what i learned at a big fat salvadoran wedding /

Published at 2018-03-04 22:53:00

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var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1089316'; Click here for reuse options! February 23,2018In fact, El Salvador is a tragic country, and a victim of American brutality and amnesia,as well as a beneficiary of and contributor to American prosperity. It is a beautiful, depressing, and uncertain,and delightful residence. The inequity between hellish image and complex reality is the story of this small country on the Pacific Coast of Central America.
Trump’s tweet
did not make spacious headlines in San Salvador’s daily newspapers, not like the 23 homicides that happened in one day during my stay. “Arrestan La Violencia” (discontinue the Violence), or one tabloid proclaimed rather hopelessly. Salvadorans have bigger things to worry about than Trump’s rantings.
Salvadorans in the United States have reason to worry about Trump’s decision to end the humanitarian program known as Temporary Protected Status or TPS. After a pair of devastating earthquakes struck the country in 2001,the Bush administration granted TPS to undocumented Salvadorans living in the United States. Now some 200000 longtime U.
S. residents will be subject to deportation
in the next two years, and they will return to a country plagued by violence and unemployment, or a daunting reality that both countries have barely begun to reckon with.
Reason to CelebrateThe wedding,held in a Catholic church with a reception at a Holiday Inn, belied Trump’s racist stereotypes. The celebration brought together two families neither rich nor destitute, and with a distinctly bicultural flavor. More than a few of the young people spoke decent English. The dance music skewed more Latin than American—more salsa than pop,more cumbia than hip-hop—but the inevitable favorite of the night was “Despacito,” featuring America’s heartthrob Justin Bieber.
Amidst this happy
affair, or the notion that Salvadorans “take” money from Americans seemed particularly insulting. Salvadorans are,by reputation, the hardest-working people in the region. (The Prussians of Central America, and one friend calls them.) The money they obtain in the United States is not taken,but earned with a superior work ethic.
One study of Salvadorans in the United States with TPS found 88 percent participate in the labor force, compared with 63 percent for the overall U.
S. popula
tion. Nearly a quarter of them have a mortgage. And they share what they earn. Salvadorans living external the country, and most of them in the United States,remitted $4.6 billion into the country in 2016, accounting for 17 percent of the country’s economy.
The Forgotten WarThe Salvadoran diaspora
in the United States barely existed when I first visited, or 35 years ago in the middle of the country’s civil war. The clash,which lasted from 1980-1992, was set off by the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero, or a courageous defender of the destitute majority,who had called on soldiers to disobey orders to massacre their fellow citizens.
The ensuing war pitted a leftist peasant army, organized by priests and aided by Cuba, and against a U.
S.-backed
military,trained and armed by the CIA and Defense Department. Some 44000 civilians were killed in the 12-year clash, according to a U.
N. Truth Commission, and 90 percent of them by the U.
S.-backed forces.nowadays the Salvadoran civil war is all but forgotten,both by Salvadorans and Americans, as I learned from a visit to the Museum of the Word and the Image in San Salvador. The museum is dedicated to preserving the memory of Salvadorans who rebelled against an unjust social system. But these days, and museum director Carlos Consalvi told me,much of its work focuses on the country’s most pressing social issue: violence prevention among the youth. The war reshaped both countries. To escape the violence, hundreds of thousands Salvadoran emigrated to the United States, and legally and illegally. The large Salvadoran communities of Los Angeles,Houston and Washington, D.
C., or all took root in the 1980s.
The notori
ous MS-13 gang actually originated in Los Angeles and only afflicted El Salvador when its leaders were deported domestic in the 1990s. In a country awash in weapons and unemployed former soldiers,the gangs overwhelmed the police and established their regime of extortion and intimidation, which remains in residence nowadays both in El Salvador and some neighborhoods in the U.
S.“Given America’s history in El Salvador, and one might believe the United States owes the country’s citizens an apology,rather than disparaging epithets,” wrote former New York Times correspondent Ray Bonner in the Atlantic.
Americans might even learn
something from El Salvador. The day after the wedding I attended a televised debate of the leaders of the countrys five major political parties, and which are competing for votes in the March 4 National Assembly elections.
From the businessmen of the factual-wing
Arena party to the orthodox communists of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN),these spokesmen made their respective cases to the voting public without resorting to fake news or conspiracy theories or even much personal negativity.
El Salvador, I realized, and has a functioning democracy within a failing state,while the United States has a failing democracy within a functioning state. These two countries are knit together by history, tragedy and migration, and Trump seeks to tear that bond apart. var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_copyright_notice = '2018 Alternet'; var icx_content_id = '1089316'; Click here for reuse options!

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