IDENTIDADES 1 ENGLISH IDENTIDADES 9 ENGLISH | Page 68

( Montevideo, 1994), which led to found the Continental Network of African Organizations. He has the militancy as action of life. In 1991, he stated: " Once the South Africa issue is over(...), I will continue with something else. I will be buried with some compromise; I prefer that to stay at home talking about past glories and defeats "( Ini, 1991: 7).
C. Detention followed by change of identity C1 and C2. Camilo Ramon Juarez and Javier Martin Nemesio Juárez. Buenos Aires, June 12, 1968 / Buenos Aires, April 2, 1967. Oral sources: TC 179. Interview with Camilo Ramon Juarez( 45), Buenos Aires, August 6, 2013. Written sources: Dandan, 2013a and b. See F3( Mother) and F4( Maternal aunt). Along with his mother Alicia and his brother Javier, he was arrested in April 1976 because the police were looking for the father and husband, Quique Juarez *. After a day in jail, they went to live with their paternal grandparents in Florida( Buenos Aires). Quique was living underground and moved them to the place of his brother Pedro Luis Rosario( Santa Fe). They lived there under false identities, firstly using the last name Coronel and then others they forgot. The neighborhood activist Estela Miguel took care of them for preparing their return to school, but she died on October 15, 1976, in the operation called The Surgentes ´ Massacre. While Quique changed his appearance, they moved and soon, with a woman who impersonated their mother, they returned to their grandparents ´ house.
* Quique took part in the popular uprising known as The Cordobazo( 1969). He was a delegate of the public company Electrical Services of Greater Buenos Aires( SEGBA) in the Sector Costanera. He joined the group Cinema Liberation, was founder of the Peronist Working Youth( JTP) and political leader of the Montoneros ´ northern column. He contributed to the magazines El Descamisado, Causa Peronista, Noticias y Militancia. He was killed along with other colleagues on December 10, 1976, in Florida( Buenos Aires), perhaps while facing their kidnappers, since he was living right there with his parents.
D. Identity change D1. Paola Thelma Barrionuevo. Buenos Aires, April 15, 1978. Oral sources: TC 182. Interview with her daughter Thelma( 38), Buenos Aires, August 13, 2013. Written sources: None. See F5( Father). Her parents were Dori Matilde Amador and The Black Dakar, both Montoneros from the basic unit Little School of Bethlehem, disguised in a church at Flores neighborhood. The prevailing sociopolitical situation in late 1976 forced her mother to send her, along with her little daughter Thelma Paola, to the house of some distant relatives in Salvador Mazza( Salta). Here they lived in the shadows for two years. Upon returning, The Black Dakar had already died.
E. Attempt to arrest followed by exile E1. Maria del Carmen Platero. La Plata( Buenos Aires), August 3,1933. She lives in Tandil. Oral sources: TC 25. Interview with Maria del Carmen Platero( 72), Buenos Aires, July 5, 2006. TC 116. Interview with her friend Zulema Castello de Lasala( 82), Buenos Aires, March 1, 2011. TC 189. Interview with Maria del Carmen Platero( 80), La Plata( Buenos Aires), February 18, 2014. Written sources: None. See E2-E4( Children). She was born to a renowned Afro-Buenos Aires family that migrated to La Plata just as it was founded. She graduated from the School of Theatre and continued in private studying performing arts and vocal expression. She performed on stages in Argentina, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Spain. In 1967, she married the journalist, writer and Peronist militant Thomas Saraví. They had four children: Mary, Facundo, José María and Juan. Because of the climate of violence in Buenos Aires, they moved to Tandil in 1974. On August 22, 1976, Saraví was traveling and plainclothes policemen came to arrest her. She fought back with chains and shouts of " Here you have a lioness ready to defend her cubs!" Then they had to protect themselves by living in different Buenos Aires cities until they exiled to Madrid in late 1976. After having moved to Costa Rica, she and Saraví divorced. She returned home with her children in 1983 and resided a few years in Casa del Teatro( Buenos Aires). Saraví came back to 2009 and settled in La Plata,
67