I
am sick, heart sick, of writing about September
11, 2001, the fall of the Twin
Towers, the horror and the agony every year when the anniversary rolls around
again. Yet it seems inevitable, even
somehow necessary.
This
year I yearned to commemorate another black anniversary instead—the Chilean Coup of 1973—forty years ago
today. But the subject was so vast, the
details, all essential to a real understanding of what happen on an early
spring day in the Southern Hemisphere,
too complex. I read. I studied.
I began to write and I could see that a book, not a blog entry would be
needed, particularly because the memory has been obscured and erased for Americans
who do not want to be reminded of the atrocity on our own hands, preferring to
wallow in in the victimhood of one perpetrated against us.
I
wanted to describe the perfidy of the Generals
and Admirals, the collusion of
American companies like ITT, the
last stand of President Salvador Allende
in La Moneda presidential palace, the viciousness of the
oppression, the soccer stadium jammed with 40,000 waiting for a thumbs up or
down on life, the thousands of the disappeared,
and the years of terror under the Junta and
the strutting martinet usurper Augusto
Pinochet.
And
I wanted to once again lay bare the deep responsibility of the United States Government and all of its
available organs, not the least of which were the United States Information
Agency (USIA)—dispenser of black propaganda
against Allende’s socialist government,
aid agencies, the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the highest echelons of the State Department, and—with just a
thread of plausible deniability—the Nixon
White House even as it tottered to its own demise.
I
wanted to detail the undeniable facts of American complicity and bloody hands
as laid out by the Senate Church
Committee in its 1976 investigation in which Senator Frank Church concluded, “Like Caesar peering into the
colonies from distant Rome, Nixon said the choice of government by the Chileans
was unacceptable to the president of the United States. The attitude in the
White House seemed to be, ‘If in the wake of Vietnam I can no longer send in
the Marines, then I will send in the CIA.’” And the horrors uncovered by the Chileans
themselves when Pinochet was finally removed.
I
wanted to say how deeply personal it was to me.
While I was in Sandstone Federal
Prison in 1972, as the relationship between President Allende and the
bought and paid for Chilean Congress deteriorated
to the point where a coup or civil war
seemed inevitable, I thought I might go there when I got out—perhaps the
absurdly romantic notion of someone who had immersed himself in reading about
the Spanish Civil War during my
incarceration.
Of
course I did not go. I returned to Chicago and my activities with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), including service on the editorial collective of the Industrial
Worker.
But another Draft
Resistor and Wobbly the same age
as me did. Frank Teruggi was a committed activist with Chicago Area Draft Resistors (CADRE),
Chicago Area Group on Latin America (CAGLA), New World Resource Center, SDS
organizer at Caltech, and writer for
FIN Fuente Norteamericano de Informacion
magazine (FIN). Nine days after the coup Teruggi, who was studying at the
University of Chile in Santiago, was arrested by Carabineros, para-military police at
his home with his roommate, David
Hathaway. Both men were taken to a local police station, and then to the National Stadium. Two days later, his
body was delivered to the city morgue bearing signs of torture and multiple
gunshot wounds. The government claimed
that they had released him and even that he may have been killed by pro-Allende
forces who suspected him of collaboration.
The
story of Teruggi’s father’s desperate search for information on what happened
to his son became the inspiration for Missing, a 1982 American film
directed by Costa Gavras, and
starring Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek.
But
long before that, in late ’73 the Industrial
Worker received bundles of letter written to his father and others which I
edited and published as a series Frank Teruggi’s Last Dispatches.
Teruggi’s
fate, no matter how personal to me, was just one abomination among
thousands. Hundreds were killed over the
next few years and at least 3,000 simply disappeared without a trace,
undoubtedly murdered and buried in secret.
I
wanted to tell you about all of it so you wouldn’t forget. So that the images burned as brightly in your
mind and memory as any falling bodies from the Twin Towers.
But,
alas, I have had to throw my hands up in despair. The best I could do was this:
Two Anniversaries
September 11,
2013
I’ll ante my
3,000 vaporized on a crystal morning.
You’ll see me
your 3,000 homeless ghosts.
I’ll give you my
crumbling Towers and billowing ash.
You will call
with the bombed rubble of La Moneda .
I’ll throw in a stack
of terrorists with beards and turbans.
You’ll count out
freckled faces, crew cuts, and black fedoras.
Let’s show our
cards and see who loses.
--Patrick Murfin
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