Reconstruction of Historical Memory: A Methodological Approach to Uncover the Reasons of the Armed Uprising in the Montes de María, Colombia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Sociological and Historical Tour of the Black Communities in the Montes de María Subregion, Colombia
“The pain of family fragmentation, the impossibility of possessing and preserving some property, the pain and mistreatment suffered by women, the linking of men to a foreign war, the ignorance of their authorities come to the collective memory, and the impossibility of autonomy over the territory”.
1.2. The Expansion of the Insurgency towards the Montes de María
1.3. About the Héroes Montes de María Block (AUC)
2. Results
2.1. The Arrival of the Armed Conflict in the Territory
(…) these FARC people sometimes went down from the village of La Palmira…, but sometimes they also went down through the village of Buenos Aires. They went out from the villages of Macayepo to Palmira and then went to Buenos Aires and from there to the El Floral hill. Then, to the village of Mesa and Carmen de Bolívar. We did not know who they were, just armed people, Chinese and cachacos, who patrolled and patrolled from one place to another… but they did not mess with the peasant.(3.12.2020.CZM1.SO)
(…) concerning the treatment from the guerrilla before the facts of violence… It was always typical for us, even cordial. They asked for permission to go through the farm and asked for animals and milk. Sometimes, they bought them, but they acted by force? No! That is why we affirm that our relative was not kidnapped by the guerrillas but by the paramilitaries.(3.12.2020.FHJ1.SO)
(…) among other things, people found the imprint of the boots, and then they already knew that the guerrilla was in the area… Around ‘97 or ‘96, as the grandparents said, my dad too… he had a cousin who was in those groups, and he says that he saw them all the time because they never stopped patrolling the area but never mistreated the civilian population.(5.12.2020.CZN1.SO)
(…) regarding the first demonstrations or appearances of the armed paramilitary structures in the village of Berrugas, I heard that there was an armed confrontation when they arrived. They arrived in cars to Berrugas, people arrived… and we sensed that something was happening. That happened in the year 99. The threatening meetings began and started the social control and collective fear.(12.2.2021.LC.BE)
(…) I was on a farm called “El delirio” when a guerrilla group arrived. It was one of my first scares… I took care of that farm as a day laborer. The first thing that the leader said was that they were hungry and ordered to kill a turkey. I was alone on the farm with the administrator’s wife, and she arrived frightened with two tears in her eyes, but I was more frightened than she was! She told me to kill the turkey, and we made the food for them.(4.12.2020.EXG1.SO)
(…) in reality, the guerrillas only attacked the landowners and ranchers in the area … Sometimes we found them on the farms and, when not, on the ranch.(5.12.2020CZN1.SO)
(…) people could not work freely; we could not keep animals on the street because they were stolen… He entered any house without asking permission, and if he saw any little animal, a hen, or a chicken in the house, he said, “I’ll take it” and took it away. Another way of exercising violence was at the village fairs, arbitrarily charging tariffs per person and family. We had to find the money, or they would kill us.(11.2.2021.Ci.Li)
(…) one of the paramilitaries threatened the women from Rincón del Mar. Once, he severely mistreated a woman, cutting her head with a machete… she was sexually abused by a group of paramilitaries on several occasions.(10.2.2021.LC.RM)
(…) that day they moved… There were about 32 houses in the town, which were 32 families. There was no one left in the village… everyone was displaced! One part of the population arrived in San Onofre, the other in Sincelejo and Cartagena. All the people left immediately.(3.12.2020.CZM1.SO)
2.2. Before the Armed Uprising
(…) when he arrives in the village of Libertad, he begins to implement a repertoire of violence, begins to impose his norms. Given the number of his armed men, he arbitrarily imposes his social norms.(11.2.2021.Ci.Li)
(…) regarding the sexual abuse of women from Libertad, the first time we learned that he sexually abused women was from a beauty contest that he invented to choose the most beautiful girls from the villages of San Onofre. He took them to a personal camp he had, and there he raped them one by one… many denounced them, but not all of them.(5.12.2020.CZN1.SO)
(…) what finally happened to him was that the community ended up lynching and murdering him … it was going to happen to him initially. We, natives, get tired of the atrocities of these paramilitary groups.(5.12.2020.CZN1.SO)
(…) Since the week before the uprising, the Libertad community wanted to rebel. We were tired of all the abuses… so the community said that the paramilitaries were tired and defeated by the confrontations and actions of the marines.(10.2.2021.LC.RM)
(…) There was the end of oppression… it was the end of being a submissive town. We organized ourselves, we told other nearby towns that they would support us in what we wanted to do, but they were scared! We free ourselves! We liberate ourselves.(5.12.2020.CZN1.SO)
2.3. Consequences of the Armed Uprising
(…) after that, there was a space of great fear. The paramilitaries threatened to take over the town. However, we were determined to repel the attack and posted guards at the entrance to the village.(11.2.2021.LC.Li)
(…) On the sixth day after killing a paramilitary, a marine commander arrived. He arrived at Libertad with 100 men in three trucks. They found a small group of paramilitaries, between 10 and 15 people, and a confrontation occurred.(5.12.2020.CZN1.SO)
(…) There was an exchange of fire between the marines and the paramilitaries… God! They were going to massacre us. However, precisely, and thank God, they encountered the marines at that moment, and there was a confrontation. The people said they were going to destroy the town, but the marine infantry killed 12 paramilitaries in the confrontation.(5.12.2020.CZN4.SO)
2.4. Situational Elements That Made the Difference
(…) people reacted aggressively because a paramilitary assaulted a young man. I’m sure the community does not react that way, but he was wrong, which was the moment to unleash the community’s fury.(5.12.2020.CZN1.SO)
(…) They were going to catch him. He escaped, and the people chased him for several hours until they captured him at around 5 in the morning. They attacked him with sticks and stones on the bridge located at the entrance to the town. While he was still alive, they threw a big stone at him that crushed his head… there he dies.(5.12.2020.CZN6.SO)
(…) after that event, people were terrified… I remember a woman that arrived, a great leader, someone with the power to organize people. She said that after we tried, we couldn’t back down. That is not possible. She began to write a letter where we asked for support from the government and directly from the armed forces. The letter said that if something happened to the community, the responsibility lay with the State. She also organized us and gave us courage. We believe that the village would not have taken the step of rebellion without her. Without her guiding us, we would not have freed ourselves.(11.2.2021.Ci.Li)
(…) one of the paramilitaries threatened the women of Rincón del Mar. Once, he physically abused a young woman, giving her some cuts on the head. The woman, in a struggle, takes the gun from him and tries to shoot him, but not knowing how to use it, he takes it from her. Then he shaves her head with an old machete. All this happened in front of the community. It was a public act. We all saw it. He abuses her repeatedly for several days and together with several paramilitaries. I believe that if the woman murdered him, the people would have rebelled. I think that was the trigger that Rincón del Mar needed to rebel.(10.2.2021.LC.RM)
(…) in this village, there was no rebellion! There was never a rebellion against the paramilitaries…! It was not like in the case of Libertad that rebelled. In Libertad, they decided to rebel, but not here, not here in Rincón del Mar.(10.2.2021.LC.RM1)
(…) About why Libertad revealed, and Rincón del Mar did not, here we lived different situations. The pressure from illegal groups was so hard, and some people were forced to join the armed structures.(15.2.2021.LC.RM5)
(…) Suddenly some people wanted to know how it feels to have the power of the armed structure. Suddenly that made people not rebel themselves as much. There were people from here who influenced the rebellion not to take place. Before the arrival of the paramilitaries, there were people who had illicit businesses, and it was convenient for them to work with the paramilitaries. They worked to avoid the rebellion taking place.(15.2.2021.LC.RM4)
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Design
3.2. Shows
3.3. Inclusion Criteria
3.4. Technique
3.5. Process
- (a)
- It began with collecting data on the experiences of various participants. In a first exploratory phase, representative and recognized social leaders were contacted in several meetings to socialize the object and scope of the study. This exercise allowed the identification of the first informants (Afro-descendant peasants with experiences of interaction with the insurgency, predominantly from the FARC-EP, ELN, and the AUC). The reconstruction of their historical memory of the conflict was worked from affectations, interactions, moments, places, and situations.
- (b)
- Regarding the analysis of behaviors and personal narratives to have a general overview of the experiences, this step is related to and was used as a complement to the exploratory phase to corroborate the previous knowledge that was acquired about the participants, their experiences and lives, in short, about their social realities and ways of constructing and interpreting them. Thus, in the first step, an inventory of the collection and existing documents was made; next, the documents were classified according to the demographic characteristics and content of the narratives; then a detailed review of the narratives made it possible to exclude information considering their relevance and contribution to the study (Sandoval-Casalimas 1996).
- (c)
- Identification of the units of meaning and generating categories, themes, and patterns, detecting citations or key units: At first, a qualitative data analysis matrix was built from a priori and conceptual categories based on the theory that supported the study. Subsequently, after an in-depth reading of the interviews or narratives compiled and their comparative analysis, new emerging categories emerged. Some categories already established are renamed, which allows extracting elements of analysis that reconstruct and represent the totality of the reality studied (Sandoval-Casalimas 1996).
- (d)
- The elaboration of a generic description of the experiences and their structure (conditions in which they occurred, the situations that surround them, and the context): Here, relationships are generated between the categories with which it is possible to carry out a systemic sweep of the data that ultimately manages to create the expected significance in the investigative exercise, although segmented according to the findings and partial interpretations (Sandoval-Casalimas 1996). This point is addressed regarding the definition of categories and subcategories and their relation.
- (e)
- Finally, the development of a narrative that combines descriptions and structure to convey the essence of the experience in terms of the phenomenon studied: The narrative designs are intended to understand the succession of events or situations told by those who lived or experienced it at different moments of the event. The research finally assembles the narrative data segments into a general story that includes chronologies, experiences, social constructs, perceptions, longings, and relevant facts.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | Year | Source Cited in Kaplan | Event Description |
---|---|---|---|
Afghanistan | 2009 | Gall 2009 | Damages caused by foreign troops’ bombing attacks triggered the armed uprising of civilians in the towns of the Helmand district. |
Afghanistan | 2009 | Gopal and Rosenberg 2009 | As a result of the armed violence and the tax demand of the Taliban, the people of Nangahar took up arms against them. |
Congo–Uganda | 2009 | Gettleman and Schmit 2009; Bavier 2009; Gettleman 2009a | Entire populations terrorized by the then Rebel Army of Resistance of the Lord (ERS), were organized in self-defense groups armed rudimentarily with shotguns, rustic weapons, and hunting weapons. |
Iraq | 2006 | Al-Ansary and Adeeb 2006 | A group of civilians organized themselves with the support of the government in self-defense against Sunni insurgents. |
Mozambique | 1989–1993 | Wilson 1992 | Groups of Jehovah’s Witnesses rose against Renamo political rebels. |
Sierra Leona | The 1990s | Gettleman 2009b; Gettleman 2009c; Raghavan 2010 | Communities of the Dusa Marreb, especially the Sufis, rose against the Islamic extremist movement. |
Sudán | The 1970s | Snapp 2010; Heaton and Fick 2010 | Local militias armed themselves against the insurgent group ERS. |
Date | Region | Guerrilla Structure | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | Montes de María, in the municipalities of Ovejas and Carmen de Bolívar | Armed command 35, Antonio José de Sucre, attached to the Caribe Block | Persecutions of EPL strongholds and peasant leaders, whom they accused of negotiating their principles with the government. Indeterminate casualties. |
1995 | Municipality of Ovejas | Armed command 37, Benkos Biojó, attached to the Caribe Block | Ambush, 50 guerrillas attacked an infantry patrol. A guerrilla and a marine killed. |
May 1995 | Municipality of Salado | Armed command 37, Benkos Biojó, attached to the Caribe Block | Assassination in an ambush of 30 soldiers. |
July 1995 | Municipality of Salado | Armed command Frente 37, Benkos Biojó, attached to the Caribe Block | The murder of rancher Santander Cohen. |
1996 | Municipality of Chalán | Armed command 35 and 37 | Attack with a “donkey bomb” against the police station. |
1997 | Municipality of Salado | Armed command 37, Benkos Biojó, attached to Caribe Block | Unleashed an all-out war against the Méndez clan, sponsor and shaper of paramilitary groups, and involved in the 1997 Salado massacre. |
1997 | Municipalities of Ovejas and Los Palmitos | Armed command 35 and 37 | The assassination of several mayoral candidates. |
Date | Region | Paramilitary Structure | Number of Victims |
---|---|---|---|
Between 16 and 21 February 2000 | Montes de María, in the townships of Salado, Loma de las Vacas and Balguero (Carmen de Bolívar); Canutal, Canutalito and Bajo Grande (Ovejas) | Gulf of Morrosquillo and Canal del Dique fronts led by alías Cadena and Juancho Dique respectively. Commanders from other fronts also participated: alías Gallo, el Tigre, and el Negro Mosquera (the last two were deserters from the FARC), Cinco Siete, Amaury, and Pantera | 60 victims (52 men and 8 women), including 3 minors under 18 years old |
14 October 2000 | Township of Macayepo, department of Bolívar (Montes de María) | Héroes Montes de María block, specifically the Gulf of Morrosquillo front led by alías Cadena | 16 peasants |
17 January 2001 | Chengue department of Bolívar (Montes de María) | Héroes Montes de María block, specifically the Gulf of Morrosquillo front led by alías Cadena | 27 peasants |
11 March 2000 | Las Brisas department of Bolívar (Montes de María) | Héroes Montes de María block, specifically the Canal del Dique front, led by alías Juancho Dique | 12 peasants |
Village | Registered Cases of Crimes against Freedom and Sexual Integrity |
---|---|
Libertad | 136 |
Rincón del Mar | 18 |
Berrugas | 12 |
Pajonal | 7 |
Palo Alto | 5 |
Plan Parejo | 3 |
Village | Presence of Cases Typified as a Triggering Action | Presence of Social Leaders | Presence of People Who Provoke a Social Response | Civil Rebellion |
---|---|---|---|---|
Libertad | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Rincón del Mar | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Berrugas | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Plan Parejo | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Pajonal | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Palo Alto | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Arrival of the Armed Conflict in the Territory | Repertoire of Violence and Social Changes Resulting from the Conflict | Causes of the Armed Uprising of Defenseless Civilians | Consequences of the Armed Uprising | Situational Elements that Made the Difference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Presence in the community of armed strangers. | Differences between the guerrillas and the paramilitaries. | Frequency and types of victimizing acts. | Generalized fear of the consequences of the uprising. | Community decision to rebel and overcome fear. |
Places of concentration and suspicious movements. | The first victimizing acts. | Excesses of paramilitary groups. | Strengthening of social cohesion. | Leaders or social agents that motivated the uprising. |
First contacts with the civilian population. | Perpetuity of the victimizing acts. | Threats to family cohesion and security. | Attempted armed reprisals by armed groups. | Little presence of armed troops belonging to illegal armed groups. |
State protection. | Frequency of sexual violations. |
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Banquez-Mendoza, J.G.; Martínez-González, M.B.; Amar-Amar, J.; López-Muñoz, L.V. Reconstruction of Historical Memory: A Methodological Approach to Uncover the Reasons of the Armed Uprising in the Montes de María, Colombia. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030103
Banquez-Mendoza JG, Martínez-González MB, Amar-Amar J, López-Muñoz LV. Reconstruction of Historical Memory: A Methodological Approach to Uncover the Reasons of the Armed Uprising in the Montes de María, Colombia. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(3):103. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030103
Chicago/Turabian StyleBanquez-Mendoza, Jesús G., Marina B. Martínez-González, José Amar-Amar, and Laura V. López-Muñoz. 2022. "Reconstruction of Historical Memory: A Methodological Approach to Uncover the Reasons of the Armed Uprising in the Montes de María, Colombia" Social Sciences 11, no. 3: 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030103
APA StyleBanquez-Mendoza, J. G., Martínez-González, M. B., Amar-Amar, J., & López-Muñoz, L. V. (2022). Reconstruction of Historical Memory: A Methodological Approach to Uncover the Reasons of the Armed Uprising in the Montes de María, Colombia. Social Sciences, 11(3), 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030103