1932 and "La Matanza"
Despite some initial success, Romero's and Arujo's plans for
democratic consolidation were brought to an abrupt end by
international events. The Wall Street Crash in November 1929
and the Great Depression that followed were catastrophic for El
Salvador. Virtually all - 95 percent - of her exports were coffee.
As the market for this collapsed after 1929, so did the country's
economy. All were affected, in particular the landless poor, for
whom living conditions deteriorated appallingly. Unrest both
amongst the destitute masses and the elite grew, and in December
1931 Arujo's brief period in office was ended by a military
coup , engineered by the vice-president General Maximiliano
Hernández MartÃnez.
Social unrest over the deteriorating conditions suffered by
campesinos and the urban poor grew, exacerbated by growing
repression meted out by the new government. On the night of January
22, 1932, thousands of campesinos - the majority indigenous - led
by the Communist Party, rebelled . Armed mainly with
machetes they attacked military installations and haciendas in the
west of the country, assassinating hundreds of civilians including
government functionaries and merchants. Mainly because plans to
rebel had been widely known in the days before the event, the
rebellion itself was rapidly quashed by superior government forces.
The ringleaders were arrested and later executed.
The scale of government repression in the wake of the
failed rebellion was unprecedented in the history of the country.
The army, the police, the Guardia Nacional and the private forces
of the hacienda owners engaged in a week-long orgy of killing.
During " La Matanza " ("the massacre"), as it became known,
anyone suspected of connections to the rebellion, anyone wearing
indigenous dress or anyone simply perceived to be guilty was shot
out of hand. In some cases, whole villages disappeared. Exact
figures have never been known, but the death toll is estimated at
up to 30,000 people, although the government itself insisted that
only 2000 were killed. For El Salvador's indigenous population, the
effects of the massacre went far beyond the immediate death toll.
As it became increasingly dangerous to be identified as
indio (indian), traditional dress, language and customs
largely disappeared.
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