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September 2, 2008

Condo-Hell

Posted from: Juayua, El Salvador

There has been quite a gap since I last wrote anything and unfortunately i'd have to say that its partly because of a lack of inspiration during the last few weeks in Central America :-( Both Panama and (particularly) Costa Rica left me a bit 'flat.'

There is no denying that.. well, they really do have some canal there in Panama! And watching Green Turtles come ashore to nest in Costa Rica was VERY cool. But, overall they lacked something. Or maybe its actually that they have too much of something ... Overpriced, hugely overdeveloped for tourism, 'For Sale' signs abound, Real Estate operators in every small town, Condos and 'Gated Communities' springing up everywhere and an apparent WAVE of North Americans in search of the next property bargin. Not really my scene.

What worries me most is hearing that the very people who have inflicted this 'Cond-hell' on countries such as Panama and Costa Rica now consider it too developed and expensive and have started to move into other areas such as Nicaragua - I can only hope that Nicaragua doesn't go the same way!

Still, things seem to be looking up as now i'm in El Salvador... and lovin' it!

September 8, 2008

War... What Is It Good For?

Arriving in El Salvador certainly brought with it a change in feeling compared to the other areas of Central America such as Panama and Costa Rica.

In all the time spent in El Salvador we only saw 8 other travellers and minimal tourist development. In some ways El Salvador reminded me a little of Colombia - With its recent civil war history and the rest of the world looking at it as a 'trouble spot' - yet the people there are amongst the friendliest and most helpful we've met. Like Colombia, I feel that the people there make a very special effort with the travellers they meet because they know the world looks at them and their country as drug producers, guerrillas or just bad people. Simply not fair and certainly not true.

El Salvador had a pretty tough history even through the more recent years. I only really remember it as a place that was being mentioned on the news a lot when I was at school. The civil war there started in 1980 and ran on until 1992 - although the history runs way back beyond that.

It was a war between the right-wing military government of El Salvador (U.S. funded to the tune of 7 Billion Dollars) and the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), a coalition of four leftist and one Communist guerrilla group. Basically a long and very bloody war of the oppressed people against a brutal military dictatorship.

One of the first places we visited in El Salvador was the small village of El Mozote which became infamous as the site of a brutal massacre by Government troops at the end of 1981. The north eastern areas of El Salvador were considered to be something of an FMLN stronghold and it was in these areas that the government implemented 'death squads' whose role was quite simply to wipe out whole communities.

Although this happened in many areas of El Salvador, it was the scale of the massacre in El Mozote that makes it stand out.

Almost 1000 men, women and children were tortured and killed in this small rural village. Only one person managed to escape and survive. Everthing in the town was destroyed including all livestock. Nothing was left alive.


The Memorial Rose Garden

There are believed to be numerous, as yet unidentified, mass graves around the village. However, the one that has been exhumed is perhaps the most tragic of all. In 2003 an Argentinian forensic team uncovered a mass grave in which they found 146 bodies. Of the 146 corpses, 140 of them were aged under 12 years old, and the average age was 6 years old! The youngest was just 2 days old!

This site has now become a dedicated momument to all those who were killed in the village. The childrens mass grave transformed into a memorial rose garden.

When we were there, we were lucky enough to meet two very interesting people. One was an English girl who was working for the church. She had helped create the original mural and rose garden in dedication to the children 4 years earlier. She had just returned to carry out a little repair work on the paint job.

The other was an American author who had published a book about the Mozote Massacre. He had been in Mozote back in 2003 when the forenic work was being carried out on the childrens grave. He had just come back to El Mozote after 5 years with thoughts of updating his book. Both these people were able to give us an amazing insight into the tragic events of the village and what happened afterwards.

On March 7, 2005, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights reopened an investigation into the El Mozote massacre because of the new evidence found by the team of Argentine forensic anthropologists. Unfortunately however, recent efforts by lawyers in El Salvador to reopen the case, which was shelved in 2000, have repeatedly failed, even after a court ruling that year stripped protection under the national amnesty law from suspects in the most egregious human rights violations.

War... what is it good for!

September 23, 2008

Food Glorious Food!

In general, Central America tends to get a bit of a bad rap when it comes to food. Rice and beans during the week and beans and rice at the weekends. But, there's a lot of good stuff out there if you look for it and are willing to experiment a little.

Along the chain of small villages that make up the "ruta de las flores" in Western El Salvador, Juayúa is famed for its weekend food fair. No surprise then that we arrived in Juayúa on a Saturday, hungry and ready to eat. Of course you could find your 'beans and rice' here if you really wanted to, but why would you with options such as:

'crazy' corn, lobster, seafood chili, BBQ beef/pork/chicken, tacos, burritos, endless varieties of local soups, grilled sausages, kebabs, fresh fruits (chocolate dipped strawberries!), juices, and some excellent local coffees.

In short, I ate myself silly for the whole weekend! I usually lose a bit of weight when I travel, but I think that balance may have been re-adjusted in Juayúa. And, as if that wasn't enough, Juayúa was also hosting the 'Miss El Salvador' contest!

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