Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo
This Argentinian group of grandmothers has been in search of the children stolen and adopted between the years 1976 and 1983.
Their website in English is here.
The website says “These children are the children of our children, who have also disappeared. Many babies were kidnapped with their parents, some after their parents were killed, and others were born in clandestine detention centers where their mothers were taken after having been sequestered at different states of their pregnancies.
We, the babies’ grandmothers, tried desperately to locate them and, during these searches, decided to unite. Thus, in 1977, the non-governmental organization called Abuelas (Grandmothers) de Plaza de Mayo was established, dedicated specifically to fighting for the return of our grandchildren. We also relentlessly investigated our children’s and grandchildren’s disappearances, in hopes of finding them.
As mothers our search is two-folded because we are demanding the restitution of our grandchildren while simultaneously searching for these children’s parents, our sons and daughters.
From the moment that our children (often with our grandchildren in their wombs) disappeared, we visited every court, office, orphanage, day care center, and so on, to locate them. We appeared before the courts, the successive military governments, the Supreme Court, and the ecclesiastical hierarchies, never obtaining a positive result. We finally directed our claim to international organizations such as the United Nations and the Organization of American States, again to no avail.
In 1977 we began our struggle with the claim for 13 children’s restitutions. As of August 2004, over 400 children have been recorded as missing. However, we know that there are approximately 500 kidnapped children. In many cases, their relatives did not declare such kidnappings, either due to ignorance of the ability to do so or because they did not know that the mothers were pregnant at the time of their disappearance.
The disappeared children were deprived of their identity, their religion, and their right to live with their family, in order words, all of the rights that are nationally and internationally recognized as their universal human rights.
Our demand is concrete: that the children who were kidnapped as a method of political repression be restored to their legitimate families.
Procedures for the Search of Our Grandchildren
Since 1976, we have pursued:
- Investigations at local and federal courts, including cases of granted adoptions and also with regard to NN children (names unknown) who may have been recorded at those courts.
- Investigations of all births registered in governmental offices after the conclusion of the normal legal term for such registration.
- Beginning in 1997, we began informational campaigns to draw young people (of an approximate age range of our grandchildren) that may have doubts regarding their true identity to Abuelas. We have had very positive results.
We continually publish announcements in local newspapers read by individuals who are aware of information relating to the kidnappings but who keep silent either due to complicity or fear. In addition, we distribute posters and leaflets with photographs and details of the disappearance of children.
When reports are made, all information is filed into folders containing individual accusations of each case, details of the disappearance, photographs of the child and/or his/her parents, identification documents, and habeas corpus that have been filed, among other information. Each person who makes the denouncement signs all these documents. A certificate of the mother’s pregnancy is included, in a case where the detainee was pregnant, or a birth certificate of the child, in the event that the child was kidnapped after birth.
In our discourse, we make it clear that our grandchildren have not been abandoned; they have the right to recover their roots and their history; they have relatives who are constantly engaged in searching for them.
In the 30 years, we have been able to located 87 of the disappeared children, including 4 found by governmental commissions and 2 located by CLAMOR, the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights in the Southern Cone.
Some of the children are already living with their legitimate families and have become perfectly integrated. Others are still living with the families that have raised them, but are in close contact with their true grandmothers and relatives. By being a part of two families, the children have recovered their identity.
There is a large number of disappeared children whose identities were completely annulled. In those cases, we use modern science to prove that they are members of a particular family. For this purpose, we rely on support from the scientific community in the field of genetics, hematology, morphology, and others.
Through our participation and effort in the International Convention on the Rights of the Child, we were able to push for the inclusion of articles 7, 8 and 11, which refer to the right to an identity and are known as the “Argentine clauses.” This International Convention was later incorporated into the Argentine Constitution, via law number 23,849.
In 1992, as a direct result of a petition we organized, the National Executive Power of our government created CONADI, the National Committee for the Right to Identity. The main objective of this organization is to assist young adults who doubt their identities by investigating all existing documents and referring them for blood analysis. Blood analyses are conducted by the National Bank of Genetic Data, which has the power to perform such analyses without legal intervention.”
Procedures for when a person approaches the organization
The website says “Spontaneous Appearances
What Happens When a Young Person Approaches Abuelas?
Each young person who approaches Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo does so because of persistent doubts: Is it possible that the people who call themselves my parents are not really my parents? And if not, whose child am I? Could I have a family, someone who is looking for me? The young people who approach our organization face these questions as well as many others.
For this reason, a lot of young adults approach us with fear and without knowing exactly what Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo do.
One of Abuelas’ objectives is for each young person who approaches the institution to have the possibility of starting a private and confidential search regarding his/her origins.
When a young person approaches Abuelas, he/she is interviewed to find out whether or not the case relates to Abuelas and its mission. Any children with records or certificates of being born during the years 1975 and 1980 may be presumed to be the child of someone who disappeared.
The search is not easy since the majority of the documents that these young people bring to Abuelas are false. However, the National Commission for the Right to an Identity (CONADI, a commission under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Justice, Security, and Human Rights) makes this search possible. Documents and records are requested from distinct institutions involved in the registration of each baby and, if necessary, free blood tests are requested from the National Bank of Genetic Data.
With CONADI’s help, it is possible to start an identity search for a young person born between 1975 and 1980.
Throughout the years, more than 407 young people have approached CONADI and 58 cases have been solved. Of these 58 cases, not all of them are young people that are searched for by Abuelas but most of them have found their biological families.
If a young person over the age of 29 approaches Abuelas, the search is conducted through an agreement reached by Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo and the National Ombudsman. In these cases, the main purpose is to recover the identity of the young man or woman, unrelated to the matter of disappeared children. If you have doubts about your true identity and you think that you are the child of a disappeared, contact dudas@abuelas.org.ar”
Another page from 2011 says that 101 stolen babies have been reunited as of that date.
Hat tip to commenter Astrin for bringing this organization to our attention in a comment that coincided with initial stories about Pope Francis. He had been accused of being part the “ecclesiastical hierarchies” that is mentioned as not giving enough assistance. He was head of the Jesuit order during this time but was not a Bishop until 1992. He had been directed by the Jesuit order in Rome to do something about the kidnappings. In the case of the founder of this organization, information about the whereabouts of her daughter was not passed to him until after the founder’s daughter had been killed and child already adopted.
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