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Resonate

In Peru, crimes committed by the state go unpunished. Families seek justice and, in many cases, the remains of a body that will allow them to find closure. This happened during the internal armed conflict and continues to happen today. The names of those responsible change, but the positions remain the same: president, minister, congressman, military officer, police officer.

In a church, in front of the altar, there are dozens of white ossuaries containing the remains of people who disappeared during the internal armed conflict and were found in mass graves. These are handed over to their families in an official ceremony. Elsewhere, other families look at the coffins of their loved ones, killed by the military or police. The procedure is the same: handover, identification, burial.

The mothers of yesterday and today cross paths in the corridors of prosecutors’ offices, at marches, at hearings. They share the silence, the wait for a forensic report, the habit of holding a photograph as proof of existence.

Each restitution is a reminder and a warning. A reminder that the state has not settled the debts of the past. A warning that the violence continues.

While remains from four decades ago are returned, the bodies of young people killed in recent protests are buried. Investigations pile up and files are archived.

In the demonstrations for justice, the names of yesterday are spoken alongside those of today. The echo they leave behind knows no calendar. Memory resounds, loss resounds, and in that sound we discover that democracy coexists with crimes that never ended.