Antimonumento 43
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An ''
antimonumento In Mexico, anti-monuments (Spanish: ''antimonumentos'') are installed and traditionally placed during popular protests. They are installed to recall a tragic event or to maintain the claim for justice to which governments have failed to provide ...
'' was installed in front of the Superior Court of Justice of Mexico City, on the median strip of Paseo de la Reforma Avenue, in the Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City. The work included the installation of a red number 43 made of metal along with a plus symbol, in reference to the forty-three students kidnapped—and possibly killed—in Iguala, Guerrero, in 2014 after being arrested for allegedly committing criminal offenses, plus the six students and witnesses killed during that event, and to honor the more than 150,000 people killed since the start of the Mexican drug war and the 30,000 disappeared persons reported by 2015. The anti-monument was installed by peaceful protesters during a demonstration on 26 April 2015 as a plea for justice and to prevent the case from being forgotten by the authorities and society. The sculpture became the first of its kind in Mexico and would inspire the installation of other guerrilla-like memorials throughout the city and in other states of the country. The artwork was never given an official name and those who installed it referred to it simply as either ''Antimonumento'' or ''+43''. After the subsequent installation of other unnamed anti-monuments, like the '' Antimonumento +65'' and the '' Antimonumento +72'', the ''Antimonumento +43'' received its name after its physical characteristics. Demonstrators added the slogan of those seeking justice for the case ("Because they were taken alive, we want them back alive!") to the border of the sidewalk and subsequently installed a complement in front of both elements, a concrete turtle with forty-three rocks on its shell with little turtles painted with the names of each of the disappeared on them.


Background

On 26 September 2014, around 100 students of the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers' College in Tixtla, Guerrero, left in buses towards Mexico City to take part in a protest for the anniversary of the Tlatelolco massacre (1968) on 2 October. The buses were illegally obtained due to the lack of resources to buy or rent them. When they arrived in Iguala, approximately from Tixtla, the students split into two groups, some waited to rest on the highway while the second group went to the city's toll booth, where they abducted an intercity bus driver. He agreed to cooperate as long as he was allowed to drop off his passengers at the local bus station. There, the driver spoke to security guards who contacted local authorities. As time passed, the students at the station became suspicious and contacted the other group. Upon arrival, they hijacked three more buses and split into five groups, three went through the city and the remaining went back to the highway. A municipal patrol intercepted the city group in traffic and began firing warning shots. The buses continued on their way and the students responded with stones. After that, more patrols joined the chase and started to shoot at the buses. Seeing themselves surrounded, the students got off and responded by throwing more stones at the officers and these fired their weapons back. Six people (including students and witnesses) were killed, twenty-five people were wounded and forty-three students were arrested. None of those who were arrested was taken into custody and their whereabouts have been unknown since that night. The federal investigation, led by the attorney general of Mexico,
Jesús Murillo Karam Jesús Murillo Karam (born 2 March 1947) is a Mexican lawyer and politician affiliated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). He served as governor of the state of Hidalgo from 1993 to 1998. In 1998 he became Undersecretary of P ...
, concluded that the mayor of Iguala, , and his wife,
María de los Ángeles Pineda Villa María de los Ángeles Pineda Villa is the former first lady of Iguala, a city in Guerrero, Mexico. In October 2014, the Attorney General of Mexico Jesús Murillo Karam accused her and her husband, José Luis Abarca Velázquez, of being the ...
, were holding an event that would be affected negatively by the students. The mayor ordered their apprehension and they were subsequently handed over to members of the local drug gang,
Guerreros Unidos Guerreros Unidos (, ) is a Mexican criminal syndicate in the states of Southern Mexico. In 2014, the cartel kidnapped 43 students from Ayotzinapa College in Iguala, Guerrero. A witness confirmed that soldiers in the Mexican Army were involved ...
, who killed them and disposed of their bodies in the nearby Cocula Municipality.


Protests and installation

After the event was publicized on social networks, multiple protests erupted across the country. Demonstrators created slogans like "We are missing 43!" and "It was the state" and demanded the resignation of the president of Mexico, Enrique Peña Nieto. Since the kidnappings, every 26th of every month, family members and demonstrators march in the streets of Mexico City demanding justice. During the seventh month of protests, on the afternoon of 26 April 2015, unlike the previous demonstrations, in which protesters walked through the streets demanding justice, organizers created a cultural festival in front of the building on Paseo de la Reforma Avenue, within the limits of downtown Mexico City. Approximately 100 people gathered and were asked to create a human barrier as a truck arrived at the intersection of Reforma, Juárez and Bucarelli Avenues. There, the demonstrators began to dig in the gardens of the Reforma median strip in order to place three red-painted metal figures: a plus symbol, a number four and a number three. They handed out flyers titled "+43, an anti-monument for memory and justice". There, they wrote: The numbers are made of steel and have an approximate height of . They were brought from the state of
Jalisco Jalisco (, , ; Nahuatl: Xalixco), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Jalisco ( es, Estado Libre y Soberano de Jalisco ; Nahuatl: Tlahtohcayotl Xalixco), is one of the 31 states which, along with Mexico City, comprise the 32 Federal En ...
, in western Mexico. The figures' foundations were covered with concrete and the protesters installed the phrase "''¡Porque vivos se los llevaron, vivos los queremos!''" ("Because alive they were taken, alive we want them back!") in front of the anti-monument on the edge of the sidewalk and stayed during the night to prevent the Government of Mexico City from removing them. The truck driver was arrested but released hours later.


Reception

The sculpture became the first ''
antimonumento In Mexico, anti-monuments (Spanish: ''antimonumentos'') are installed and traditionally placed during popular protests. They are installed to recall a tragic event or to maintain the claim for justice to which governments have failed to provide ...
'' to be installed in Mexico and since then multiple guerrilla-like memorials have been erected there. A similar work was installed by the Government of
Acapulco Acapulco de Juárez (), commonly called Acapulco ( , also , nah, Acapolco), is a city and major seaport in the state of Guerrero on the Pacific Coast of Mexico, south of Mexico City. Acapulco is located on a deep, semicircular bay and has bee ...
, Guerrero, to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the kidnappings. Cristina Híjar González, researcher at the National Center for Research, Documentation, and Information on the Arts, commented that the work "is a step ahead in collective action for the afe returnof the detained-missing students of Ayotzinapa. It means a political-aesthetic act of living memory and resistance that nhancesthe repertoire of recent protest in Mexico".


References


External links

* {{Public art in Mexico City 2015 establishments in Mexico 2015 sculptures Anti-monuments in Mexico Monuments and memorials in Mexico City Outdoor sculptures in Mexico City Paseo de la Reforma Steel sculptures in Mexico