It appears I may have found the first case of a Argentinian Jewish mother and baby Gellman who was 'disappeared' by Israeli conytrolled Zioniast Catholic Argewntine military in the 1970's.However it may be that coincidentally the wife of the Jewish Gelman may noyt herself have been Jewish,in which casre I'm still back to zero examles where statistically out of 500 estimated babies of female Argentine victims we should find 50 plis Jewisgh Argentine babies that should have gomne missining if 50 + Jewish females under wenrt what the other 400 + Catholic mothers experienced before their brutal murders while Pope Francis remained silent.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jul/08/pope-francis-south-america-argentina-dirty-war-dictatorship
She recalls the story of the late Argentine poet Juan Gelman, whose son and daughter-in-law, who was seven months pregnant, were “disappeared”.
Boitano said that while he was in political exile in 1978, Gelman went to the Vatican to hunt for clues about whether his grandchild had survived. There, an official confirmed that his daughter-in-law had indeed given birth while she was in a detention camp.
Years later, in 1990, Gelman’s son’s remains were found in a cement-filled barrel. His daughter-in-law, Maria Claudia, who was Uruguayan, had been flown to Uruguay and given birth before her presumed death. In 2000, Gelman discovered his granddaughter and the two eventually met.
Boitano believes the church knew many of these critical details as early as 1978, but did nothing to help victims’ families. Nuns were also sometimes on hand for the birth of children born by pregnant victims..............
jewish women disappeared in argentina by military junta a ...
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23 jun. 2015 - jewish women disappeared in argentina by military junta a myth - zionist ... Pope Francis, the Dirty War and the Jews - The Forward.wolfblitzzer0: Demented Pope Francis aka Jorge Mario ...
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Rape Of Argentine Jewish Women ,A Pope Francis
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jul/08/pope-francis-south-america-argentina-dirty-war-dictatorship
Pope's South American tour recalls a divided church – and a dirty war
Argentina’s church apologised for ‘silence’ amid the 1976-83 dictatorship – now an activist wants the Vatican to shed light on the people who disappeared
Angela “Lita” Boitano was standing about 50 meters away from her daughter Adriana when a car pulled up carrying a group of men who she later learned were Argentinian military policemen dressed as civilians.
They grabbed 24-year-old Adriana and bundled her into the car before speeding away. Lita never saw her daughter again. It was the second time tragedy had befallen Boitano: a year earlier, in 1976, her 20-year old son, Michelangelo, had disappeared on his way home.
As many as 30,000 people are thought to have joined the ranks of Argentina’sdesaparecidos, the term used for political opponents of Argentina’s 1976-83 dictatorship who were kidnapped, tortured for information and then made to vanish.
For Boitano, the loss of her two children not long after she was widowed in 1968 transformed her into an activist, a role she still plays today, at the age of 83.
“The strength to live came from our children – to search for them in the hope that they would be alive. Because I was left with nobody,” she told the Guardian.
That search has taken her all the way inside the halls of the Vatican, where, she believes, meticulous files have been kept about the people who disappeared. These files were principally collected through the papal nuncio’s office in Buenos Aires at the time, where victims’ families would file written complaints about the disappearances...........
Although the role of Pope Francis, then head of the Jesuit order in Argentina, has been called into doubt in the past, he has always made it clear he had no sympathies for the military regime. In 2006, on the 30th anniversary of Angelelli’s murder, then Cardinal Bergoglio said the bishop “was stoned for spreading the Gospel and paid for it with his blood”.
Argentina’s church itself recognised its failure to condemn the dictatorship. In a statement it issued in September 2000, Argentina’s bishops apologised for their “silence” and the “effective participation” of some clergymen in “torture, delation, political persecution” during the regime.
But Boitano, the Argentine activist who lost her two children, is still waiting for a more meaningful recognition by theVatican of the role some clergy played during the dirty war.
She recalls the story of the late Argentine poet Juan Gelman, whose son and daughter-in-law, who was seven months pregnant, were “disappeared”.
Boitano said that while he was in political exile in 1978, Gelman went to the Vatican to hunt for clues about whether his grandchild had survived. There, an official confirmed that his daughter-in-law had indeed given birth while she was in a detention camp.
Years later, in 1990, Gelman’s son’s remains were found in a cement-filled barrel. His daughter-in-law, Maria Claudia, who was Uruguayan, had been flown to Uruguay and given birth before her presumed death. In 2000, Gelman discovered his granddaughter and the two eventually met...........................
Published in Israel's english Haaretz earlier this year shortly after alleged murder of Jewish Argentine government attorney Nisman.
http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.639110
Argentina’s Jews are serving the far right’s silent revolution
It has been proved once again that in Argentina truth is stranger than fiction. What appeared to be a conspiracy theory has taken on real form; who knows what monster is lurking. Dark forces from the past are returning, keen to reap vengeance on the Kirchner family because late Argentine President Néstor Kirchner, the husband of his successor Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, put them on trial for crimes against humanity.
About a week ago I wrote in Haaretz’s Hebrew edition that the murder of prosecutor Alberto Nisman reeked of a well-timed right-wing conspiracy, in cahoots with former police and army officials, to overthrow the government and destroy Argentina’s democracy, still weak after 30 years.
Indeed, as information leaks out, the conclusion that Argentina is undergoing an attempted revolution strengthens. This is an elegant, sophisticated and refined revolution. It’s being carried out not by tanks or attacks on the Casa Rosada, Argentina’s White House, but by stoking the kind of social and economic chaos that overthrew Chilean President Salvador Allende in 1973, which Naomi Klein described so well in her book “The Shock Doctrine.”
And here, amid all the commotion, smoke and disinformation, surfaces the Jewish connection — mainly because the affair revolves around the 1994 terror attack on the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires — and the 85 victims who were buried underneath. Second, the journalist Damián Pachter who broke the news of Nisman’s death received death threats and fled to Israel, leaving behind a trail of speculation on his motives.
Worse still is the role the Jewish community is unwittingly playing in this despicable affair as it protests the deal Argentina signed with Iran in the attempt to absolve Tehran of responsibility for the terror attack. This deal is controversial and problematic no doubt, but it does not measure up to Israel’s arms deals with Argentina’s junta during the dictatorship launched in 1976. In the 1970s, the number of Jews murdered by the junta by Israeli-made arms was several times greater than the number of Jews later murdered by Tehran’s minions in Buenos Aires.
And the community doesn’t notice that the far right is latching onto the legitimate protest and building the revolution's foundations based on its criticism. Not only does this attempt not serve the Jews, but you don’t have to be a historian to know that it will target them sooner or later.
Nisman, who was murdered a week ago, is an example of the Jewish drama in Argentina. He was infected by the obsession with Iran that infected the entire community. He was nourished by materials that Israel gave him (according to the local media), and was used by the right wing to promote a revolution he probably never wanted. In the end, he paid with his life.
This is the story of Argentina’s Jews on a small scale. I ask myself how these wise and good-hearted people could have fallen into a trap and wound up on the same side as the country’s fascists.
If that weren’t enough, there’s the Israeli connection. Israel has become an player in the Argentine drama, and not for the right production company. Argentines believe that it gave intelligence to Nisman, and now the reporter who broke the story has found refuge there.
Israel probably isn’t directly involved in the affair, but Argentines see it as an extremely powerful player making things complicated for two major reasons: first, because this is a chance to strike at Iran; second, because Israel has a score to settle with Latin America’s “left-wing” governments that embrace the Palestinians and vote against Israel at the United Nations.
Even if this theory is far-fetched, the two reasons sound logical. As far as Israel is concerned, the Argentine right wing is more Zionist than the current government, and that’s enough reason to speed up regime change.
So Argentina’s Jews, whose pain is real, have become pawns in the hands of foreign interests who have nothing to do with them. Worse, they are serving a historical process that has been timed by forces that not only care nothing about the Jews, but will settle accounts with them the first chance they get.
Ironically, it seems that when Argentine Jews hit the streets last week to protest, holding signs reading “We are Nisman,” they knew what they were talking about.
Dr. Meir Margalit, the coordinator of the Latin America desk at the Forum of Peace Organizations, heads the Center for Advancement in Peace Initiatives.
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