Sunday Tribune

Strident voice for ‘dirty war’ victims dies aged 93

BRIAN MURPHY The article was first published in The Washington Post.

THERE were moments when Hebe de Bonafini inspired the world: defying Argentina’s military junta to lead a mothers’ campaign seeking justice for thousands of people “disappeared” by the dictatorship – including her two sons and daughter-in-law.

There also were times of disunity and scorn. Her strident views divided the famed Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo movement, and her caustic tongue could leave her isolated because of comments seen as antisemitic and justifying the September 11, 2001, attacks as payback for America’s bullying.

Her contrasting legacies – unwavering and alienating – became a fixture of Argentine politics for more than four decades as the country grappled with the horrors of the right-wing junta’s rule from 1976 to 1983 and rebuilt a democracy haunted by the past.

De Bonafini, once a homespun mom with a grammar-school education, moved through that arc as a voice of conscience over the regime’s “dirty war”, yet also as caretaker of her own combative political brand that allowed for almost no middle ground.

“It’s true that I am very radical,” said De Bonafini, who died November 20 at a hospital in La Plata, Argentina, at 93. “The mothers always ask for the maximum, and what is the maximum that we ask for: to have justice, to maintain principles and to live with ethics.”

The group was first galvanised by rage and sorrow. De Bonafini and 13 fellow mothers – all with missing children or relatives – gathered in 1977 outside the main government palace in Buenos Aires. It was a courageous challenge to the dictatorship and its violent crackdowns against anyone it perceived as a threat, including journalists, authors, professors, leftist students and political opponents.

The mothers returned each Thursday. And more joined each week, walking around a clock tower and holding images of their missing loved ones. A white headscarf, emblazed with the names of the disappeared, became the movement’s hallmark. De Bonafini was rarely seen without a scarf with wisps of hair – chestnut, then grey – peeking out as the years passed.

When police seized one of the original protest leaders, Azucena Villaflor, in December 1977, De Bonafini assembled the group in the plaza and quickly steered the tone of the marches in a more aggressive direction. De Bonafini later brought in megaphones and loudspeakers, shouting insults against the junta and crying out the names of those missing. (Villaflor was taken to a prison camp, and her remains were found by forensic teams in 2005.)

An estimated 30 000 people were “disappeared” and presumed killed by the military regime. The Argentine mothers inspired similar movements over the decades, including women-led peace rallies during the Balkan wars and Russian mothers opposing the war in Ukraine.

“We are not fighting over whether our children are alive or dead,” De Bonafini said in 1986. “We have a much more wide-ranging fight. We are looking for justice, and all that might mean: that people not forget.”

In February 1977, security forces took away De Bonafini’s eldest son, Jorge, who was part of a leftist guerrilla faction. In December 1977, her other son, Raúl, was hauled away. Six months later, Jorge’s wife, María Elena Bugnone Cepeda, was arrested. None were seen by their families again.

“Before my son was kidnapped, I was just another woman, another housewife,” she said in 2017. – a principled position, she argued,

Even after the collapse of the junta, given US backing for Argentina’s De Bonafini kept up her confrontational dictatorship and other right-wing style with its democratically regimes in Latin America – and elected successors to demand answers embraced some of Washington’s main and mete out punishment. All the foes, such as Cuba’s Fidel Castro, Hugo while, she said, threats against her Chávez in Venezuela and FARC (the never stopped. Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia)

In biographer Alejandro Diago’s guerrillas in Colombia’s civil war. 1988 book, Hebe Bonafini, Memoria y After the 9/11 attacks, De Bonafini said Esperanza she described herself as a she felt “happiness”.

“mother lion” always on the hunt. “The blood of so many in that

That zeal, however, brought rifts moment were avenged,” she said, and recriminations. The mothers’ pointing to Nato bombings, US movement split in 1986 along the embargoes and military alliances with with-me-or-against-me lines drawn by authoritarian governments. “That was De Bonafini. Some joined her. Others due to this power that those men broke away into a separate faction, attacked, with their own bodies,” complaining that her political leanings she added. “And everyone knew it.” had become too extreme and her temperament (Others, too, around the world too unpredictable. draw links between the attacks and US

She adopted staunch anti-us views foreign policy.)

Argentine journalist Horacio Verbitsky called her out for the remarks.

She shot back by noting his Jewish faith and calling him a “servant of the United States”, bringing accusations of an anti-semitic smear.

In 2005, she also denounced Pope John Paul II, saying he would “go to hell” for his credited role in helping nudge the collapse of communism. She later sought support for her antipoverty efforts from Pope Francis, who was born in Argentina and became the first Latin American pontiff.

Yet a plan led by De Bonafini to build apartments for residents of Buenos Aires slums unravelled in 2011 in a scandal that deeply tarnished her image as a social crusader.

De Bonafini’s political ally, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, then the Argentine president, set aside $45 million for Sueños Compartidos (“Shared Dreams”), a charity group founded by De Bonafini's group, Foundation Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. De Bonafini’s pick of builders raised eyebrows: a company called Meldorek, linked to a friend and adviser, Sergio Schoklender, who had been jailed along with his brother Pablo for torturing and killing their parents in 1981. De Bonafini had befriended Sergio Schoklender in prison over shared human rights issues before his release in 1995.

Allegations were raised of alleged overcharging by Meldorek and failure to make pension payments for workers.

Schoklender, meanwhile, travelled on a private plane and allegedly used company money to buy a Ferrari and yachts – although he claimed he did not own the firm. He was charged with fraud and fiscal mismanagement. A judge in 2017 expanded the indictments to De Bonafini. She claimed the allegations were mounted by political enemies. The case is still open.

Argentine leaders, however, were effusive with tributes after her death. “We lost a tireless fighter,” said a statement from President Alberto Fernández. “She faced the genocidal when collective common sense went in another direction,” he added.

Hebe María Pastor was born in Ensenada, south-east of Buenos Aires, on December 4, 1928, and left school after primary grades to help her family. In 1942, she married Humberto Alfredo Bonafini and they had three children together. (Her husband died in 1982.)

After democracy was restored in 1983, De Bonafini decried the limited scope of the trials of former junta officials. Then in 1986, an amnesty was passed that covered many security officers in attempts to avoid post-junta upheavals in the military and police. Her protests branched out.

In 1996, De Bonafini was beaten by police during a student-led protest over the introduction of university entrance exams. “Never before has blood spilled on to a scarf of the mothers,” De Bonafini told the New York Times. “If they could have, I believe they would have killed me.”

Her polarising effect was evident in the aftermath. A caller on a morning radio show grumbled that De Bonafini “is always sticking her militant nose where it does not belong.”

Five years later, De Bonafini said she had received anonymous threats that attackers would hit her “where it hurts the most.” In May 2001, two men posing as phone company workers entered her home and severely beat her daughter, María Alejandra Bonafini, and burned the woman’s arms with a cigarette.

De Bonafini’s death was announced by her daughter, her only survivor, and statements from Argentina’s political leaders. No cause was given.

The election of leftist President Néstor Kirchner in 2003 brought a new political alliance with De Bonafini. Kirchner lifted the amnesty and resumed prosecutions for alleged “dirty war” crimes. De Bonafini stood by the family, including Kirchner’s widow Cristina and political successor, amid allegations of corruption. (Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is the current vice president.)

“We are their voice, or try to be their voice,” De Bonafini said of the disappeared. The band U2 paid homage to the protests in its 1987 song Mothers of the Disappeared. When U2 visited Argentina in 1998, singer Bono met De Bonafini. She gave him a white headscarf.

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2022-11-27T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-11-27T08:00:00.0000000Z

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