The most prominent displays of wealth and luxury juxtaposed by the most poor people experiencing houselessness — not to say Atlanta is any different, but it’s the scale.

I find much of the same here. The crescent-shaped marks sting as I hold my toothbrush, pack my bag, and hook my silver around my neck as I get ready in the morning. Towering buildings, which easily mirror those on Fifth Avenue, condescend over “popular”, working-class neighborhoods. The universal news-stingers reflect skyrocketing inflation, parroted by the fascist taxi-drivers who unwittingly take us from one memory-site to another. The sound of drums and brass fill the pedestrian streets as green and yellow smoke rises over the crowd. Cold rain unforgivingly lets down over thousands gathered to bear witness to their political futures, while peddlers frantically put out their stocks of ponchos and umbrellas.

The sounds of the pipes and AC in this hotel take turns sounding like screams of pain and loud knocks at our door. Twice now, the little turn-timer on the microwave has gone off without cause as I’ve been alone in the dark. The window looks out to a family’s room; I can see and hear them in the mornings, worrying me as if they were in the room. To put it plainly: this place gives me the fucking creeps.

Buenos Aires has its own terrible beauty as any other major Latin American city would, but with its own flavor. Think Mexico City — built directly upon the ruinous city of Tenochtitlan, ransacked and violated by barbaric Spanish invaders. Hey, but at least there’s a public conception of “original” or “Indigenous” culture in Mexico City. Buenos Aires is a grand monument whose brilliance allures you to come closer and join: only when you’re close do you realize its made of bleached bones, not marble.

I don’t deny the beauty of this place in the slightest. In a continent renowned for its xenophobia, there is a vibrant and (partially) integrated community of immigrants who make this a badass place to be. We’ve been eating Korean, Vietnamese, Brazilian, and Peruvian food these nights. I really couldn’t ask for more, considering most of my nights in Cordoba were spent eating some version of a ham and cheese sandwich or pizza. Still sticking with ham and cheese, though.

I recall the conversation I had with Carlos, who was one of the musicians and poet who came to the asado during our last bits in Cordoba (specifically around Cerro Azul). This is a country, continent even, of millions with connections to land and her original peoples in some form or another. The difference is whether or not they make an effort to learn about these histories and realities, and to decolonize their minds. It is a lifelong process like anything else, but immensely important.

I have no intention to soapbox to my fellow “mestize” (mixed-race) Latin Americans about how they need to join me on this journey of decolonization, et cetera — because if they truly want to do it, they will. I don’t intend to bring someone in on this discourse, these spaces, these paths if they lack the basic respect for the essence of decolonization: that these lands are colonized, that our ancestors are still with us, that our siblings are still here, and that hope is not lost.

I have learned that there is nothing to be gained from trying to engage with those who make your identity a question — something ostensibly up for debate. They are the collaborators to our repressors, the devil’s advocates who will put you in danger for the sake of preserving the “marketplace of ideas”, the informants whose allegiances to the state come before whatever conception of humanity you two have. These are times for joy and for love and for gathering, but we do so in strength and in careful advisement. We have no choice but to prepare.

memento mori

Madres y Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo

In “Children of the Dirty War:  Argentinas stolen orphans” F. Goldman tells how Maria Isabel Chorobik de Mariani went to some meetings of the Madres de Plaza de Mayo and then started the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo to join with other grandmothers who were looking for their missing grandchildren.  Maria thinks she has found her grandchild but it took years to get the children to consent to be tested.  So, after believing or at least hoping for many years, she is disappointed to find that she is not related.  False hope can be very devastating.  I was very happy to learn about the database where people born during the years of those disappeared and those who lost a grandchild can register with their dna.  Hopefully many, many more will be found.

Tráfico y Tortura

club atletico

archeological remains of the former detention center

Visiting the Club Atlético secret detention center in Buenos Aires was a haunting and thought-provoking experience, particularly due to the striking juxtaposition of its grim history and its current location beneath a noisy highway. This combination of historical significance and present-day surroundings created a profound and disconcerting atmosphere. As we approached the site, the ambient noise from the highway above served as a constant reminder of the bustling urban life continuing just overhead. The contrast is stark, with the energetic flow of traffic standing in contrast to the history once concealed beneath the ground.

highway

Highway built above the former club atletico detention center

tower of people in former detention detention

pillar in club atletico

For me, this visit served as a powerful reminder that beneath the surface of everyday life, there can lie hidden stories of pain, suffering, and injustice. The clash between the bustling highway and the solemnity of the clandestine detention center prompts contemplation about the coexistence of past atrocities and the vibrant present-day city. It forces visitors to confront the unsettling reality that history and its lingering echoes are not separate from the present, but rather intricately intertwined.

Hidalgo (2012) examines the complex and varied approaches taken towards Argentina’s former secret detention centers. She explores the different ways in which these memory sites have been dealt with– including demolition, modification, and preservation. The article analyzes the cultural, political, and social factors that influence the decision-making processes surrounding these former detention centers. In a way, Club Atletico was neither destroyed nor preserved. The remains of the basement where people were detained and tortured exist, and portions are visible; however, to a mere passerby they appear to be nothing beyond a construction or dig site. I walked right past the site when meeting up with the group because it was so nondescript. Moreover, our tour guide mentioned that if they continue to excavate the site they may also subject it to extreme water damage as the rainwater falls down steadily between the cracks of the highway. In this way, it is neither destroyed nor preserved. Memory, heritage, and justice intersect in complex ways at these secret former detention centers, and the state’s preservation of Club Atletico seemed (to me) an afterthought.

 

Reflection on Club Atlético

Club Atlético, buried under a highway in Buenos Aires, was never an athletic club at all: it was a euphemistically named secret torture site, one of many around Argentina. It was formerly the basement of a police building. Like many others, it displayed photos of its victims who never returned home. At first, you are overwhelmed by the wall of faces, but then your eyes begin to settle on individual people. There was another installation involving only names, but I find that the photos tell the people’s stories and humanize them in a unique way. This site also had objects left behind when the site was abandoned, which made what happened feel more concrete. Something else that I thought was important was that it included a map showing the United States’ role in installing dictators not just in Argentina but across Latin America through Plan Condor. This is not just Argentina’s history but U.S. History and needs to be taught and understood in the U.S. as well. I don’t believe many Americans know about this at all, and I only learned about it later on in high school, in a specific Latin American history class. While I’m glad I was taught about it, it was interesting it only came up in Latin American history and not U.S. history. We claim to be about freedom and democracy, yet have installed dictators all over the world to further our interests. This is yet another example of why it is important not to whitewash history, and why the latest attacks on education in the U.S. are so harmful. We have discussed how not all schools in Argentina teach about human rights, though they’re supposed to, but at the same time Black history, anything LGBTQ related and even a variety of books are being banned in parts of our own country. It’s important to learn about human rights issues across the world, but we must remember they are not something that happen solely in other countries, unrelated to us.

Evita

Evita’s rise to prominence as the wife of Perón brought forth a remarkable era of change in Argentina. She championed the rights of the working class, advocating for improved labor conditions, suffrage for women, and social welfare programs. Evita’s charismatic personality and dedication to social justice very clearly left a mark on Argentine society. The public profoundly perceived her commitment to them, which seems to have elevated her to an iconic status– she has transformed into a symbol of hope and empowerment for many Argentines.

evita on building

Evita on a building in BA

Our visit to the Eva Perón Museum was a moving experience. The museum captures the spirit of Evita’s legacy and evoked a sense of empathy and admiration for her efforts on behalf of the less privileged. Seeing Evita’s personal effects, such as her clothing and handwritten letters, yields a personal connection with her story. However, what really resonated with me was the passion and admiration with which our tour guide talked about Evita. The stories she told encapsulated the many ways in which Evita is preserved as an “immortal” symbol of hope.

 

Club Atletico

 

  I visited the site Club Atletico and was truly disappointed. The city has built a highway over top of the memorial as if the monument meant nothing. It was hard to focus and really feel for the people who were harmed because the sound of traffic overpowered my ears. I don’t know if this is their way of getting rid of the history but to me, that’s what it felt like. I feel that the community could do a better job of protecting the memorial. There should be some type of glass cover because the rain will only make it harder to preserve.

 

To learn that there was a secretive detention center in the basement of what used to be a three-story building was hard to picture without a visual. It was said that the extraction has stopped due to a lack of equipment and money. I feel that if this was important to the city as it is to the victims’ families then money and equipment shouldn’t be a problem. It’s hard to see that people can do horrific things such as torture, kidnap and kill people but when it’s time to make it right, the same efforts are not taken to preserve their memories. 

I feel we can preserve the memory of human rights abuses by continuing to speak up and tell the truth about what caused this all. I heard that the U.S. had a lot to do with the genocide of these people and I bet they are not at all helping with the investigations. The only way to make sure this doesn’t happen again is to continue holding all parties responsible accountable for their wrongdoings against humanity. Memorials should be taken better care of and shouldn’t be thrown under busy highways!