Patio 29

Patio 29 (Spanish: Yard 29) is a common grave site in Santiago General Cemetery in Chile, where political prisoners, especially those who "disappeared" during the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, were buried anonymously. The mass grave, the largest of Augusto Pinochet's military government, was used for unannounced and unmarked burials in the 1970s until an anonymous tip alerted the public to its usage. With the return of democracy to Chile in 1990, an exhumation effort through 2006 recovered 126 bodies in 105 graves and identified three-quarters of the victims. A 2005 DNA test later reported widespread identification errors and a new identification database began in 2007. Exhumation authorities report that the site has been fully exhumed, a claim contested by which families of the victims.

Plaque on Patio 29.
Inscription reads: Patio 29 represents the horror of a mourning that does not end.
It represents the tireless fight of the families to know the Truth, obtain Justice and make Memory.

The burial grounds became Chile's first cemetery to be designated a protected national monument in 2006. The site serves as a symbol for the human rights movement and the 1973 coup's disappeared. As such, Patio 29 became part of the Bachelet government's "symbolic reparation" program. Annual marches against the coup end at the site.

History

In 1973 a military coup overthrew the socialist Chilean government and replaced it with a military dictatorship headed by Augusto Pinochet, the Commander-in-Chief of the Chilean Army. The military rule was characterized by systematic suppression of all political dissidence.[1] The worst violence occurred within the first three months of the coup, with the number of suspected dissidents killed or "disappeared" reaching several thousand.[2]

In 1979, the Vicariate of Solidarity, the Catholic Church's human rights office, received information regarding illegal burials of six victims from Paine, Chile in a section of Santiago's main cemetery, known as Patio 29;[3] this led to a court investigation which revealed that Patio 29 had been used to anonymously bury the unmarked bodies of executed political prisoners between 1970 and 1980,[4] especially those kidnapped during the 1973 coup.[3][5][6]

In 1981, Santiago's military prosecutor prohibited the unmarked bodies from being incinerated or removed,[4] though Walkowitz and Knauer wrote in Memory and the Impact of Political Transformation in Public Space that the military government dug up and hid hundreds of these bodies in 1982.[7] Following the end of military rule and return of democracy to Chile in 1990, investigation of human rights violations became a top priority. Though a 1978 amnesty decree prevented prosecution for pre-1978 offenses, the new Aylwin government sought disclosure of the truth and recompense for the victim's families and appointed a National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation. The commission's February 1991 Rettig Report named victims disappeared shortly after the coup, executed by gunshot, and presumed to be buried in Patio 29.[8] Patio 29 was the largest of about twelve Pinochet era mass graves identified and searched.[9]

In September 1991, two judges on cases by the Vicariate and family of disappeared leftist leader Bautista van Schouwen issued court orders to begin research projects to exhume and identify the graves.[3] The majority of the 105 bodies recovered in 1991 appeared to have been shot and beaten. Some were missing limbs or were bound with wire. The victims were as young as 13 years old,[9] and some coffins contained multiple bodies.[10] Pinochet, who remained commander-in-chief of the Chilean army during the 1991 exhumation,[3] explained that bodies were stacked to save space ("What great economizing!"[11]), and later apologized after public outcry.[10] This comment embarrassed Pinochet's followers and "reactivated cultural revulsion and human rights sensibilities".[11][12] In Reckoning with Pinochet, Stern wrote that the 1991 exhumation led the public to view Pinochet soldiers on trial as criminals.[13] The Santiago Catholic Church's antemortem records were matched with autopsy records to identify and return the bodily remains to living relatives.[8]

As of 2006, 126 bodies were found, of which 96 were identified[10] by the Medical Legal Institute in 1998.[14][lower-alpha 1] Authorities reported that all bodies in Patio 29 had been exhumed by 2006, though some families of the victims disagreed. More than 1000 of the disappeared from this period have not been found.[10] Skepticism about the matches' veracity emerged in 2003, and the institute's own DNA testing in 2005 revealed a project rife with mistakes and exaggerated certainty:[14] 48 bodies were wrongly identified and 37 more were doubted.[10] The Medical Legal Institute created a new DNA database in May 2007.[16] Three bodies were positively identified in late 2009.[17]

Chile's National Monuments Council declared Patio 29 a National Monument on 13 July 2006[18] at the request of a group of Chamber of Deputies legislators.[19] The Council chose the site for its proof of the Pinochet military government's elaborate procedures used to conceal the disappeared's bodies and their identities.[4] At the ceremony, Patio 29 was described as a symbol of the country's painful history and an educational place for human rights.[4] As a national monument, the site will be conserved and maintained by government funds unless ordered otherwise by the courts.[10] It is the first cemetery to become a national monument in Chile.[20]

In 2008, the National Monuments Council ran an architectural contest to revitalize Patio 29, and chose a project that would create a music plaza with seven copper columns linking Víctor Jara's tomb with Patio 29.[18] The memorial is made of 3,032 precast concrete bricks.[21]

Description

Patio 29 is a common grave site in Santiago General Cemetery where the victims of mutilation, torture, and execution under the Pinochet military government were buried.[7] Augusto Pinochet came to power in the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, where he led the army that attacked the presidential palace and overthrew President Salvador Allende. The military junta replaced constitutional rule for 17 years, under which thousands of Chileans were detained and tortured.[22] The Patio 29 cemetery section is bordered by Mexico Avenue to the north, O'Higgins Avenue to the east, Copihues Street to the south, and Maitenes Street to the west.[4] Though the cemetery changed its section numbering in 1987, the section is still known as Patio 29.[4] The section has 105 graves, though many contained more than one person.[3] The plots remain marked by their original rusted iron cross headstones with burial dates and "NN" for "no name".[10][7][3] Most of the dates fall within the last four months of 1973.[10] The site has not been reused for burials.[4] Folksinger Víctor Jara, a prominent casualty of Pinochet's 1973 coup d'état, lies in a crypt across from Patio 29.[23]

The Memorial for the Disappeared at the cemetery's Metro entrance and Víctor Jara's tomb near Patio 29 together form a ten-minute "popular route" walk through the cemetery for tourists, as opposed to the "patrimonial route" past the graves of Chilean political leaders.[24] A sign at the Patio 29 memorial describes the site as "an emblematic place of the human rights violations that took place between 1973 and 1990 as it was used to cover up the bodies and identities of the detained disappeared and politically executed during the military regime".[24] The annual protests against the 11 September 1973 coup start at the then-besieged La Moneda presidential palace and conclude here in the General Cemetery.[25]

Panorama of Patio 29, August 2012

Cultural influence

The exhumations at Patio 29 led to two documentaries: Patio 29: Histories of Silence, and Fernando ha vuelto, which told the story of recovering Fernando Olivares Mori's body from the plot, his burial, and an interview with his wife after the DNA-based doubts were posited.[26] In a review of Patio 29: Tras la Cruz de Fierro, Katrien Klep placed the book alongside an international human rights trend towards "memorialization", Southern Cone writings about "monuments, memorials, and 'lugares de memoria' (memory locales)", and interest in reconciling their divided societies.[25] In keeping with this symbolism, Patio 29 became part of the Bachelet government's "symbolic reparation" program.[25]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. One such victim, leftist Walter Schneuer, was identified by his fingerprints. He had disappeared in the days following the coup.[15] Records show leftist leader Bautista van Schouwen to have been buried in Patio 29 as well.[3]

References

  1. Roniger, Luis; Sznajder, Mario (15 July 1999). The legacy of human-rights violations in the Southern Cone. p. 303. ISBN 9780191585241.
  2. BBC: Finding Chile's disappeared
  3. Coad, Malcolm (4 September 1991). "Chile exhumes burial ground of the victims of Pinochet's 1973 coup". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 3 May 2014 via LexisNexis. (Subscription required.)
  4. "Patio 29 Declarado Monumento Nacional" [Patio 29 Declared National Monument] (in Spanish). Dirección de Bibliotecas, Archivos y Museos. 17 July 2006. Archived from the original on 3 March 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  5. "Guardian Weekly September 15, 1991". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. 15 September 1991. p. 7. Retrieved 3 May 2014 via LexisNexis. (Subscription required.)
  6. "BBC Monitoring News Diary for Monday 11 September 2006". BBC Monitoring. 11 September 2006. Retrieved 3 May 2014 via LexisNexis. (Subscription required.)
  7. Walkowitz & Knauer 2004, p. 202.
  8. Payne-James, Busuttil & Smock 2003, p. 77.
  9. "Mass grave found". Herald Sun. News Corp. 11 September 1991. Retrieved 3 May 2014 via LexisNexis. (Subscription required.)
  10. Navarro, Lygia (19 August 2006). "Chile mass grave is a national monument now". The Indian Express. Indian Express Group. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  11. Stern 2010, p. 127.
  12. Otano, Rafael (2006). Nueva crónica de la transición. LOM Ediciones. pp. 233–234. ISBN 978-956-282-837-6.
  13. Stern 2010, p. 117.
  14. Stern 2010, p. 334.
  15. Keung, Nicholas (26 November 1998). "Celebration day for victim's wife Toronto woman 'waiting for this day for years'". The Toronto Star. Star Media Group. p. A15. Retrieved 3 May 2014 via LexisNexis. (Subscription required.)
  16. Stern 2010, p. 335.
  17. Morales, Pamela (4 December 2009). "Three Bodies Identified from Chile's Infamous Patio 29". The Santiago Times. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  18. Snyder, Jason (27 August 2008). "Chile's General Cemetery Remembers Pinochet Victims". The Santiago Times. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  19. "Solicitan Declarar Monumento Nacional al Patio 29" [Patio 29 to Be Declared National Monument] (in Spanish). Dirección de Bibliotecas, Archivos y Museos. 18 May 2006. Archived from the original on 3 March 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  20. "Desde este jueves, el Patio 29 es Monumento Nacional" [Since Thursday, Patio 29 is a National Monument]. Radio Cooperativa (in Spanish). 13 July 2006. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  21. Pastorelli, Giuliano (21 November 2010). "Proyecto de Intervención y Puesta en Valor del Patio 29 / García, Rozas, De Simone, Torres, Agosin, Silva, Muñoz" [Patio 29 Intervention and Deference Project]. Plataforma Arquitectura (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  22. "Pinochet's Chile". The Washington Post. 2000. Archived from the original on 3 May 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  23. Walkowitz & Knauer 2004, p. 204.
  24. Klep 2010, p. 125.
  25. Klep 2010, p. 126.
  26. Stern 2010, p. 426.
Sources

Media related to Patio 29 at Wikimedia Commons

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