If that sounded harsh, it was nothing compared to what we were about to see. We arrived in a small, poor village called El Mozote, a few kilometres down the road from our base in Perquin. In December 1981, El Salvadoran troops had rounded up all the men, women and children in the village. After killing the men and adolescent boys, they raped and killed the women. They then killed the children in one massive assassination, international forensic teams later confirmed. The youngest of the children killed was 3 days old.
Cold facts on paper, but they had an extraordinarily raw affect when we stood in the well tended children’s memorial garden on a beautiful sunny day. A wall with all the names of the children under 12 massacred that day stands there – 140 in total with an average age of 6. A local senora showed us round the village. With one little child running round her, and heavily pregnant with another, she explained how she happened to be out of the village on the day of the slaughter. Three of her brothers and three of her sisters were not so lucky.
Signs of the violence remain. We saw a bomb crater and bullet holes in houses caused by air-force strafing. Much of the ammunition was US-supplied. Under Reagan, the American government used millions of dollars of funds each day to help the El Salvador government crush the red ‘threat’, which apparently included newly-borns.
A pretty intense experience, especially for Christmas Day, although we did do some normal festive drinking and over-eating (including some mince pies battered after more than a month in my backpack) that day – more of which later.