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March 10, 2008
The March of the Forgotten
by Katharine West
On Thursday, March 6, 2008, Colombians took to the streets of the
country’s cities in a valiant gesture to reclaim the memory
of victims of the right-wing paramilitary violence, which has tormented
the country for decades. The atmosphere was surprisingly festive—despite
the somber message, with many widows and orphans participating in
the march. It was more of a celebration of the lives of the fallen,
with chants of “ni perdon, ni olvido; castigo a los asasinos”
(no forgiveness, no forgetting; punishment for the killers).
According
to Ivan Cepeda, interviewed by City TV, a Bogotá-based television
channel, nine million people worldwide participated in the anti-paramilitary
marches, while others put the number in the hundreds of thousands.
The fact that the march took place only one month after widespread
protests against the FARC highlights how divided the country remains
under the government of President Alvaro Uribe.
In the little pre-march coverage that did exist, many critics tried
to convince people that the march had been organized by the FARC
and, therefore, marching would be unpatriotic—or, at the very
least, would signify a lack of support for the president at the
same that he was embroiled in a diplomatic confrontation with Ecuador
and Venezuela.
In a sad comment about the strength of Colombian democracy, many
held placards stating, “I am a survivor of the genocide of
the Patriotic Union,” a leftist political party founded in
1985 by the FARC and other sectors on the left and whose members
were massacred during the 1980s and 1990s. The march in Bogotá
also included representatives from Hijos Colombia (Children of Colombia),
an organization made up of children whose parents were massacred,
and members of leftist groups, trade unions and even the Lesbian
Gay Bisexual Transgendered (LGBT) community.
Many marchers
carried photos of people who were murdered or disappeared—politicians,
trade unionists, peasants, students, etc.—and several of the
marchers wore balaclavas and held models of chainsaws, an obvious
reference to the testimonies of demobilized paramilitary that provided
detailed descriptions of how bodies were dismembered during massacres.
Paramilitaries are also responsible for a large percentage of the
three million people—out of a total population of 44 million—who
have been forcibly displaced from their homes and land.
Katherine
West is a graduate in Law of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia.
She has lived in Bogotá for the last nine years and is presently
finishing a masters program in Latin American Studies in the Javeriana
University.
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