|   Letter from Guatemala, 
                            August 24, 2002 Dear Friends and Family, It has been a while since I have 
                            had the chance to write. A lot has been going on down 
                            here and with me personally and I havent had 
                            much opportunity to sit at a computer much less organize 
                            my thoughts. Most significant, however, I should tell 
                            you before continuing that 500,000 communion wafers 
                            turned out to NOT BE ENOUGH during Pope John Pauls 
                            visit to Guatemala City recently. Can you believe 
                            it? Guatemalans everywhere found themselves embarrassed 
                            and disillusioned and without a communion wafer. As 
                            if being found guilty of genocide in the Spanish courts 
                            a couple months ago werent enough. THE TRIAL (if you can call 
                            it that)If we dont stop and change direction, 
                            we will end up where we are heading. -Chinese 
                            proverb
 After a series of cancelled dates, 
                            failed appeals and enough 3am departures out of Xamán 
                            to make a good girl turn bad, the trial has been transferred 
                            to a new, yet-to-be-created court in the Ixcán 
                            region. Since the municipal center of the Ixcán 
                            is actually closer to community, this would have been 
                            a good thing -- if only the trial weren't almost over 
                            and it werent logistically impossible for the 
                            lawyer (from the capital) to make it up there on last 
                            minute notice. The lawyer for the community, has of 
                            course appealed the transfer. However, the appeal 
                            cannot be received by the judge due to the fact that 
                            there are no court personnel as of yet in the Ixcán 
                            (details!) not to mention public defenders, a jail 
                            for suspects, or any of the other pleasantries of 
                            a functioning justice system. Estella recently sent 
                            a new appeal to the Supreme Court of Guatemala and 
                            we currently await the hearing. Estella says that 
                            if the transfer goes through, it will be another three 
                            years  at least  before the process begins 
                            again, and what amazing feats of incompetence the 
                            court will come up with at that point remains to be 
                            seen. Of course, many believe that what appears to 
                            be incompetence is actually a very efficient method 
                            of keeping justice from ever being won. Same thing, 
                            really. FAR FROM HOMEIn a climate specifically manipulated to instill fear 
                            and insecurity, it is often hard to discern what is 
                            real and what is your mind (or the mind of your neighbor) 
                            screwing with you. In June and July, there were three 
                            separate reports of armed, masked men seen either 
                            on the outskirts of Xamán or inside the community. 
                            In the midst of these alleged sightings and their 
                            accompanying mayhem, an unidentified man was chased 
                            away from my window late one night. I do not know 
                            if he was a peeping tom (or part of a more sinister 
                            plot!) but I can say that I did find his presence 
                            quite disturbing.
 Meanwhile, more unequivocal threats 
                            and acts of intimidation directed towards human rights 
                            defenders in the capital have been on the rise. On 
                            the morning of July 5, Estella, the lawyer for the 
                            community, was attacked as she walked from her car 
                            to her office building. She fought back, escaping 
                            only after a significant struggle. I visited with 
                            her just yesterday and there was still a huge scar 
                            on her throat where her attackers nails dug 
                            in as he attempted to strangle the life out of her. 
                            Since that incident, she has been followed and intimidated 
                            on various occasions. In late July, the offices of 
                            the only two other international accompaniment organizations 
                            working in Guatemala City were broken into and their 
                            computers were stolen.  LOGICSpain recently decided that while they do consider 
                            what went on in Guatemala in the early 1980s to be 
                            an act of attempted Genocide, they feel that it is 
                            within the jurisdiction of the Guatemalan government 
                            to deal accordingly with this crime. Unfortunately, 
                            since the same man who was President during these 
                            atrocities is now the head of Congress, no one in 
                            Guatemala truly believes that that will be happening 
                            any time soon.
 Meanwhile, back in the US of A, 
                            in July, 29 US citizens were sentenced to 3 to 6 months 
                            for participating in a peaceful protest in Fort Benning, 
                            Georgia, the site of the infamous School of the Americas 
                            (SOA). A training center for Central American military 
                            officers, the SOA was where many Guatemalan military 
                            personnel were trained in counter-insurgency (including 
                            torture) techniques in the early 1980s, during the 
                            attempted genocide (according to not only Spain but 
                            also the UNs Truth Commission Report on Guatemala). 
                            While impunity reigns for these crimes against humanity, 
                            a group of peaceful demonstrators, many of them nuns, 
                            will now serve hard time in a federal prison for holding 
                            a demonstration in the Middle of Nowhere, Georgia. 
                            Sixty-four year old Sister Kathleen Desautels went 
                            on record to say The indignities I will have 
                            to experience in prison pale in comparison to what 
                            the victims of the graduates of that school had to 
                            endure. She and her fellow activists wore T-shirts 
                            proclaiming You can jail the resistors but you 
                            cannot jail the resistance to their hearing. 
                            They have no intention of shutting up now. ME VS. NATUREI got the flu a couple months ago, followed by a 2 
                            kinds of parasites, amoebas in various stages of development, 
                            and even worms. Yes, that was worms. In my stomach. 
                            The medicine for this parque zoologico, 
                            as the doctor called it (he fathomed himself quite 
                            the funny man), was rough on my system and weakened 
                            all natural defenses, making me susceptible to a second 
                            round of animalitos, which also had to be blasted 
                            out with heavy drugs. A couple weeks later, I had 
                            my first scorpion bite and about a week after that, 
                            I acquired a strange foot infection (from bathing 
                            in dirty stream water with an cut on my ankle) which 
                            swelled up my foot to twice its normal size and hurt 
                            like hell, making it nearly impossible to get around.
 I am feeling better now and I have 
                            no intention of not eating, walking or bathing. I 
                            will not give up my struggle. ADIOS As I prepare to close another chapter 
                            in my sordid history with Guatemala, I am questioning 
                            my purpose here and honestly, I dont know if 
                            you can sense it from my letter, but I am feeling 
                            a bit dejected. I have dedicated the past year of 
                            my life to helping a community of returned refugees 
                            in Guatemala feel more secure and so that they can 
                            pursue justice. As I look over my shoulder on my way 
                            out of the country, I see that they neither feel secure 
                            nor have they gotten any closer to any reparations 
                            for or acknowledgment of their losses. They are still 
                            dirt poor, without any clinic, running water or electricity, 
                            afraid of the army and afraid to pursue the extremely 
                            flawed channels that exist for them to pursue justice. 
                            They are without any real means of changing their 
                            reality. I am not sure that this case will endure 
                            the obstacles and fear that it has been so very riddled 
                            with. I am realizing how much determination there 
                            is in Guatemala to keep its history buried deep 
                            in the earth with the clandestine graves of the poor 
                            and indigenous masses that line the countryside and 
                            the ruins of their ancestors triumphs from days long 
                            gone by. I am angry that anyone who wants to work 
                            their way towards uncovering the truth will inevitably 
                            endure many more years of fear and suffering before 
                            they ever see the fruits of their efforts  that 
                            is if their efforts ever reach fruition. I am angry 
                            that such blatant impunity is tolerated not only within 
                            Guatemala but in the international community. I am 
                            angry that the army continues to win every day as 
                            more and more people walk away from the struggle. 
                            I am angry that businessmen and politicians up north 
                            are getting rich off of it. I am angry that people 
                            who work for justice end up getting so screwed. I 
                            try not to let myself sink too deep into this well 
                            of despondency, however, and continually remind myself 
                            that if we dont continue working to uncover 
                            the truth, we allow the impunity, repressionand disparity to flourish. The only thing worse than 
                            living in a world so ugly and so unfair is living 
                            in a world without hope. My friend and personal guru 
                            Goyo tells me that if you expect to see the 
                            results of your work, you are not asking big enough 
                            questions. I have a lot to learn about patience.
 One week ago, I reluctantly said 
                            goodbye to the community of Xamán, assuring 
                            them that the next accompanier is on her way (I didnt 
                            make that up) and that I will be back soon for a visit. 
                            I have accepted a position with Rights Action, a Canadian 
                            organization working throughout Central America, and 
                            I will begin working with them in October as an investigative 
                            reporter, more or less. I will be covering various 
                            issues surrounding the peace process in Guatemala 
                            as well as Natural Resources and Land Sovereignty 
                            Issues throughout Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala 
                            and Chiapas. However, before I dive into that project, 
                            I am going to come home for a month or two to take 
                            a breather, catch up with yall and attend the 
                            wedding of the lovely Miss Bonnie Boecker. So, I hope 
                            to see you soon. Until then, take care.  Jessica Jessica Pupovac is a committed human 
                            rights activist, a dancer and a Karaoke Queen. As 
                            a student she founded the University of Illinois chapter 
                            of the Students for a Free Tibet. She graduated from 
                            U of I in 1999 and left Champaign-Urbana in 2001 to 
                            become a human rights monitor/accompanier with the 
                            Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala 
                            (www.nisgua.org). As an accompanier, she spent one 
                            year living in the community of Xamán - a rural, 
                            indigenous community of returned refugees and the 
                            site of the 1995 Xamán massacre.There, she 
                            provided a degree of security to the community by 
                            bearing witness, attempting to raise awareness of 
                            their struggle in the international community and 
                            traveling with community members to trial. 
 She currently resides in Guatemala City, where she 
                            works with a Canadian NGO, Rights Action.
 
 Her letters have appeared in the Public I and the 
                            paper formerly known as the Octopus, as well as various 
                            solidarity newsletters throughout the US.
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