A new generation within Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo prepares to continue the search that became a global icon of the fight for human rights
50th Anniversary 1976 Coup
The Abuelas created a movement. Their grandchildren are ready to carry the torch
The 1976 coup wasn’t unprecedented. The brutality that followed made it a turning point
Although dictatorships were common in Argentina, the last military junta’s vicious violence was unlike anything the country had seen before
Fifty years after the 1976 coup, continuing to ask questions that remain unanswered to this day is at the heart of our efforts
An announcement on the radio, streets full of soldiers and deep uncertainty of what would come next. This is how the coup unfolded 50 years ago
‘Memoria, Verdad y Justicia’ began as a demand to power. It slowly became a tradition, a narrative through which democracy tells the story of its own origins
Five numbers that show how the dictatorship affects Argentina to this day
Fifty years on, the toll is not only felt in the ongoing search for victims’ remains and stolen children, but also in the ruthless economic consequences
Escape from a dictatorship death camp: the story of Jaime Dri
Captured in Uruguay and later brought to Argentina, Dri managed to outwit his captors and become the only person to successfully flee ESMA and survive
The Operation Condor files: the poet who led a global search for his granddaughter
Macarena Gelman was 23 when she discovered the truth of how the Argentine dictatorship had devastated her family
The massive thefts committed by dictatorship officers are crimes the Argentine judiciary has only recently begun to investigate in full
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