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History of resistance literature
The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo is an Argentine human rights group that began demonstrating in 1977 in response to the National Reorganization Process of Jorge Rafael Videla’s military dictatorship. They were a group of mothers and grandmothers with the central goal of finding their disappeared family members, or desaparecidos, who were illegally abducted and detained by the Arginine regime and holding accountable those who were responsible. Their political resistance, which continues today, is characterized by both large demonstrations in front of the Casa Rosada presidential palace and various graffiti art exhibitions as a public archive of this atrocity and a call to action in addressing current events. Subsequent photo art and memoirs have continued to commemorate their ongoing activism.