Observing Memories Issue 2 | Page 10

Oath of Jorge Rafael Videla as President of Argentina. 29 March 1976 | Author unknown, Wikimedia Commons Pedro Eugenio Aramburu visiting Oberá in 1965 | “Reseña histórica de Oberá”. Gualdoni Vigo, Enrique. Municipalidad de Oberá, 1987. Wikimedia Commons The personal account of two direct perpetrators and the institutional recognition of the violence perpetrated by the Army understood from these public statements definitely left the military without any chance to present themselves before the public opinion as the “saviours of the fatherland from the Marxist thread” or as the “victors of a fair war against the subversive enemy” (Badaró, 2009: 311). Corps and former Minister of Military Regime Planning, Major General (R) Ramón Díaz Bessone, became the main promoters of this memory with the publication of the book In Memoriam, considered by the military as the counterpart of the Nunca Más (Never more) published by CONADEP in 1984. His three volumes describe the circumstances in which members of the armed and security forces, their relatives and civilians were killed by armed organizations during the 1970s, but above all it provides a narrative from which to re-interpret the past and take up a stance regarding the debates and questionings of the present. Indeed, the book lays the foundation for a new narrative about the past to be strengthened: The Complete Memory. This is a mirroring and reactive memory opposed to as much as reflected in the memory of the disappeared and the socially legitimated category of victim of State terrorism. On the one hand, this shift towards the memory of the victims can be understood as a symptom of an era in which the foundation of a collective identity in a traumatic event represents a sufficient basis for promoting claims and disputing different meanings in the public arena; and, on the other hand, as part of a mournful memory resulting in an active effect Paradoxically, the generation of officers of unity and adhesion based on a common painful contemporary to the illegal repression, gathered in memory. However, it can also be understood as an the Military Circle were the main promoters of the expression of the little space found by the victims of shift towards the memory of the military victims. the guerrilla in the memory of the activists and the Among them, the former head of the Second Army human rights organizations, and for the State. 8 Observing Memories ISSUE 2