Rigoberta Menchu has dedicated her life for betterment of the people of her nation and is credited to bring an end to Guatemalan Civil War
@Author, Timeline and Childhood
Rigoberta Menchu has dedicated her life for betterment of the people of her nation and is credited to bring an end to Guatemalan Civil War
Rigoberta Menchú born at
She lost several members of her family during the Guatemalan Civil War including her father who died during a protest and her mother who was violently tortured and killed.
In 1983, her life story was transcribed and translated into English in the book 'I, Rigoberta Menchu' and was based on interviews by Elisabeth Burgos Debray. It became an internationally recognized record of the Guatemalan struggles. There has been some controversy surrounding the credibility of her account of the crimes she witnessed but many have supported her testimonies.
Rigoberta Menchú had pledged not to marry and dedeicate all her life to her work. But she reneged on her pledge and got married to Angel Canil, who is 10 years younger to her, in 1995. The couple have adopted a son named Mash Nawalj'a.
Rigoberta Menchu Tum was born January 9, 1959 to Vicente Menchu and Juana Tum in Chimel, Guatemala and is one of nine children. Her family was a part of the Quiche sect of Mayans.
Her community was poor, so she grew up working on farms and plantations six months out of the year to help support her family. Her childhood memories of the conditions under which she and her family had to work helped influence her later work; she lost a younger brother to starvation as they struggled to make ends meet.
As a teenager, she was keenly interested in social activism and took part in women's rights groups.
Her early years were shaped by a tumultuous time in Guatemalan history, the Guatemalan Civil War, during which the government was overthrown, and unrest and violence took over.
When their community was threatened, her father, a community leader and activist, helped lead the resistance in their local community. His involvement resulted in his imprisonment and torture. Despite suffering several atrocities he remained undeterred from his goal and joined the ‘Committee of the Peasant Union’ (CUC) to continue fighting for rights for Mayans and the lower class after being released.
Following in the footsteps of his father Rigoberta became a part of the CUC, in 1979, to continue fighting for the rights of the Mayan people who were being persecuted by the Guatemalan government.
She was a part of a large farm worker strike in 1980 which was organized by the CUC.
In mid-1981, Menchu demonstrated in the Guatemalan capital city against the government's unfair treatment. She was then in danger for her life and, that same year, managed to escape the country to Mexico to avoid capture and punishment. There she continued her work for the Mayan poor by exposing the tragedies happening in Guatemala.
She helped found ‘The United Representation of the Guatemalan Opposition’ in 1982 which opposed the militaristic rule in Guatemala.
In 1983, she became a member of the 31st of January Popular Front and started educating those being persecuted to fight against the brutal rule of the government. Three years later she progressed to the National Coordinating Committee of the CUC.
In 1983, she narrated the documentary 'When the Mountains Tremble' which became an important historical document cataloging the Guatemalan government's crimes against its people.