Escrache

Escrache is a type of direct action demonstration which involves publicly harassing public figures, usually by congregating around their homes, chanting and publicly shaming them. In Argentina the term was coined in 1995 by the human rights group HIJOS, to condemn the genocides committed by members of the PROCESO who were pardoned by Carlos Menem.

In Chile these actions are known as funa. In Peru they are known as roche and are often signed "El roche".[1][2]

In Spain in 2013, a number the Platform of Mortgage Victims (PAH) held escraches against members of the parliament who were not willing to sign a popular legislative initiative (ILP) supported by 90% of the population,[3] to allow the repossession of homes to cancel out mortgage debt, a law without which homeless former owners would be forced to continue paying the banks after losing their homes.[4][5] The PAH's campaign – "There are lives at stake"[6] – referred to the high rates of suicide among those evicted and detailed strict guidelines of how escraches were to be conducted in nonviolent manner, without insults or affecting the children of the deputies.[7]

Origin of the term

The lunfardo term "escracho" has been used for some time in Río de la Plata. It was mentioned by Benigno B. Lugones in 1879 referring to a scam in which a lottery ticket supposedly naming the victim is presented to them and they are asked to pay to receive it, for an amount which is inferior to the amount they have "won" in the lottery.[8] Escrache might also have come from the Genoese synonym for a photo "scraccé",[9] "scraccé" also passed to mean make a portrait, or more recently to smash someone's face in.[10] Another proposed origin is the English to scratch (the tickets used in the lottery scam were scratched to modify the number) or the Italian scaracio meaning spit.[11]

The term came into wider use in 1995 by the human rights group HIJOS, when Carlos Menem pardoned members of the Proceso de Reorganización Nacional who were accused of human rights violations and genocide. Using chants, music, graffiti, banners, throwing eggs, street theater, etc., they informed neighbors of the presence of murderers in the neighborhood. Over a decade passed before those responsible for the murders committed under the regime of Jorge Rafael Videla were brought to trial for their crimes.

gollark: This is apioform.
gollark: So it works in about 30ms - perfectly okay - *without* the ts_headline, but takes about 30 seconds *with* it.
gollark: It gives a snippet of the page text basically.
gollark: It looks like it somehow incurs a "bitmap heap scan" and "nested loop" but I have no clue why.
gollark: I don't understand why including `ts_headline(pageText, query, 'MaxFragments=3,MaxWords=60')` suddenly makes Postgres decide to operate about 100 times slower on this.

See also

Notes

  1. "El Roche". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  2. País, El (17 February 2013). "Los desahucios unen a los votantes". Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  3. Marco, By Yaiza Hernández, assisted by Ernest. "Mortgage fraud, faux-democracy and escrache in Spain". Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  4. http://www.diagonalperiodico.net/movimientos/la-pah-anuncia-madrid-su-campana-escraches-para-se-apruebe-la-ilp.html
  5. "Hay Vidas en Juego – campaña para que los diputados conozcan por qué tienen que votar favorablemente a las medidas de la ILP hipotecaria". escrache.afectadosporlahipoteca.com. Archived from the original on 22 June 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  6. http://escrache.afectadosporlahipoteca.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2013/03/Protocolos-de-acciones-y-escrache.pdf
  7. Gobello, José: Lunfardía. Introducción al estudio del lenguaje porteño pág. 18 Buenos Aires 1953 Ed. Argos
  8. According to Linguist Roberto Bein
  9. Teruggi, Mario E.: Panorama del lunfardo 2* edición pág. 192 Buenos Aires 1978 Editorial Sudamericana
  10. Teruggi
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.