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                                     From 
                                      Address to the  
                                      Feminist Family Values Forum  
                                      by Maria Jimenez 
                                     To 
                                      my mind, this movement of the Mothers of 
                                      the Disappeared was the forerunner of all 
                                      modern movements seeking democracy throughout 
                                      Latin America. More significantly, it is 
                                      this movement that redefined for me the 
                                      essence of the women's movement. While this 
                                      is the common vision of women throughout 
                                      Latin America, for me, a Mexican American 
                                      living in the United States, this was a 
                                      new perspective: this courageous campaign 
                                      against totalitarianism broadened my vision 
                                      of how women could achieve equality.
                                      
                                      In the words of Guadalupe, a member of CONVIGUA 
                                      (National Coordinator of the Widows of Guatemala): 
                                      "We did not know what to do after the massacre 
                                      of 1982. We didn't cook, we didn't eat; 
                                      our children cried from hunger and pain, 
                                      but we came to realize that we were left 
                                      to carry the full responsibility of our 
                                      family, to feed our children, apart from 
                                      the great burden of suffering, which we 
                                      carry around in our hearts." A woman named 
                                      Teresa, from the Federation of Popular 
                                      Neighborhoods in Guadalajara, said, 
                                      "For the woman, the house is hers, and things 
                                      such as no light and no water are part of 
                                      the home. So it is her fight."
                                      
                                      In this movement, women assert their moral 
                                      authority as mothers and raise their voices 
                                      for the the political systems they want 
                                      and against oppression. Their reproductive 
                                      and nurturing roles were transformed from 
                                      the private to the public, the biological 
                                      to the political. Said a widow in Guatemala: 
                                      "The first thing we had to conquer was our 
                                      own fear."
                                      
                                      These groups challenged totalitarian regimes 
                                      and the use of state-initiated violence 
                                      to suppress the political freedoms of expression 
                                      and association. These movements became 
                                      the precursors of current movements to challenge 
                                      undemocratic practices of governments and 
                                      to defend and protect human rights.
                                      
                                      Moreover, when they confronted repressive 
                                      governments, seeking to defend individual 
                                      children and relatives, they were subjected 
                                      to harassment, persecution and violence. 
                                      Many became victimized by private and public 
                                      security forces--suffering torture and rape. 
                                      Ultimately, seeking justice for their family 
                                      members, the mothers and women relatives 
                                      of the disappeared confronted their situation 
                                      as women--political rape created an understanding 
                                      of gender abuse and gender inequality in 
                                      power relations.
                                      
                                      In the end, the movement of Mothers of the 
                                      Disappeared opened an alternative space 
                                      for political participation that mobilized 
                                      people in forms other than those established 
                                      by traditional political systems. The issue 
                                      is no longer whether the movement is feminist 
                                      or not feminist, but that it changed the 
                                      lives of women and the way in which gender 
                                      is perceived in traditional politics, leading 
                                      to a questioning of power relations as they 
                                      move from the individual, personal, and 
                                      familial to the broader society.
                                      
                                      Historically then, it becomes clear that 
                                      for many Latin American women, the struggle 
                                      to assert their rights and dignity as women 
                                      is an integral part of the liberation movement 
                                      of all peoples. We cannot liberate people 
                                      without liberating women, and we cannot 
                                      liberate women until we liberate all people. 
                                      
                                       
                                     
                                       
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