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Discovering Dominga (Dir. Patricia Flynn)
Discovering Dominga (Dir. Patricia Flynn):
<http://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2003/discoveringdominga/>
***** FILM SYNOPSIS
When 29-year-old Iowa housewife Denese Becker decides to return to
the Guatemalan village where she was born, she begins a journey
towards finding her roots, but one filled with harrowing revelations.
Denese, born Dominga, was nine when she became her family's sole
survivor of a massacre of Mayan peasants. Two years later, she was
adopted by an American family. In "Discovering Dominga," Denese's
journey home is both a voyage of self-discovery that permanently
alters her relationship to her American family and a political
awakening that sheds light on an act of genocide against this
hemisphere's largest Indian majority.
On March 13, 1982, Denese Becker was a nine-year-old Maya girl named
Dominga living in the Maya highlands, when the Guatemalan army
entered the village of Rio Negro. By the time the soldiers left,
hundreds of people, including 70 women and 107 children, had been
massacred and dumped in a mass grave. They became part of the
estimated 4,000 to 5,000 men, women and children killed in the Rio
Negro area by military forces from 1980 to 1983. The Rio Negro
villagers had been marked as "insurgents" for resisting their forced
removal to make way for a World Bank-funded dam.
Dominga was one of the unaccountably "lucky" survivors of the
massacre at Rio Negro. Placed in an orphanage, she was adopted two
years later by a Baptist minister and his wife from Iowa. Dominga
became Denese. Adjusting to her new life in America, she tried to
bury the trauma of the massacre and the unspeakable memories so
foreign to her Midwestern neighbors. She graduated high school,
happily married Iowa native Blane Becker, had children, and became a
manicurist.
But Denese never completely forgot her childhood as Dominga, and was
haunted by memories of her parents' murder. When she asked one of her
adoptive cousins for help to research her past, she discovered she
still had family in Guatemala. She decided to return to find them.
Once there, she shares bittersweet memories of family and village
life with her relatives, and then the story of the killings comes
pouring out. Inexorably, Denese is drawn into the ongoing struggle of
the surviving Rio Negro community to find justice.
Forming themselves into a Widows and Orphans Committee, the survivors
had started to document the massacre and speak out for justice.
Though peace accords brought Guatemala's civil war to an uneasy close
in 1996, seeking the truth about crimes committed during the war and
redress for the victims remained difficult and dangerous. A United
Nations Truth Commission found the Guatemalan army responsible for 93
percent of total war crimes, and the killings at Rio Negro were
declared a crime of genocide. Yet as Denese discovers, the
perpetrators have not been punished, and the military is still
powerful.
Outraged at the injustice, Denese decides to become a witness in a
landmark human rights case brought against the Guatemalan military.
She joins her relatives to demand the exhumation of the Rio Negro
massacre victims from a clandestine grave and their re-burial in a
new gravesite called Monument to the Truth. Ultimately, the community
succeeds. In a dramatic moment, Denese returns once again to
Guatemala to witness a forensic team unearth the grisly remains of
the victims, including the body of her beloved father.
Back in the U.S., she begins speaking about her experiences before
school and community groups. For Denese, honoring the truth is
morally necessary, but also personally shattering. Though her husband
has fully supported her journey to rediscover "Dominga," the strains
begin unraveling their marriage. As Blane reflects, "A war that
happened so long ago has broken our family apart."
<http://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2003/discoveringdominga/about.html> *****
Buy or rent the video (sale, $295; rental, $95) at
<http://ucmedia.berkeley.edu/new/newmain.html#movie38562>.
--
Yoshie
* Bring Them Home Now! <http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/>
* Calendars of Events in Columbus:
<http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/calendar.html>,
<http://www.freepress.org/calendar.php>, & <http://www.cpanews.org/>
* Student International Forum: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/>
* Committee for Justice in Palestine: <http://www.osudivest.org/>
* Al-Awda-Ohio: <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Al-Awda-Ohio>
* Solidarity: <http://www.solidarity-us.org/>
- Thread context:
- AP: Trouble brewing in the model transitional government,
Michael Pollak Thu 01 Jan 2004, 09:41 GMT
- Alterman quip,
Michael Pollak Thu 01 Jan 2004, 09:39 GMT
- Local Angel (Dir. Udi Aloni),
Yoshie Furuhashi Thu 01 Jan 2004, 01:13 GMT
- Supply side Jesus........,
Mike Ballard Thu 01 Jan 2004, 01:02 GMT
- Discovering Dominga (Dir. Patricia Flynn),
Yoshie Furuhashi Thu 01 Jan 2004, 00:40 GMT
- Abolition of the antithesis between town and country,
Louis Proyect Thu 01 Jan 2004, 00:31 GMT
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