El Immortal . The Immortal

Duration: 01:18:00 In 1979, the Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua ended the dictatorship of the Somoza family. Fearing a second Cuba, the Reagan Administration financed and armed the counterrevolutionaries. What followed was a long and bloody civil war that left many Nicaraguans with deep scars. Wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Rodriguez, Mercedes Moncada
Institution:Open Society Archives at Central European University
Language:Spanish
Published: Lesur, Aaron Fernandez ; Rodriguez, Mercedes Moncada ; Oria, Puy ; Armendariz, Montxo 2005
Nicaragua
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10891/osa:b2cc425b-1420-48cb-8c8f-e06da10e0390
Description
Summary:Duration: 01:18:00 In 1979, the Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua ended the dictatorship of the Somoza family. Fearing a second Cuba, the Reagan Administration financed and armed the counterrevolutionaries. What followed was a long and bloody civil war that left many Nicaraguans with deep scars. When Contras and Sandinistas clashed on 3 April 1983 around the village of Waslala, the Rivera family - mother Julia, daughters Maria and Reina, son Emilio and twins José and Juan - was literally caught in the crossfire. Maria saw her husband tortured to death and Emilio (13) and José (12) kidnapped and recruited by the Contras. 15-year-old Reina went along to watch over them, unaware of the fact that the Contras "went through women like towels." Twin brother Juan remained behind and later, as a conscript on the Sandinista side, fought against his own brother. Twenty years later, the tension is still palpable. The vivid memories of the war and the feelings of hatred and shame make it hard to pick up the pieces. Meanwhile an empty truck called "El Immortal" travels through the village. Director Moncada Rodríguez uses this truck as the leitmotif and shows a country where the war still haunts the villages and jungle.
Published:2005