Author : Bill Hutchinson
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 264 pages
Book Rating : 4.3/5 (91 download)
Book Synopsis When the Dogs Ate Candles by : Bill Hutchinson
Download or read book When the Dogs Ate Candles written by Bill Hutchinson and published by . This book was released on 1998 with total page 264 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: When the Dogs Ate Candles follows one U.S. citizen as he journeys into the terrible reality of El Salvador in the 1980s, a reality that made the term "death squad" common in the English-speaking world. Galvanized by what he learned in a chance encounter in 1986, the author, Bill Hutchinson, undertook a novel strategy to protect human rights workers in El Salvador. Called "the Accompaniment Project", the plan brought U.S. volunteers to El Salvador to remain by the side of Salvadorans involved in human rights work. Hutchinson's gamble was that murderers, fearing an outcry in the U.S., would hesitate to kill anyone accompanied by a U.S. citizen.This is also the story of Salvadorans who stood up to a barbaric regime: the savage torture of Mirtala Lopez, a teenaged leader of a refugee organization who survived to continue her work among the displaced; the brilliant human rights work of Herbert Anaya, leader of the Non-Governmental Human Rights Commission of El Salvador, who was assassinated in 1987; and the astonishing testimony of an embittered army defector, Cesar Vielman Joya Martinez, who escaped to the U.S. to tell that his unit operated as a clandestine death squad unit using funds provided by U.S. supervisors. U.S. citizens are also here: Brian Willson, the Vietnam veteran who lost his legs when he sat in front of a munitions train; Rep. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) who carried photographic evidence of the war's savagery to the floor of the House.When the Dogs Ate Candles affords an intimate insight into a handful of people -- ordinary people made extraordinary by the circumstances they faced -- and unfolds a compelling narrative of a terrible episode in human history. A must-read forall those interested in the Central American solidarity movement and human rights issues in the late 20th century.