Ugly History: The El Mozote murders - Diana Sierra Becerra
 In 1984, a group of radio broadcasters
 and operators
  walked into the abandoned village 
 of El Mozote in El Salvador.
  Fireflies illuminated the remnants 
 of a massacre
  that had taken place three years earlier.
  Led by Colonel Domingo Monterrosa,
  government soldiers had tortured,
 raped, and murdered 978 people,
  including 553 children.
  The youngest victim, Concepción Sánchez,
 was just three days old.
  Both the US and Salvadoran governments 
 denied the massacre had taken place,
  and the slaughter left few people
 alive to tell their story.
  But with the help of Radio Venceremos,
 one of those survivors, Rufina Amaya,
  shared her testimony—
  exposing both Monterrosa 
 and the governments funding his crimes.
  This massacre was one in a long line
 of atrocities
  committed against El Salvador’s farmers.
  Since the 1800s, a handful of oligarchs
  had controlled nearly all 
 the country’s land,
  forcing laborers to work
 for almost nothing.
  In 1932, Indigenous farm workers
 led an insurrection,
  but the dictatorial government responded
 by committing genocide
  against these communities.
  From then on, one military dictatorship
 after another ruled the country
  in concert with wealthy landowners.
  Their power only grew in the 1960s,
  when the United States began supplying
 the regime with military aid.
  The US wanted to stop the spread 
 of reformist and revolutionary movements,
  which they saw as threats to capitalism.
  So they spent huge sums of money training
 Salvadoran soldiers and “death squads”—
  fascist military units versed 
 in brutal counter-insurgency methods.
  Throughout the 1970s, 
 these forces slaughtered farmers
  who organized to demand basic rights,
  such as living wages, food, 
 and clean water.
  Finally, in 1980, farmers
 and urban workers formed
  the Farabundo Martí 
 National Liberation Front.
  This coalition of guerrilla groups fought
 to overthrow the dictatorship
  and build a socialist society that met
 the needs of laborers.
  These revolutionaries were attacked
 from every direction.
  Colonel Monterrosa led a special battalion
 intent on destroying the FMLN,
  using tactics he’d learned
 at an American military school.
  State forces terrorized farmers 
 to stop them
  from joining or aiding the guerrillas.
  But one group of rebels 
 would not be silenced:
  the operators of Radio Venceremos.
  This clandestine guerrilla radio began
 in 1981,
  and its broadcasters Santiago and Mariposa
 became the voice of the revolution.
  They transmitted news
 from the front lines
  and reported military abuses 
 that no other source covered.
  The station’s politics and popularity
 made it a high-profile target.
  And because they operated 
 in a relatively small area,
  its broadcasters had to move constantly
 to evade capture.
  To communicate undetected, the group 
 modified two radios into telephones,
  linked together through kilometers 
 of barbed wire covering the countryside.
  This secret telephone line helped 
 the rebels
  stay one step ahead of their pursuers.
  In addition to reporting news,
  the radio broadcast educational programs
 in areas under guerrilla control.
  Here, farmers organized democratic
 councils to govern themselves,
  alongside cooperatives, schools,
 and medical clinics.
  Organizers also encouraged civilian women
 to participate in these councils
  to ensure the revolution overthrew 
 both capitalism and patriarchy.
  Women made up roughly 
 a third of the guerrillas,
  working in a huge variety of roles.
  Colonel Monterrosa was obsessed 
 with destroying Radio Venceremos.
  In October 1984,
  government soldiers finally captured
 their radio transmitter.
  Monterrosa himself went to retrieve
 the equipment
  and held a theatrical press conference 
 celebrating
  his “decisive blow to the subversives.”
  But in reality, the radio team had
 outsmarted him once again.
  The transmitter was boobytrapped.
  Once Monterrosa’s helicopter
 left the press conference,
  radio members detonated 
 the device over El Mozote,
  killing the colonel near the village
 he had massacred.
  Monterrosa’s death was one victory 
 in a much larger conflict.
  The civil war raged on for 8 more years
 before concluding in 1992,
  when peace accords dissolved 
 the oppressive National Guard
  and allowed the FMLN to become 
 an electoral party.
  But these accords didn’t address 
 problems of deep, structural inequality.
  In 1993, the UN Truth Commission
  reported that over 75,000 people
 died during the war.
  Yet the Salvadoran legislature prevented
 the prosecution of war crimes
  and continues to obstruct justice 
 to this day.
  As of 2021, no participating 
 American officials have been put on trial,
  and only one individual 
 from the Salvadoran government
  has been sentenced for war crimes.
  Historical erasure exists 
 in the US as well,
  where these and other stories 
 of US intervention in Central America
  are rarely taught in public schools.
  But the victims refuse to be forgotten.
  Rufina Amaya continued to share 
 her testimony until her death in 2007.
  And survivors of other massacres still
 organize to denounce state violence.
  They map old massacre sites,
 exhume and bury loved ones,
  and build sanctuaries and museums,
  all in the hope of pollinating 
 a more just future.