Step into the small offices of the Archive for Permanent Memory (Archivo Permanente Para La Memoria) and follow the main hallway to reach a cramped room divided up by computer stations, shelves that hold meticulously organized stacks of binders, boxes of cassettes and discs, and [RETURN TO ARTICLE]
FOLLOW US
Also by Joseph Huff-Hannon
-
Changing the Climate for Justice
In a central plaza of the Universidad del Valle in Cochabamba, Bolivia, a small group of men and...
MORE » -
Locating Argentine Memories
The Archive for Permanent Memory reunites children of the disappeared with their pasts
MORE »
SUPPORT INDEPENDENT MEDIA
Invest in the news you need. In These Times is a nonprofit, reader-supported magazine and website.
subscribe today for $19.95!
SAVE 53% OFFTHE NEWSSTAND PRICE!
MOST READ
- Why Conservatives Can’t Fix Poverty
- The Girl’s Guide to Staying Safe Online
- Siri and the High-Tech Gender Gap
- It’s the Stupid Republicans, Stupid
- True Crime Finance Stories
- Is the Federal Government Helping to Bust Unions?
- Anger Sowing Seeds of a New Consumer Movement
- What Can Labor Learn?
- Marching Off the Cliff
- New Eden, Old Devils

Reader Comments
A very moving and powerful story. As a museum professionnal, I’m touched by how the Argentinian people have used photos, recordings, and other miscellaneous documents to give tangible reality to hidden histories concealed by systems of oppression.
register a new account »Posting Security