V V V V NW qw -W v w LA -W v w a COVER STORY w InAA fhn Pilar's story -Escape from persecution Last week, Daily reporter Caroline Muller met with - Pilar Celeya and her family at the Frien- ds Meeting house in Ann Arbor. The Salvadoran family came to Ann Arbor in July, 1985 as part of' the sanctuary movement, a nationwide group of churches and synagogues devoted to providing a; safe shelter for Central American refugees. The interview was tran- slated by Residential College senior Mary Dorst Daily: What city are you from in El Salvador? Celaya: San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador. D: What was the reason for your family's decision to flee the country? C: Because of government per- secution. D: The fear of persecution? C: No, actual persecution. D: Why were you persecuted? C: "We were all union workers in El Salvador. I am one of 10 children. Of the 10, eight were involved in union movements. This is the reason why we hadeto leave the country - because the government suspected everything that was associated with unions. I started getting involved with unions in 1973. All my brothers were also participating at that time, and Aurelio began in 1975. So we had protests in the streets and demon- strations. We had work stoppages so that we could demand better con- ditions and so on. We weren't just going to sit there and do nothing. We decided to participate and be a part of the work demonstratons and mar- ches. These had very grave consequences for us. My husband was working as a union organizer for about three years, and I myself for about seven. One of my brothers was captured in a factory in 1979 with 25 other workers. We were detained for eight days. And after these eight days, they were given liberty because of a lot of pressure brought by unions. Even though they were given liberty, by the time another week had gone by, people started disappearing. At this time, my husband and my brothers realized what was hap- pening to their friends in the factory - that they were turning up tortured and zo forth. D: Tortured? C: Some turned up tortured, the others vanished. They gave up their jobs and moved out of the house they were living in so that the government wouldn't find them there. This was September 3,1979. From this day, until February of 1980, my husband and my brothers only came to the house every once in a while to pick up clothes, or do something briefly. At this time we were very sure we were being watched, and that the government was looking to see if we were in the house. I also stopped working at the time because I feared returning to my factory. So Feb. 17, 1980, a death squad visited our house.1 A death squad is like an arm of the1 Salvadoran. military. This isn't of- ficially acknowledged by the gover- nment, but this is true, because no of-, ficial of the death squad has ever been1 captured by the government or im-1 prisoned. . So 7:30 in the evening, a member of the death squad came to our house9 asking for a glass of water, but really1 wanting to see who was in our house. They thought that they saw my husband and my two brothers in the house, but they actually saw a young friend, my younger sister's boyfriend, and my brother-in-law. My brother-in- law always worked as a security guard in the factory, and was never involved with any union activities, so he didn't think it was dangerous for him to stay in the house. He went outside to see what was going on. He didn't even get to the border of the property, because the death squad shot him, and he died in- stantly from a bullet in the heart. The children jumped under the bed at that point, for they have learned to protect themselves. But the death squads came in and started shooting at the men. They killed my younger sister's boyfriend, and wounded our 18-year- old friend. Everyone tried to protect themselves. My younger sister, who was 18 at the time, was also shot across the legs very severely, and they also wounded a 5-year-old girl. When they couldn't see any more to shoot, just because the room was so filled with smoke, they didn't leave it at that, they shot up every little thing we had, and shot completely through the roof, destroying it. As soon as we were really sure they had left, we went out to see what we could do to help the people who had been injured. Sometimes I forget ,whan I'm telling this testimony of ours to include this part, that later this very same night, three members of a death squad, different members, came to the hospital where my sister was being treated for her wounds, and tried to arrest her also. Fortunately, we had some friends who were working in the hospital, who knew her, and prevented the death squads from taking my sister away. We couldn't ask the police to help us because they were the very same death squad people. Our friends helped switch hospital rooms and promised us that they wouldn't let just anyone in, except us. From that very night we had to leave our house, never to return to it again. Eighteen of us had been living there, and we scat- tered to different parts of El Salvador. My sister was in the hospital for more than a year, because she was machine-gunned right across her legs, and they had to operate on her again and again. We always went to visit her there. We knew that we could in no way leave the country at that time, with my sister still in the hospital. That would have been completely im- possible. She was in the hospital for the entire year of 1980, and then Jan. 26, 1981, they found another of our brothers, who was a union member. He was taking care of his three month-old daughter at the time in the neigh- borhood where he was living, and they completely surrounded the house and beat him and captured him, and they left the daughter with some neigh- bors. So, for an entire eight days he just disappeared from us, we had no idea where he was, or what was hap- pening, .and he was subjected to tor- tures this whole time. They gave him electric shocks and a whole series of tortures in the national jail. They wanted him to admit to a whole list of charges that they drew up, which he was completely innocent of. So for eight days he denied them, saying, 'No, I will not admit to something I am not guilty of.' At the end of these eight days, he finally admitted to these trumped-up charges because the government let him know exactly where each one of us was living, addresses, how many people were in the house, and that they would attack with a machine gun everyone in these houses unless he admitted to the charges. And no one knew where we were, not even the Red Cross. 'So if you don't admit to these charges,' they said, 'we'll kill you and everyone of your family members also.' He had to memorize pages and pages of charges that he was accused of, and read them on national television. D: What did they accuse him of? C: That he was the head of a whole band of terrorists, and that he was guilty of all the things the National Guard had accused him of in this position, that he had given medical help to the guerrillas. Many, many charges, and he just had to accept them all. The International Red Cross spoke with him, but couldn't see him, because the authorities wouldn'tlet them see him because of all the tor- tures he had received. They could only speak with him. So it was two weeks, maybe a month later, that they put him in the infamous Mariana Prison. We visited him the entire year when he was in prison, at least once a week, to give him food and see how he was doing, because they hardly even gave him food in prison. In the beginning of this year, 1981, my husband, Aurelio, and my brothers had to leave immediately, without thinking about passports or documents or anything. They just fled. D: While your brother was still in prison? C: Yes. They left the country along with my sister-in-law, walking almost all the way without any money, until they finally managed to get to Mexico. D: How many miles was this? C: It's a 40-hour bus ride, but that's if you go straight. They tfiey did a heck of a lot of walking. Sometimes they had to sleep under trees and travel at night, under the security of darkness. Myself, my mother, and the children - practically all women and children - were the only ones left there, and we stayed in El Salvador until they finally let my brother out of prison on December 12, 1981. My problem was that as soon as they gave him liberty, I had to sign a statement saying that he was being released. They had all the facts, my name, my address, my signature, and everything else, and as soon as they let him out, he went immediately to the Mexican Embassy to seek refuge, and they also couldn't get rid of him there because he would have been killed instantly if he were on the streets. So as soon as he was released, it just became an even worse night- mare for me. Aurelio and almost By 1944,t everyone had left already, and I had completely si to. go from one -place to another to doing, not re: protect ourselves and myself, to hide and other hur from the authorities during all of and the peol December '81, and into January '82. anymore unti So it wasn't until the first week of fice, out of the February, 1982, that I finally was able In 1944, th to leave the country. We borrowed strike. Eveni money for the bus tickets to leave, for been killed in my mother and children. We arrived to the street in Mexico in February of 1982 without 'folded arms a fixed place to be. We had been going real happy at from here to there for so long in El was kicked o Salvador we had nothing in Mexico, just followed really. there has ju We were in Mexico until last year, military men when we had the opportunity to come 50 years. The into the U.S. and continue in our kind of repr struggle here. Even if we can't par- out of the ticipate in marches in El Salvador maiming the now, we can bring our message to respecting ar North Americans and tell them of our It wasn't u struggle and our situation in El finally starte Salvad again into ur D: Did you know you were going to wouldn't star live in the Quaker church before you were compl came to Ann Arbor? treatment th C: We knew since we were leaving military dic Mexico that we would be coming to movement b Ann Arbor to live with the Quakers. the union D: Have the people in Ann Arbor growing littl been receptive to you? ferent work C: The reaction has been very, very have tremen good. Many people have told us that themselvesa they did not know what .was happen- this. This is h ing in El Salvador. Since we've involved wit arrived here, and have been able to began in 197 give our testimony, people who didn't begun before know anything really at all have The move joined in solidarity with us, and there are uni are very interested in learning and strugglin what's really going on. D: Are th D: How would you describe the at- union movem titude of the police since you've been C: There isc here? federation of C: Well, I don't think they really that is pro-g mind we're here. We haven't really rest of them a had any encounters with them. They D: Do they know we're here. government? D: Let's back up a little bit. What unions are re the unions like in. El Salvador? Are C: They'r( they similar to ones in the U.S., where for a changE they work for better wages and change in a working conditions? basic rights C: I don't know much about the change so th union movement here in the U.S.,.but can choose t I do understand that it is very dif- try, not so th ferent from the unions in El Salvador. been before, Salvadoran unions fight just to sur- the United S vive. They fight and struggle just to government: get enough to eat, to be able to Many peop educate their children. They don't have democratic e people were just fed up, ick of what he had been specting the right to life Oman rights of the people, ple agreed not to work il this man was out of of- e country. here was a huge, huge though 32,000 people had 1932, everyone just went ts in what we called a strike.' The people were t first when this dictator out of office, but he was by another dictator. So st been a succession of n ruling the country for y've continued the same ession - kicking people country, killing them em, torturing them, not ny rights whatsoever. ntil 1968 that the people d organizing themselves nions, because they just nd for it anymore. They etely fed up with the ey were getting from the clators, and the union egan again. From 1968, movement has been e by little in each dif- place, and the people dous courage to organize and work together like ow I, in 1973, began to get th union work. Aurelio 5, and my brothers had I did. public schools there like we do here. They fight to be able to buy medicine, to be able to cure themselves of illnesses and injuries, for the basic dignities that belong to human beings. From 1922 to 1928 in El Salvador, there was a period of a group of presidents that gave a slight opening, a slight opportunity to workers, to unions, to the people. In 1930, there was a president that gave quite a bit of space for people to organize. Then in 1931, there was a military man who overthrew this more liberal president, and from that moment on, the union movement has just been destroyed - he cracked down on everyone. In the beginning of 1932, there was what they call 'The Massacre,' where 32,000 people were killed - rural people, farmers, students, professionals . . . everyone. For the next 14 years, the union movement was completely stopped because of this president. Salvador nov struggling? M This is be choose Duar him put ther put there b doesn't have1 It's only f relations, sot and say to1 working ag government democratic. The gover people and t supposedlyt of taxes. B already quite does continu D: Are you of El Salvad C: The b repression is to stop sendi teacher, wh ment hasn't stopped, ions organizing, working g. here factions within the ent? one union, the CGS (Con- tf Salvadoran Workers), government, but all the are not. want to see a totally new It seems as though the volutionary. e not necessarily asking e in government, but a ttitude, so that people's are respected, and a at the people themselves he leaders of their coun- hat it continues as it has with the government of States choosing who our shall be in El Salvador. ple ask, 'Well, if there's a government in El w, why are the people still Why is there war?' cause the people didn't te, didn't choose to have e. He's like a puppet, he's by other forces and he the support of the people. or image, for public that they can hold him up the people, 'Oh, you're gainst the democratic t.' But it's really not nment continues to kill o repress the people, and there's this new package ut they've been taxed e a lot, and the repression e. u optimistic for the future or? best way to stop the s for the U.S. government ng arms to El Salvador. A o is dead now, said that if could finance the family's basic nece> possible legal fees if the group was migration officials. But the Friends' commitment to heli outweighed even the worst-case scen the U.S. had not sent arms to ElI Salvador, the war would have beenx over years ago. And the governmentc here is sending napalm bombs to El1 Salvador that are being dropped onr the people. They send the government of El Salvador very sophisticatedt weapons that can kill lots and lots of1 people at one time. D:How many people support the present government? C: Sixty thousand people recently marched in protest against the gover- nment in El Salvador. Every day, more and more unions appear, although each person knows that it is death that awaits them by doing this, and people continue to disappear. I don't know what the unions in the U.S. ask of the government, but in El Salvador we're asking first, that they respect our right to life, and second, that we are assured work. We fight to have access to health care, because, for instance, there's only one hospital in the whole capital. We're asking that. we can educate our children, that we're paid enough so that we can af- ford to give them an education. We ask that they build more schools because the ones that they have do not reach the entire school population, and this is why there is 65% illiteracy in El Salvador. D: How do you see the role of the church in El Salvador? C: In the beginning of 1977, Oscar Romero became the archbishop of the country, and he brought tremendous changes to the Catholic Church. He brought about the right of rural people to organize themselves, because it had said in our constitution that rural people do not have the right to organize themselves. But after Romero came in, he obtained that right for them. He just became in- volved in everything. He very much understood the misery of our people. He went to every single corner of the country, talking to people, finding out what we needed, and what the situation was. D: Would you say the government respected him at first? C: Yes, at first they thought he would be just as conservative as all the other archbishops that had preceded him. But when they began to understand that what he was really doing was speaking for the people, and being interested in their misery, they immediately started accusing him of being subversive, and a terrorist, and all this stuff. They called him the communist priest. D: Is it fair to say that Romero brought about the first real change in thinking for the Salvadoran people, that he made them believe that they had power themselves, or that they could do something to change their lives? C: Yes. D: What role could the University play in furthering the sanctuary movement? C: I do think that the University could invite us to talk in the classes, because there are so many students that just don't understand anything (about El Salvador). If they invite us, with much pleasure we would go and speak in classes. I ctu far me kn sit tu, lal nn re br peg an wh re wa Ce Th di( the Th dr be ch is ce ge rig de se he go. co bu Yo We at ott m 0 m 3 m m d Ihe Celayas are among refugee families currently aided by the Sanctuarv movement. 6 Weekend-April 11, 1986