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8 - Mass Organizations

from PART TWO - JIMMY CARTER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2016

Russell Crandall
Affiliation:
Davidson College, North Carolina
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Summary

We're not talking about pragmatic Sandinistas. This is a Pol Pot Left.

El Salvador News Gazette, April 27, 1980

The largest of the three peasant-worker-student coalitions [BPR], has grown to 30,000 members in the past four years despite, or because of, frequent repression.

– Alan Riding, New York Times correspondent, 1979.

“Guerrilla Universitaria”

Travel writer Paul Theroux was visiting El Salvador in the late 1970s to deliver a lecture at the National University in San Salvador on “little known books by famous American authors.” With the literary event concluded, it occurred to him that he had “nothing more to do in San Salvador.” He then had a question for his local hosts that no one seemed to have a good answer for: why was there a mural of Marx, Engels, and Lenin in the university during the rule of a right-wing dictatorship? Theroux had visited the National University at a time when it was actually open. In 1972, the military regime forcibly closed it using tanks and artillery and kept it shuttered until 1974. In 1980, the military/civilian junta once again moved troops onto the campus, leaving dozens dead and offices and classrooms destroyed. The government did not open the university for four years.

American novelist and literary journalist Joan Didion described the state of the campus after visiting in 1982:

A few classes were being held in storefronts around San Salvador, but no one other than an occasional reporter had been allowed to enter the campus since the day the troops came in. Those reporters allowed to look had described walls still splashed with the spray-painted slogans left by the students, floors littered with tangled computer tape and with copies of what the National Guardsmen in charge characterized as subversive pamphlets, for example, a reprint of an article on inherited enzyme deficiency from The New England Journal of Medicine.

Another foreign correspondent described the government's justification for closing the university: “It claimed, with some plausibility, that it was a recruiting and training ground for rebels. Some of us sneaked onto campus soon after the closure and found some classroom blackboards still covered with diagrams for bomb-making.” The paradoxes that Theroux and Didion experienced lay at the heart of El Salvador's emerging ideological and eventually armed insurrection.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Salvador Option
The United States in El Salvador, 1977–1992
, pp. 90 - 101
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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  • Mass Organizations
  • Russell Crandall, Davidson College, North Carolina
  • Book: The Salvador Option
  • Online publication: 05 June 2016
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316471081.008
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  • Mass Organizations
  • Russell Crandall, Davidson College, North Carolina
  • Book: The Salvador Option
  • Online publication: 05 June 2016
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316471081.008
Available formats
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Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Mass Organizations
  • Russell Crandall, Davidson College, North Carolina
  • Book: The Salvador Option
  • Online publication: 05 June 2016
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316471081.008
Available formats
×