jueves, febrero 15, 2007

EN 1992 :hace quince años


María Elena Moyano Delgado
(*Barranco, 29 de noviembre de 1958 - † Villa el Salvador, 15 de febrero de 1992).
Fue una luchadora social peruana dirigente vecinal y feminista, conocida popularmente como "Madre Coraje", fue asesinada en Lima, por un comando de aniqulamiento del grupo terrorista Sendero Luminoso. En momentos en que el país se encontraba sumido en una guerra, una de las voces que se alzó contra el terror de Sendero Luminoso, por la lucha contra la pobreza, y por la defensa de los derechos humanos fue la de María Elena. Maria Elena Moyano ha quedado en el corazón de todas las mujeres y hombres como símbolo de lucha por la paz. Es una de las mujeres pilares de la lucha contra la pobreza y por la vigencia de los derechos humanos y por la construcción de la paz.

Homenaje a Maria Elena Moyano a 15 años de su desaparición
jueves, 15 de febrero , 2007 - 11:09:49
(RPP) Eugenia Delgado madre de Maria Elena Moyano y el alcalde Jaime Zea colocaron ofrendas en su tumba del cementerio de Villa Salvador ubicado en Lomo de Corvina.
En emotiva ceremonia familiares, autoridades ediles y amigos llegaron hasta el cementerio donde se recordó a la luchadora y la paz que lidero Maria Elena Moyano.
Hoy 15 de febrero se cumple 15 años de la violenta muerte de la dirigente que luchó contra la violencia terrorista en el distrito de Villa El Salvador. Maria Elena Moyano falleció victima de un atentado el 15 de febrero del año 1992 a los 33 años.
Maria Elena Moyano fue una dirigente que agrupó a las mujeres de su distrito para organizarse y promover el desarrollo del mismo. Dirigente del Programa del Vaso de Leche llegó a ser Teniente Alcalde y cuando la violencia terrorista intentó amedrentar a las dirigentes del distrito, Maria Elena Moyano salió al frente con marchas y protestas.
“Moyano lideró marchas y protestas contra la violencia terrorista y se enfrentó públicamente contra los delincuentes terroristas que el 15 de febrero de 1992 atentaron contra su vida, causándole la muerte, expresó el alcalde Jaime Zea, tras indicar que ni la venganza, ni la revancha, ni la muerte han hecho de Villa El Salvador un pueblo violento sino más bien ejemplar.

María Elena Moyano Delgado
(29 November 1960 – February 15, 1992) was a Peruvian community organizer and activist of Afro-Peruvian descent who was assassinated by the maoist Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso) insurgent movement. Although only one of many atrocities committed during the most violent period of Peru's modern history, her death resulted in a public outcry.

Early life
Moyano was born in the Barranco district of Lima. Her activism began in her teens, as a member of the Movimiento de Jóvenes Pobladores, a youth movement in Villa El Salvador, a vast shantytown (pueblo joven) on the outskirts of the capital, largely populated by migrants from the interior of the country.
In 1984, at age 24, she was elected president of the Federación Popular de Mujeres de Villa El Salvador (Fepomuves), a federation of women from Villa El Salvador. Under her leadership, it grew to encompass public kitchens, health committees, the Vaso de Leche program (which supplied children with milk), income-generating projects, and committees for basic education. In 1990, Moyano left her position in Fepomuves and shortly thereafter was elected deputy mayor of the municipality of Villa el Salvador.

Shining Path inside Lima
At this time, Shining Path was trying to consolidate its hold on the poorer neighborhoods of Lima, and the circumstances obliged local political leaders to not make a firm commitment towards the grassroots organizations but to also take a principled stand on and pronounce a clear condemnation of terrorist methods.
Shining Path was particularly suspicious of women's organizations, which it accused of reformism, of collaboration with the government, and of opportunism; in short, of betraying the revolution as envisaged by Abimael Guzmán and other the leaders of the organization.
In mid-1991, Shining Path began an open attack on popular women leaders in Lima. In September, Juana López, coordinator of the Vaso de Leche program in the Carmen de la Legua Reynoso district of Callao, was murdered after she had denounced the presence and activity of Sendero in the neighborhood. Protestors took to the streets to denounce and repudiate the methods of Sendero. Moyano was a speaker at the final gathering, strongly condemning what she considerated the terrorist activities of Sendero as threatening the very existence of the country.
Death
Shining Path, however, eventually caught up with Moyano. On February 15, 1992, during a fund-raising rally in Villa El Salvador, in the presence of her two children and other onlookers, she was machine-gunned to death and her corpse blown up with dynamite.
Thousands of people attended her funeral. Later, in a plaza in the center of Villa El Salvador, a statue honoring Moyano was erected, and her autobiography was published.
The assassination of Moyano was one of the last major atrocities carried out by Shining Path. In September 1992, Guzmán was arrested and the leadership of the organization fell shortly thereafter. Subsequently, Shining Path was largely eradicated.




We strongly believe that Maria Elena's death has not been in vain. We believe Peru to be a viable country, a place for women and men -of all ages, races, classes and conditions- to live in. This is what Maria Elena lived for. Presently in Peru, women have taken on a political role of more importance than ever before in the history of the country. They are leaders, citizens, women's rights activists, organisers and mobilisers of the grassroots efforts to survive, to overcome the crisis and to protect life and livelihoods -as well as the democratic spaces and values that have cost all Peruvians so much effort to construct.

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