The Buenos Aires legislator of the Front of All (FdT), Victoria Montenegro, presented her book “Hasta ser Victoria” at the Argentine embassy in the city of The Hague, in the Netherlands, spokespersons for the bloc reported.
The work traces the history of its appropriation and the subsequent recovery of its identity through the search for the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo.
the legislator He shared the presentation of the book with Rabbi Abraham Soetendorp, a survivor of the Shoah.
Also present were the Argentine ambassador to the Netherlands, Mario Oyarzábal, the executive director of the Anne Frank House Museum, Ronald Leopold, and the director of the Anne Frank Argentina Center for Latin America, Héctor Shalom.
During the event, Montenegrin He detailed how the process of recovering their identity was and the fundamental role played by the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo.
Later, shared an act in the residence of the Argentine ambassador together referents of European human rights and survivors of the Holocaust.
Montenegro, who chairs the Human Rights, Guarantees and Anti-Discrimination Commission of the Buenos Aires Legislature, is carrying out a series of activities linked to the defense of human rights and the prevention of genocide in the Netherlands and Germany, organized by the Ana Frank Argentina Center for Latin America.
The legislator is part of a broad Latin American delegation made up of other legislators, officials and educators.
As part of the agenda of activities carried out by the delegation, on July 21 and 22, Montenegrin will dialogue with survivors of the Shoah and their descendants, relatives of Nazi genocides and relatives of Latin American dictators who repudiate the acts of the perpetrators.
The meeting will take place at the Wannsee Conference House in Berlin, where the “Final Solution” was signed 80 years ago.