FMLN – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Fri, 07 Feb 2025 16:06:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png FMLN – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 From El Salvador’s Civil War, a Lesson in the Power of Popular Education https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/from-el-salvadors-civil-war-a-lesson-in-the-power-of-popular-education/ Fri, 31 Jan 2025 20:28:55 +0000 https://now.fordham.edu/?p=200357 During the civil war in El Salvador in the 1980s, when insurgents were battling the country’s military dictatorship, a different sort of campaign was taking place in the background—waged not with weapons of war but with books and pens and instruction.

While pursuing her doctoral studies, Fordham history professor Stephanie Huezo, Ph.D., was intrigued to learn about those who were “teaching people to read and write during a war, when they were fleeing military operations,” she said. Thus began her research that led to her current book project on how popular education has helped people organize and effect change—in both El Salvador and the United States.

Revolutionary Learners

Huezo is on leave this semester writing the book, tentatively titled Revolutionary Learners: Grassroots Organizing and Political Consciousness in Salvadoran Communities (1980-2020). Her work is supported by a prestigious Career Enhancement Fellowship, funded by the Mellon Foundation and administered by the Institute for Citizens & Scholars, which focuses on strengthening democracy and civil discourse.

The Salvadoran Civil War killed more than 75,000 people over a 12-year period. The war ended in 1992 with UN-mediated peace accords between the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) and the Salvadoran government, which gave neither side a conclusive victory.

It was soon after the outbreak of the civil war—when the government had shut down hundreds of schools—that communities in FMLN-controlled areas turned to popular education, a grassroots approach to spreading literacy and political awareness, Huezo said. Professional teachers, professors, union organizers, and others trained the popular educators, hundreds of whom taught the poor and oppressed in rural communities and FMLN guerilla camps.

Many of those who were teaching the popular teachers had no more than a sixth-grade education. They often worked in abandoned buildings or under mango trees, sometimes forced to share paper and pencils—if any were even available, as Huezo described in an article last year.

‘Trying to Build a New Society’

Salvadoran communities and the FMLN were looking beyond mere survival. During her interviews in El Salvador, Huezo spoke with a woman who became an educator after being inspired by the FMLN saying they were “trying to build a new society” through education, in preparation for eventually taking power.

A monument at a school in Chalatenango, El Salvador, that commemorates popular education. Translated: “This is how we were born. Popular education and solidarity in service of the community.” Photo by Stephanie Huezo, June 2017

Teachers used the generative method of a Brazilian educator named Paulo Freire, leveraging students’ existing knowledge to build literacy while also helping them understand their country’s history and develop critical thinking.

“That’s really what popular education does—it not only teaches people how to read and write by using simple words that fit into one’s daily life, but also understand the root of a situation in order to then work to change it,” Huezo said.

Long-Term Impacts of Popular Education

Popular education strengthened young people’s commitment to resisting the repressive Salvadoran government and gave people the education they needed for organizing food distribution and other local efforts, according to Huezo. The education had longer-term impacts as well, as communities that organized during the war also supported the country’s first-in-the-world ban on metals mining, passed in 2017 (but recently repealed).

“There’s more awareness of the power of organizing because of what happened” during the civil war, Huezo said.

Popular educators from Central America have helped seed organizing efforts in U.S. immigrant communities as well. In her book, Huezo will describe how these communities’ activism helped bring about Temporary Protected Status, a federal government designation that spares immigrants from deportation for humanitarian reasons. (The Biden administration gave the program an 18-month extension in early January.)

Huezo described popular education as empowering not only for students but for their teachers—and for anyone trying to effect change. By sharing their knowledge, teachers lose the attitude of “I’m no one” and come to appreciate what they have to offer, even if they didn’t get far in school.

The larger lesson, she said, is that “even though we might feel like we don’t have a lot to give, we do.”

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