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Maria Julia Hernandez, 68;
rights activist
The Salvadoran worked to expose abuses committed during her country's
civil war
By Sam Enriquez and Alex Renderos
April 1, 2007 - (the times) Maria Julia Hernandez,
a celebrated human rights activist who spoke up for victims during
El Salvador's protracted civil war and tended to their families
in the years that followed, died Friday of a heart attack. She was
68.
As director of Tutela Legal, a human rights group sponsored by the
Roman Catholic Church, Hernandez had traveled the Central American
country gathering evidence and interviewing survivors of alleged
massacres during the bloody conflict that ended with a United Nations-brokered
peace accord in 1992.
"Our deep challenge and pledge, our reason
for being, are the victims, who were mostly the poor of El Salvador,"
she said of her work during a 2004 speech.
Seeking to expose abuses by so-called death squads was dangerous
work. Thousands of people were threatened or killed by soldiers,
police and right-wing paramilitary groups battling leftist guerrillas.
Critics of government security forces were quickly labeled rebel
sympathizers.
Before embarking on an investigation, Hernandez always said this
prayer, colleague David Morales recalled: "Well, God, I'll
either see you today or you'll give me more time to keep fighting.,"
Hernandez and her co-workers roamed El Salvador, photographing the
dead and keeping a tally that far exceeded government estimates.
U.S. Embassy officials in San Salvador in the mid-1980s criticized
her efforts to bring international attention to the conflict, suggesting
quietly that she might be sympathetic to guerrillas.
"Maybe it's better I don't have a family," Hernandez,
who was single and had no children, told The Times in 1984. During
the war, people would come to her offices and thumb through books
of photographs to find missing relatives and friends.
Hernandez began her work 25 years ago at Tutela Legal (Legal Guardians),
an office created by Archbishop Oscar Romero. Romero, who was among
a group of priests targeted by Salvadoran officials for their outspoken
support of the poor and criticism of military abuses, was shot to
death in 1980 as he celebrated Mass.
That year also marked a surge in U.S. military aid to the Salvadoran
government, prompted by fears in the Reagan administration of a
communist takeover in the region.
Hernandez and others had long argued that those armaments were used
by government-sponsored death squads that roamed the country killing
civilians suspected of aiding the guerrillas.
Tens of thousands of people died during the civil war, many buried
in unmarked graves with no explanation or notice issued to surviving
family members. Hundreds of thousands of others went into exile,
including to California.
Hernandez, a lawyer, had said that she believed her mission was
to help families learn the fate of missing loved ones and to bring
their killers to justice. She was convinced that a majority of the
killings during the civil war were done by government forces, a
finding dismissed by officials who considered her office partisan
and left-wing.
After the peace accords were signed in Mexico City in 1992, she
tried to pursue legal action in the December 1981 killings of civilians
by soldiers at El Mozote and three other villages northeast of San
Salvador. Salvadoran and U.S. officials said that the deaths came
in a three-day battle with armed guerrilla forces, despite contradictory
reports from the villages.
Forensic anthropologists later concurred that hundreds of unarmed
civilians, including women and children, had been killed; many were
tortured first. Salvadoran defense officials have said it would
be impossible to identify the responsible soldiers.
Hernandez's death Friday coincided with the burial of Romero exactly
27 years earlier, said Silvia Guillen of the Fundacion para el Estudio
para la Aplicacion del Derecho, a human rights foundation.
"Her death is a huge loss for those of us who work in human
rights," she said, "and it leaves us with the continuing
responsibility."
From : http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-hernandez1apr01,1,5551428.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california&ctrack=1&cset=true
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