News articles from the New York Times regarding issues in Guatemala such as difficult days recalled, 800 reported killed, civil patrols formed, villages destroyed, American aid.
Read moreFact sheets on El Salvador providing quick facts such as the size, population, economy, military rule, unemployment, land exploitation, hunger and malnutrition, and information on Archbishop Oscar Romero.
Read moreAn article from The Nation regarding terrorism in El Salvador and the government’s attempt to democrsize the country.
Read moreDocument relating to the different ethnic groups and languages of El Salvador. It focuses on the Indians of El Salvador and their language, Pipil, which is a dialect of Nahua….
Read moreDocuments relating to the land reform in El Salvador. Includes articles and reports on the issue. Documents are as titled: “Land Reform in El Salvador”, “Labor Council Calls for Action…
Read moreDocument regarding issues of the land-reform in El Salvador. Issues discussed are main problems, uprising of 1932, military rule, land reform a la Prosterman and financing land-reform in El Salvador.
Read moreAn article from Harper’s Magazine regarding El Salvador. The article covers topics such as behind the lines, a village of fear, the face of Jean Donovan, torture as a way…
Read moreEl Salvador Liberation Fighters Launch Final Offensive FMLN’s Call to Arms Massive Solidarity in Nicaragua China Rulers Face Political and Economic Crisis Chinese Publications Discuss Trotskyist Ideas Iran Washington Steps…
Read more“These are the fist of a series of feature articles written for Prensa Latina from El Salvador by Mexican journalist Mario Menendex at the risk of his life. The author…
Read moreA press release regarding U.S. Religious Leaders who visited Mgr. Oscar Romero in El Salvador before he was assassinated. Their trip to El Salvader had three purposes: to express support…
Read moreThe library is dedicated to the memory of Secwepemc Chief George Manuel (1921-1989), to the nations of the Fourth World and to the elders and generations to come.
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