Victor Jara

Victor Jara was a very famous folk singer and writer in Chile, known all over the world after being killed during the coup in which Salvador Allende died and Pinochet took over. He was caught by the military forces inside the university where he taught, along with several other socialist students and professors, and taken to the national stadium, where they were all held. From here, I've read and heard different versions. The most heroic is that he was playing his guitar in the stadium and an officer ordered him to stop. He kept playing and singing and they cut one of his hands off. As he kept playing with just one hand, they cut the other as well. Uncapable of playing, he kept singing and they shot him... The true facts are that he was shot to death and his body was found with both hands cut. His murder file, together with many more crimes perpetrated during Pinochet's dictatorship, is now being opened again, for trial.

Last week, I went to a bar to hear some live music. There was this one guy with just a guitar, who played several south american songs, not just chilean, which had in common this political resistance message. He played some songs from Victor Jara and Violeta Parra (soon a post about her as well), who were both characters of Chilean's regime. The bar was not big, but was full, full with normal and different people, who all had in common the fact that they would know all the songs, all the lyrics (even when the singer did not) and would suggest other similar songs for him to play. The atmosphere inside was full of feeling, powerful, like flesh wounds still to heal. Pinochet was in power until 1990, meaning that the dictatorship and its effects are still recent for chileans. All the people in that bar were born in the regime and their feeling about it, their value of democracy, is way more present than in Portugal.

© Image from Wikipedia

7 comments:

San said...

Made me think of some biographies taking place during these happenings in Chile.

"Love of justice as the instrument that provides equilibrium for human dignity."

;)

Sadino said...

Indeed! Nevertheless, a pity that sometimes dignity arrives only when life is gone...

Unknown said...

Nem acredito que estás a falar desses dois artistas! O meu pai adora-os e farta-se de ouvir música deles! Estás a ficar um rapaz culto! Quem diria :P

Sadino said...

Oh Mariana, então vê lá se te cultivas também para depois impressionares o teu pai! :p Não sabia que a Violeta também tinha assim tanta projecção em Portugal!

Violeta said...

Pedro, tú tienes razón, las heridas siguen latentes en esta tierra que sangra, más aún cuando nos damos cuenta que, terminado el Régimen Militar, aquellos que lucharon por la democracia y que ahora están en el poder, continúan con la misma mierda. El ideal se quebró y no nos queda más que cantar canciones que nos devuelvan la esperanza, aunque sea por un instante, aunque sea durante una fría noche de jueves.

Sadino said...

Creo que el problema está en liderar. Liderar no es sencillo... Hay que agradar a demasiada gente, gente que no comparte de tus ideales y que por eso te complica el trabajo. Lo malo es que esos huévons siempre salen bien e el triste y pobre leñador siempre se jode...

Hay que decir que ese blog está mejorando su nivel cultural. Ya se escribía inglés y portugués y ahora también español!
Tenho a dizer que este blog está a melhor o seu nivel cultural. Já se escrevia inglês e português e agora também espanhol!
I have to say that this blog is improving its cultural level. English and portuguese was already being written and now also spanish!

HARD CORE MAMA said...

A LUTA, PÁ!
Engraçado que desde pequenina que cantava músicas da banda portuguesa "Brigada Victor Jara" e nunca me ocorreu pesquisar este nome. Apenas deduzi que seria o nome de um dos elementos da banda - burra!
Heróis há muitos. No passado, no presente e no futuro (se não aprendermos as lições que a História nos dá).