That Inferno
by
Murray Polner
by Murray Polner
DIGG THIS
That
Inferno: Conversations of Five Women Survivors of an Argentine Torture
Camp.
Foreword by Tina Rosenberg. (Vanderbilt University Press,
2006).
Thirty years
ago rightwing Argentine admirals and generals rebelled against their
legally elected government. From 1976 to 1983, while most of the
world looked away, they began their "dirty war" against
the country’s dissidents and leftists, descriptions often broadly
and vaguely defined.
That Inferno,
a book of "conversations" with five female survivors of
the infamous Mechanics School of the Argentine Navy – a torture
center – calls on us to try to remember what was done to them and
their country – not to mention other Latin and Central American
countries then under the sway of assassins and criminals. Having
suffered excruciating tortures (one women said "they didn’t
kill women, but they executed our husbands") they recall a
time when they and tens of thousands were killed, tortured, thrown
out of planes (they were dubbed "fish food"), raped, and
babies of imprisoned women handed over to childless pro-regime couples.
After the Junta’s botched military campaign (backed, incredulously,
by a majority of still nationalistic Argentineans) to capture the
Falkland/Malvinas from the British, a war in which they and their
largely conscript armed forces were soundly thrashed, the women
and other prisoners were released but often found themselves unable
to function "normally," reliving their nightmare over
and again.
In his prologue,
Leon Rozitchner, an Argentinean intellectual and activist, points
out that these crimes against humanity "would not have been
possible without the training received in the U.S. and European
intelligence schools and war colleges and without the support of
the powerful Catholic Church and economic interests linked to national
dominance and imperialism."
Other institutions
were just as silent, and by their silence, supportive of the Junta.
Marguerite Feitlowitz’s seminal A
Lexicon of Terror: Argentina and the Legacies of Torture
discusses the absence of protest by Argentina’s organized Jewish
community. Two percent of the population and ten percent of the
"disappeared" were Jewish as was a high percentage of
the courageous Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. The lesson: Silence
always results in acquiescence.
Jimmy Carter
was mocked by American right-wingers for trying to counter the Junta’s
murderers when he halted the sale of weapons. He also became the
first modern American President to actually believe in and practice
the defense of human rights. But when Ronald Reagan entered the
White House human rights in Argentina and anywhere else was derided
as liberal claptrap (except in Communist states) and arms sales
to Argentina were resumed.
Yet Reagan’s
policies were more in accord with traditional U.S. foreign policy
than Carter’s. Throughout the Twentieth Century the U.S. has always
been willing to accept Latin and Central American despots, killers
and its wealthy ruling elites.
Perhaps those
who torture and murder their opponents will one day be tried in
a court of law. Argentine President Nestor Kirchner told his people
he would carry out his duties "without rancor but with memory."
Memory is crucial as victims of the Gulag, the Holocaust and other
atrocities have learned. Future generations need to know what horrors
were carried out in their names.
August
8, 2006
Murray
Polner [send
him mail] co-authored
Disarmed
and Dangerous, a biography of Daniel and Philip Berrigan
and wrote No
Victory Parades: The Return of the Vietnam Veteran. This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2006 History News Network
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Polner Archives
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