Dominga and Denese, and the story of the village of Rio Negro
Press release
May 2000
[For related article click here]
After 18 years, Denese Becker -- from Algona, Iowa -- is going
home . . . to Rio Negro, a small, isolated Mayan village in the
department of Baja Verapaz, Guatemala.
When she was a 9-year old girl, Denese -- then named Dominga Sic
Ruiz -- was "lucky" to survive the "Rio Negro massacre". On March
13, 1982 the Guatemalan Army and neighboring civil defense patrollers
brutally massacred 177 women, elderly and children, including her
parents and other members of her extended family.
After the massacre, Dominga and other Rio Negro survivors lived
and barely survived in the mountains, on the run from the Army.
The elderly and young died first, of hunger and disease. Dominga
was whisked from the mountains to safety one night. After spending
a year in an orphanage, Dominga was adopted into the home of a family
in the US.
Since that time, she has lived her life in the US, far removed
from, but never forgetting her home village, her community and family.
When she recently heard about the process of exhuming mass graves
in Guatemala, to dig up the victims of the 1980s massacres, so as
to determine cause of death and give proper re-burials to the victims,
she began to reach out, to try and reconnect with her community
family. She didn't know where to start.
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Now, in May 2000, Denese is going to Guatemala to revisit her past,
to get to know her life. First, she will visit the orphanage that
cared for her. Then she will travel to the municipality of Rabinal,
in the department of Baja Verapaz, where, for the first time in
18 years, she will visit with her surviving family members who live
in the small community of Pacux, on the edge of the town of Rabinal.
After reconnecting with her family, she will then return to Rio
Negro, still an isolated village inaccessible by road, in the Baja
Versapaz mountains, in the shadow of the Chixoy dam (funded by the
World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, 1975-1985) that
caused so much grief for her home community.
For interviews and information
If you would like to know more about Denese' story, why she is returning
to Guatemala and Rio Negro now, what she hopes to find, what are her
hopes and concerns, contact: Denese Becker, t: 515-295-2392. E: becker4@rconnect.com.
If you would like more information about how the repression of
the US-backed Guatemalan military regime intersected and overlapped
with the construction of the World Bank and Inter-American Development
Bank fund "Chixoy Dam", resulting in the Rio Negro massacres, contact:
Rights Action.
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