Research team led by Charles Walker, professor of history at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis, (not pictured) and Ruth Borja Santa Cruz (center), professor of history at the University of San Marcos in Peru, digitizes documents in Peru. (Courtesy/ Charles Walker)
It was a single note that reached Ang茅lica Mendoza de Ascarza after her son Arqu铆medes was taken from her home by soldiers in Peru鈥檚 military. In faint cursive on a scrap of deeply creased brown paper, he wrote that he was being held at an army barracks and asked her to find a lawyer and money and any way possible to get him to a trial.
The day after Arqu铆medes鈥 disappearance in 1983, officers at the 鈥淟os Cabitos鈥 barracks insisted to his mother, better known as 鈥淢am谩 Ang茅lica,鈥 that he wasn鈥檛 in their custody. However, his hand-written note would play a critical role in Mam谩 Ang茅lica鈥檚 years-long effort to find justice. It would culminate in the 2017 conviction of former soldiers responsible for 53 forced disappearances that included Arqu铆medes'.
Between 1980 and 2000, roughly 70,000 people disappeared or were killed in Peru, according to the country鈥檚 2003 report. Documents, both formal and informal, were central for both piecing together a history of this violence and successful judicial proceedings seeking justice. Today, many of those documents are in danger.
Charles Walker, Professor of History, 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis College of Letters and Science
Charles Walker, a professor of history in the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis College of Letters and Science, was recently awarded a $100,000 grant to digitize archives from three major human rights organizations in Peru. With this funding from the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息LA Library鈥檚 , Walker will partner with co-investigator Ruth Borja Santa Cruz, a professor of history at the University of San Marcos in Peru, to preserve documents that chart a history of human rights in the country.
鈥淭hese archives are really endangered,鈥 said Walker. 鈥淚f the political situation changes, these organizations might be closed and maybe even burned down.鈥
Digitizing human rights documentation for historical preservation
The years from 1983 to 2000 in Peru are in many ways defined by terrorist attacks against the populace on one side and severe repression by Peru's government on the other. Caught between the those two forces were tens of thousands of people from rural, mostly indigenous communities who suffered illegal detentions, forced disappearances, killings and other violations of their human rights as set out in the and the .
Even when this violence went officially unreported or even unacknowledged by the government, it often left a trail of documents. They could be a handwritten letter, a local investigation or even a fax sent to a state agency asking about a loved one who was taken by authorities.
Right now, three human rights organizations in Peru 鈥 Asociaci贸n Pro Derechos Humanos (APRODEH) and Asociaci贸n Nacional de Familiares de Secuestrados, Detenidos y Desaparecidos del Per煤 (ANFASEP), as well as Equipo Peruano de Antropolog铆a Forense (EPAF) 鈥 all hold archives of documents that are critical for understanding the 20-year period of violence in Peru. Walker and his team will lead the process of photographing and digitally storing documents from those archives.
Many of the documents are decades old. The years have taken a toll, particularly with original communications describing the violence, which were sent by fax and telex machine.
鈥淭he paper that they used at that time was a fragile paper that is sometimes a little difficult to handle. Sometimes they fall apart simply when you touch them,鈥 said Christian Huaylinos Camacuari, a human rights lawyer and legal coordinator for APRODEH, speaking in Spanish. 鈥淭hat explains why it鈥檚 necessary to have them digitized and to do it in a professional way.鈥
The documents at APRODEH alone fill hundreds of boxes. They include closed cases of human rights trials, including some of the most important human rights trials in Peruvian history. Many of these cases were sponsored by APRODEH in Peru with international support.
Case file from the trial of former Peru president Alberto Fujimori. (Christian Huaylinos Camacuari/APRODEH)
鈥淎ll of this documentation has been used in legal proceedings that have subsequently resulted in convictions in various cases of human rights violations, including of our own ex-president of the state of Peru Alberto Fujimori,鈥 said Huaylinos.
Fujimori, president of Peru from 1990 to 2000, was sentenced in 2009 to 25 years in prison for his role in extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances. In 2023, the Peru Constitutional Tribunal . APRODEH was one of the organizations that with the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR).
The shifting landscape of human rights and cultural heritage protection in Peru
This project builds on an earlier project, also funded by the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息LA Library Modern Endangered Archives Program, in which Walker and Ruth Borja Santa Cruz digitized 40,000 documents from the Confederaci贸n Campesina del Per煤 (CCP). That work was completed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The CCP archive documents the history of Peru during the late 20th Century, including the growth of the radical left, the organization of major strikes and how the terrorist group 鈥淪hining Path鈥 impacted poor and indigenous peoples. The team added descriptions in the metadata to make the digital archive of thousands of documents searchable.
These documents, which were housed in a private home in Peru鈥檚 capital Lima, are now through the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息LA Digital Library.
鈥淲hen the CCP collection was published, we saw the interest and value of that material being openly accessible online to communities in Peru. We learned almost immediately afterward that CCP was a target of political repression in Peru and were relieved to know that the archive had been preserved,鈥 said Rachel Deblinger, director of the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息LA Library鈥檚 Modern Endangered Archives Program (MEAP).
Document digitized as part of a 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis-led project in Peru with support from the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息LA Library Modern Endangered Archives Program (MEAP). (Courtesy/ Charles Walker)
The CCP archive is one of 112 projects across 52 countries that MEAP has supported in only its first five years. The overall goal of MEAP is to support the preservation of endangered cultural heritage and to make it freely accessible to everyone, including the communities the archive represents. Right now, the complete MEAP archive holds more than 70,000 unique documents and objects. All of them are freely available for research, teaching and non-commercial purposes.
鈥淚t is important to us that collections are documented in a way that reflects the experiences of people represented in the archive,鈥 said Deblinger. 鈥淗aving someone like Ruth Borja Santa Cruz at the center of the project, we know the materials will be well cared for and described from the community perspective.鈥
The new digitization project will use the same approach to protect archives that are at risk of destruction, both due to a lack of funding to maintain them and continuing threats of violence against these organizations. APRODEH has in recent years been the target of threats, including death threats against its director Gloria Cano. All three organizations fear attacks and arson that could destroy everything.
鈥淲e believe that the archival material is fundamental and is in great danger,鈥 said Walker. 鈥淎ll three archives currently confront major threats and difficulties.鈥
Historical preservation for future research and justice
The documents are part of a complicated legacy, particularly for people who have lost loved ones in the violence. Mam谩 Ang茅lica鈥檚 efforts to find justice for her son drove her work to help establish the National Association of Relatives of the Kidnapped, Detained and Disappeared (ANFASEP).
After the legal proceedings that brought her son鈥檚 killers to justice, APRODEH requested, by power of attorney, that the judiciary return Arqu铆medes鈥檚 handwritten letter. In a 2021 ceremony, APRODEH director Gloria Cano returned the letter to his family. Mam谩 Ang茅lica had passed away only days after the reading of the sentencing.
Huaylinos said that the documents that Walker, Borja Santa Cruz and their team will preserve can also be invaluable for scholars seeking to piece together a history of the violence in Peru from 1983 to 2000.
鈥淭his documentation is important for trying to identify the possible perpetrators and, most importantly, to identify the victims and facts, who many times have been denied by the Peruvian state,鈥 said Huaylinos. 鈥淚n the cases when there were convictions, I鈥檓 convinced that those stories of horror, of suffering, of pain were converted into stories of hope, that despite the years and despite everything that was suffered, justice was found.鈥