Vides hopes to enlist Forché as a witness, a means by which news of the coming war's atrocities can be funneled back to America. Forché visited the country multiple times between 19 on a Guggenheim fellowship this experience became the basis for her controversial poetry collection The Country Between Us (1981) – and, much later, What You Have Heard Is True.įorché's memoir begins with an approach by Leonel Gómez Vides, who has traveled from El Salvador to meet Forché knowing that the poet has been translating the work of his aunt, Nicaraguan-Salvadoran writer Claribel Alegría. By one estimate, 65,000 people were either killed or disappeared by El Salvador's military junta during this period, in no small part due to the support it received from the U.S.'s Carter and Reagan administrations. The war would last over a decade and kill untold tens of thousands. In What You Have Heard Is True: A Memoir of Witness and Resistance (2019), poet Carolyn Forché recounts her time in El Salvador in the late 1970s during this time, the country teetered on the edge of a devastating civil war.
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