The Reporter (Vacaville)

Immigrants reel from pro-Trump Capitol riot

Residents who’ve seen totalitari­anism first-hand say democracy shouldn’t be taken for granted

- By Leonardo Castaneda and Fiona Kelliher lcastaneda@bayareanew­sgroup.com and fkelliher@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Ida Martinac was a teenager in Croatia dec a des ago when she watched with horror as Albanian lawmakers were dragged by the neck out of legislativ­e chambers.

Her family had just finished seeing the movie “The Exorcist” when the news came on.

“I swear, the news was just so terrif ying that ‘ The Exorcist’ just paled — it evaporated,” Martinac said.

T hat memor y c ame f looding back to the 51-year- old now living in San Francisco, first when she learned that Republican lawmakers in Pennsylvan­ia had removed their Democratic lieutenant governor from presiding over a session. Then again a few days later as the shocking scenes of the insurrecti­on at the Capitol unfolded.

For many Bay Area residents who moved to the U. S. from countries that have suffered under dictatoria­l and totalitari­an regimes, the violence that shook the country on Wednesday sparked painful reminders of life without democracy.

“W hen I read about Pennsylvan­ia, it drew an immediate parallel,” she said. “And then the storming of the Capitol — I still haven’t quite wrapped my head around what happened.”

On Wednesday, a mob incited by President Donald Trump breached the Capitol, attempting to overturn the democratic election of President- elect Joe Biden so Trump could remain in power. The mob was eventually dispersed and Biden’s election was ratified despite continued protests from some Republican lawmakers.

The violent melee left five dead, including one Capitol police officer killed by a pro-Trump mob, and millions of Americans grappling with the fallout of an assault at the seat of Congress. But while the scene was saddening for many Bay Area immigrants, it was not surprising.

“What’s left of our democracy is this very precious gem,” said Martinac, who fled from Zagreb in modern- day Croatia in 1990 before the Yugoslav Wars broke out the following year. She said that losing democracy at the hands of a mob could also mean losing the right to free speech.

“As somebody who could literally go to the gulag for saying the wrong thing, I really feel that the right to speech is a hill worth dying on. Without it — I feel like nothing much really matters anymore,” she said.

Paula Tejeda, who came to the U. S. from Chile as a teenager, said no one thinks an overthrow of government will happen in their country — until it does. In Chile, Gen. Augusto Pinochet ruled as a dictator for 17-years after a U. S.-backed coup overthrew the democratic­ally elected President Salvador Allende.

“People in Chile said, ‘ We’re never going to have a dictatorsh­ip,’” Tejeda said. “Even the people who supported the coup

thought it would only last one year.”

She wasn’t surprised at all when she saw what was happening in the U.S. Capitol. Trump, she said, had pointed at very real frustratio­n with economic inequality in a rapidly changing world, and used it to blame immigrants, people of color and Democratic lawmakers as a way to maintain his own power.

“What we saw Wednesday, I saw as something that had been building from the moment Trump was elected,” she said.

For Abbas Milani, director of the Iranian studies program at Stanford University, it was a clear reminder that no democracy is ever completely safe. The attack on Wednesday was unlikely to succeed, he said, calling rioters “a gang of hooligans.” But, under slightly different circumstan­ces, things could have gone differentl­y.

“That’s the lesson,” he said. “American democracy is more resilient than its facile foes have assumed but it’s more fragile than the defenders think.”

Iran itself was rocked by a sudden revolution in 1979 when the shah was overthrown in a popular revolt. The country is now a theologica­l republic with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as supreme ruler.

 ?? KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Paula Tejeda, who left Chile for the U.S. as a teenager when a U.S.-backed coup overthrew the democratic­ally elected President Salvador Allende, reflects on the recent political turmoil from her empanada restaurant in San Francisco.
KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Paula Tejeda, who left Chile for the U.S. as a teenager when a U.S.-backed coup overthrew the democratic­ally elected President Salvador Allende, reflects on the recent political turmoil from her empanada restaurant in San Francisco.

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