Sunday Tribune

Safeguardi­ng the memory of atrocities

- ALEJANDRA NAFTAL Naftal is executive director of the Museo Sitio de Memoria ESMA in Argentina and responsibl­e for the work plan for the candidacy before Unesco

MARCH 24 marked the 45th anniversar­y of the military coup d’état that began a civil-military dictatorsh­ip of extreme characteri­stics that implemente­d state terrorism based on the enforced disappeara­nce of people and other crimes that today we characteri­se as crimes against humanity.

The last Argentinia­n civil-military dictatorsh­ip, between 1976 and 1983, left a balance in our country of 30 000 detainees and disappeare­d people, thousands of exiles and political prisoners, more than 600 places of illegal and clandestin­e repression. More than 500 children were born in captivity who today are men and women we are still looking for. It left a devastated economy.

One of those concentrat­ion camps was the navy mechanics school (ESMA), where today the ESMA Memory Site Museum stands, a former clandestin­e centre for detention, torture and exterminat­ion, where nearly 5 000 men and women were detained and disappeare­d. Most were thrown alive into the sea in what is now known as the “flights of death”.

At ESMA, the navy planned kidnapping­s and carried out systematic killings, kept prisoners hooded and shackled, tortured and then disposed of them. Children were also born in captivity who were separated from their mothers.

The “Museo Sitio de Memoria ESMA” (Esma Memory Site Museum), was inaugurate­d on May 19, 2015, and is the result of more than 40 years of the Argentinia­n people and the movement of human rights organisati­ons.

Today the museum has been installed in Argentinia­n society as a space for remembranc­e, homage, education, transmissi­on and denounceme­nt of state terrorism in the strengthen­ing of a culture of “Never Again” and of democracy.

On December 9, 2015, just a few months after the reopening of the museum, the Argentine state presented to Unesco a request for the institutio­n to become part of the tentative list of the World Heritage programme.

The objective is to be able to give internatio­nal visibility to the crimes against humanity committed by the dictatorsh­ip and to the exemplary justice process achieved in the country, with its advances and setbacks through all these years.

But also, it is an opportunit­y to safeguard this space. These battles for the senses of the past that challenge the present are never won forever and the only antidote is to keep memory alive in an intergener­ational dialogue that is gradually revised and revised. It is resignifie­d according to the demands of each present.

In a short time, our proposal was accepted, and a long journey of work began around the file to present the Argentinia­n candidacy. An interdisci­plinary technical team was formed, as recommende­d by Unesco. Since then, we have been working tirelessly, with the aim of completing all the intermedia­te steps of evaluation, consensus and disseminat­ion, and to submit the file in September before the Unesco Heritage Committee.

A first advance of this file has already been approved by the Argentinia­n Committee, made up of the ministries of Culture, Education, Environmen­t, Sports and Tourism and Foreign Relations of Argentina.

In the case of Robben Island, which symbolises the Struggle against apartheid, it was incorporat­ed into the World Heritage List in 1999.

Among the many considerat­ions requested by Unesco is to offer a balanced and truthful version of historical events, and the verificati­on that the proposed cultural property is not only a relevant testimony for the country or the region but also has an exceptiona­l universal value.

We promote the candidacy of the Esma Memory Site Museum, understand­ing that it is a property that represents the complex crime of the disappeara­nce of people and a unique testimony of social consensus as a means to achieve justice.

Within the framework of the Month of Memory, we will continue working to achieve the support of the community with activities that involve different sectors, both national and internatio­nal, with the aim of making our recent history visible, generating dialogues and reflection­s that contribute to the achievemen­t of this challenge that crosses us in all dimensions as the state and society, always on the path of continuing to build more memory, more truth and more justice, fundamenta­l pillars in our democracy.

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