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Not Our Day to Die

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Not Our Day to Die

Testimony from the Guatemalan Jungle
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Description

It was work for Mike Sullivan-a flying job like the ones he'd done most of his life in many parts of the world-ferrying people, medicine, crops, supplies and almost anything else you can think of among the isolated jungle villages of Guatemala. Life in the farming co-ops there was simple, peaceful, and good, based on bedrocks of family, community, and faith. Then the repression began. A failed attempt at a coup had led to continued fighting between rebels and government, though in areas far from the almost-utopian Ixcan region. U.S. military and CIA intervention helped defeat the insurgency, but the social inequalities that had led to the movement remained, and the revolution went underground. The Guatemalan army, searching everywhere for those who opposed it, increased its control over the isolated jungle area. Co-op directors, teachers, catechists, and then anyone suspected of being one of or assisting the guerrillas was selectively "disappeared." The army turned to a scorched-earth policy, killing animals, burning crops, uprooting fruit trees, destroying towns, massacring their people. Throughout the Ixcan, those who survived fled. Some returned to their original mountain villages, others crossed the border into Mexico, and a third group survived for sixteen years hiding in the jungle-men, women, and children. Primeval growth took over the land as the war with the guerrilla movement raged on to encompass the entire nation. When finally peace accords were signed, the people of the Ixcan returned. Homes were rebuilt, land reclaimed, the area thrived again. But sixteen years were lost, along with countless lives. For Mike Sullivan, who had returned there when his help was needed, the story of those years-of how the people of the Ixcan survived, and of the many who didn't-was one that had to be told. In three visits, he conducted the interviews that form this book, talking with the villagers he'd known long before. At first, they spoke hesitantly, then with the flood force of vivid memory, telling of their first arrival at the Ixcan, the lives they'd made, and the years of the repression and worse. Their stories are gripping, fascinating, painful-but most of all, deeply human as we witness their struggle to survive and feel the force of the simple values that ultimately carried them through to a new and better life.

Author Biography:

Michael Sullivan flew among the jungle villages of Guatemala in the 1970s, before violence and destruction forced the people he had known to flee for their lives. Flying in the '80s in East Africa for a medical program, and later in New Guinea, he was unaware of the massacres taking place. When he learned of the terrible struggles for survival there, he returned to help, traveling to Guatemalan refugee camps in Mexico, and later making a trip on foot through the area he had known to gather the stories that make up this book.
Release date Australia
October 1st, 2017
Pages
200
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Dimensions
150x226x18
ISBN-13
9781938288906
Product ID
26758626

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