Foreword
-Richard Ashby Wilson
Introduction: The Ethnography of Exhumations
-Francisco FerrÁndiz and Antonius C. G. M. Robben
PART I. EXHUMATIONS AS PRACTICE
Chapter 1. Forensic Anthropology and the Investigation of Political
Violence: Lessons Learned from Latin America and the Balkans
-Luis Fondebrider
Chapter 2. Exhumations, Territoriality, and Necropolitics in Chile
and Argentina
-Antonius C. G. M. Robben
Chapter 3. Korean War Mass Graves
-Heonik Kwon
Chapter 4. Mass Graves, Landscapes of Terror: A Spanish Tale
-Francisco FerrÁndiz
Chapter 5. The Quandaries of Partial and Commingled Remains:
Srebrenica's Missing and Korean War Casualties Compared
-Sarah Wagner
Photo Essay
9/11: Absence, Sediment, and Memory
-Francesc Torres
PART II. EXHUMATIONS AS MEMORY
Chapter 6. Buried Silences of the Greek Civil War
-Katerina Stefatos and Iosif Kovras
Chapter 7. Death in Transition: The Truth Commission and the
Politics of Reburial in Postconflict Peru
-Isaias Rojas-Perez
Chapter 8. Death on Display: Bones and Bodies in Cambodia and
Rwanda
-Elena Lesley
Epilogue
-ZoË Crossland
List of Contributors
Index
* * * * *
Foreword
Richard Ashby Wilson
In May 1988, I drank coffee in the sweltering heat with Father JosÉ
Parra Novo, a Spanish priest nicknamed "Papito," in the imposing
Catholic church compound in CahabÓn, a regional town center in the
department of Alta Verapaz in highland Guatemala. I fumbled to
explain my fieldwork research, which sought to understand how
villagers reconstructed their lives and communities after three
decades of armed conflict. "Ah," Papito said immediately, "Then you
must go to Pinares." Why, what happened there?" I asked. He
replied, "You'll find out soon enough." Arriving in Pinares, I
encountered a small, sleepy rural Maya-Q'eqchi' village surrounded
by cacao plantations. At first, I found nothing out of the
ordinary. Farmers tended their small plots of corn, beans, and
cacao, women washed clothes in the river, youth played football on
a meticulously groomed field, and the whole community attended the
small village chapel perched on a hillside.
Only after three days did my hosts begin to open up, and recount
how, in August 1982, the Guatemalan army arrived from the military
base in CobÁn. With local men from the "Civil Patrol" leading them
house to house, the soldiers rounded up twenty-one male villagers
who were accused of being communist agitators for agrarian reform.
The soldiers marched the men to the edge of the village, shot them,
and threw their corpses into a pit in the ground. This was no
"clandestine grave." Everyone in the village knew exactly where it
was located-even the children motioned in the direction of the pit
when asked where the men were mukmu, Q'eqchi' for "buried," or
"hidden." The bodies lay where they had been tossed, untouched and
unrecovered. Their relatives were too terrorized to exhume them,
and life went on in the village, as abnormal.
Eight years later, in 1996, I traveled again to CahabÓn with staff
from (REMHI) (Recuperation of Historical Memory Project), the
Catholic Church's truth commission project. Families streamed into
the town from the surrounding villages to tell their stories to the
REMHI statement takers. The mere presence of Q'eqchi'-speaking
REMHI personnel opened a space for highland indigenous peoples to
testify about the past. Once public secrets were articulated
outside the community, families in Pinares rapidly turned to
pursuing avenues of legal remedy. The massacre was, for the first
time, formally denounced at the Congressional Human Rights Office
and the Office of the Public Prosecutor. Villagers contacted the
United Nations Mission in Guatemala (MINUGUA), which helicoptered a
forensic team to the village in May 1996 to begin exhumations.
Under constant threat from armed local perpetrators, the forensic
team worked day and night for eight days. They removed the bodily
remains to the capital for further investigation, before returning
them for a proper burial in the community. This story was repeated
across the country, as seventeen mass graves were exhumed in 1996
by forensic anthropologists working in conjunction with the UN
Mission, and many dozens more followed in subsequent years. Once
they got under way, the forensic teams worked relatively rapidly,
but criminal accountability for the perpetrators took longer, and
it is a painful truism that the wheels of justice, especially in
Guatemala, turn agonizingly slowly. Twenty-five years after my
first trip to Pinares, evidence from exhumations across the
Guatemalan highlands became central to the prosecution case in the
criminal trial of military dictator EfraÍn RÍos Montt, whose
military junta brought unprecedented violence and terror to rural
Guatemala in 1982-1983.
As this excellent and timely volume shows in detailed case studies
from around the world, regimes that massacre a civilian population
as part of a widespread and systematic policy of terror create
social disorder and disruption. Their methods generate physical and
social entropy, with regard to both the bodies of victims and the
body politic. As several contributors observe, exhumations and DNA
testing reassemble bodies and reattach names, and thereby are part
of a wider collective process of memorializing the dead, reordering
the social world, and reclaiming territory from military
occupation. Exhumations are a social process that reconfigures
time, space, and identity, and they can be understood historically
and subjectively, with attention to the symbolism and meaning of
the constituent acts. At the same time, the social dimensions of
exhumations encounter other forms of knowledge and authority,
including forensic science and the law, each with its own methods
of creating and evaluating evidence. Both law and science, despite
their universalizing ambitions, necessarily construct a partial
account of the past. The approaches in each of the fields
represented and analyzed in this book-photographic art,
ethnography, history, forensic anthropology, and criminal law-are
motivated by distinct principles and based on divergent
epistemologies. Understanding how they interact and inform and
influence one another, and ultimately shape our comprehension of
"who did what to whom" and what it has meant, is a formidable
challenge. This volume rises to that challenge and opens up new
avenues of global comparison, investigation and comprehension.
As if the task of understanding the past were not daunting in
itself, the chapters in this collection provide fascinating
accounts of the political and legal struggles surrounding
exhumations, and these often include popular mobilizations that are
both intensely local and globally connected. I know of no other
volume that addresses the topic of exhumations as profoundly, and
in as many disparate cases in Latin America, Africa, Europe, and
Asia. From the chapters herein we learn how exhumations and the
reconstructing of past violations are embedded in political
movements that ignite political agency and express a newfound sense
of citizenship and sovereignty. In recognizing this, we need not
lose sight of the fact that the social processes of remembering are
often acts of faith and solidarity with the dead, and ways of
articulating a sense of dignity and worth among the living. And the
anthropological voice and perspective comes through clearly; the
empirical documentation and ethnographic analysis presented here
should provide activists, scholars, and policymakers alike with new
insights into the symbolism and granular-level politics of
exhumations. I recommend this book to all those hoping to
understand postconflict societies and what happens once they
finally address unfinished business, and unearth the grim realities
handed down to them from violent historical episodes.
This remarkable book demonstrates through in-depth case studies from ten countries around the world how the forensic exhumation of mass graves is inextricably intertwined with grassroots initiatives, national political developments, international human rights advocacy, and transnational claims of transitional justice.
Francisco Ferrandiz is Associate Researcher at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and author of many books, including El pasado bajo tierra: Exhumaciones contemporaneas de la Guerra Civil. Antonius C. G. M. Robben is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Utrecht. He is author of Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina and editor of Iraq at a Distance: What Anthropologists Can Teach Us About the War, both available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.
"This excellent and timely volume . . . opens up new avenues of global comparison and investigation. As if the task of understanding the past were not daunting in itself, the chapters in this collection provide fascinating accounts of the political and legal struggles surrounding exhumations, and these often include popular mobilizations that are both intensely local and globally connected. I know of no other volume that addresses the topic of exhumations as profoundly, and in as many disparate cases in Latin America, Africa, Europe, and Asia." (From the Foreword by Richard Ashby Wilson)
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