From the Madison-Arcatao Sister City Project, Madison, Wisconsin:
This spring, in collaboration with several Madison churches, the Madison Arcatao Sister
City Project (MASCP) presented "Stations of the Struggle," a traveling art
exhibit during the 2008 Lent season. The Stations of the Struggle exhibit
honors the fact that the people of our sister city of Arcatao, El Salvador do
not have to look far in their history to see parallels to Christ's pain and
struggle depicted in the traditional Stations of the Cross. Healing from a long
and violent civil war, the people of Arcatao have undergone their own struggle
and continue to stand up for their human rights in the face of oppression.
As some of you may know from visiting other Salvadoran sister cities, on
the walls of the church in Arcatao are painted the Stations of the Cross,
depicting the persecution, painful walk to Calvary,
death, and resurrection of Jesus. This is a common feature of Catholic churches
worldwide. In Arcatao, the people have added a parallel story: their own.
Painted next to each station's mural of Jesus is a mural of an event
significant to the human rights struggle of Arcatao.
In August of 2006, Madison
delegates from the Movement Building Delegation traveled to Arcatao and were
moved by this powerful depiction of truth and healing. Photographer Roland
Torres, a member of this delegation, captured the essence of these paintings in
his photographs. Community members and MASCP members organized the printing and
display of the exhibit pieces from the original photographs Mr. Torres took
last year.
MASCP collaborated with 3 local churches to host the
traveling exhibit, as each church chose to draw attention to the exhibit in
their own way during various times of mass, service, and alternative reflections.
Each church hosted the exhibit for approximately two weeks, where church
members and the general public could witness the display of photographs that
shed light on the past struggle of the people of Arcatao. Materials accompanied
the exhibit, explaining that oppression and human rights struggles are not
things of the past for the people of El Salvador; rather that, even
today, various forms of oppression have reared their heads in the disguise of
remilitarization, mining of the lands, and privatization of basic needs.
The Stations of the Struggle traveling exhibit depicts the
context in which the people of Arcatao live. The photographs were interpreted
often as heartbreaking and tragic. However, the final station depicts an image
of rebuilding, hope, and resilience. The Stations of the Struggle exhibit
allowed us - MASCP members, community members, church members - to witness the
determination of the people of Arcatao to heal from the past and organize to
build a more just future.
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