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Explaining History – Argentina's mothers of the disappeared

On October 6, 1978, Patricia Roisinblit — a young Jewish medical student and leftist activist — was abducted by Argentina’s military junta while eight months pregnant. She was never seen again. But her mother, Rosa, refused to let her story end there.

In this deeply moving episode, we speak with journalist and author Haley Cohen Gilliland about her extraordinary new book, A Flower Traveled in My Blood — a powerful narrative of dictatorship, resistance, and the decades-long search for justice led by the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo, Argentina’s Grandmothers of the Disappeared.

Gilliland, a former Economist correspondent in Buenos Aires, chronicles the brutal history of Argentina’s military regime and the courageous women who defied it. We follow the personal and political story of the Roisinblit family — from Patricia’s disappearance, to the state-sanctioned abduction of her son Guillermo, to Rosa’s decades-long fight to find the truth and reunite her family.

We discuss the role of antisemitism in Argentina’s Dirty War, the use of genetic testing to identify stolen children, and the uncomfortable legacy of silence, complicity, and denial in Argentine society. With chilling parallels to today’s global political climate, this conversati

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