yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Who were Las Mariposas, and why were they murdered? - Lisa Krause


4m read
·Nov 8, 2024

From 1930 to 1961, thousands of people were imprisoned, tortured, and murdered under Rafael Trujillo’s dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. Three sisters would go on to lead an underground revolution. But while their courage inspired many, it threatened the man in power, and their lives would come to a tragic early end.

Trujillo rose through the military ranks during the United States’ occupation of the Dominican Republic. He assumed power in 1930 through a coup and rigged election and created a system that enriched himself and his allies. Trujillo’s family alone controlled three-fifths of the country’s gross domestic product, including monopolies over salt, beef, and newspapers. He renamed the country's capital after himself and expected his portrait to be displayed in every household. And he committed atrocities, including the massacre of thousands of Haitians. All the while, a secret police force maintained his power by targeting opponents at home and abroad.

The Mirabal sisters grew up in a middle-class family in the countryside. Their parents sent the four sisters—Patria, Dedé, Minerva, and María Teresa—to one of the country’s best boarding schools. There, Minerva met a classmate whose relative was killed on Trujillo's orders. She began seeking out strong voices of opposition and discussing issues of oppression and justice with her sisters. While Dedé stayed out of politics, Minerva, Patria, and María Teresa became invested in changing their country.

However, the Mirabal family’s safe standing soon collapsed. In 1949, they were invited to one of Trujillo’s parties, which served as his personal hunting grounds for young women. Declining the invitation was not an option. Despite Minerva’s attempts to avoid him at the reception, she eventually danced with Trujillo but rejected his advances. The Mirabal family left the party early, which was seldom done and considered disrespectful to the dictator. Their father, Enrique, was imprisoned and family property was confiscated.

Minerva graduated with highest honors as one of the first women in the country to receive a law degree. But she was denied state authorization to practice—a process Trujillo oversaw. While studying, Minerva met Manolo Tavárez Justo. He shared her political convictions, and the two married in 1955. They watched as armed revolutions launched throughout Latin America. After Trujillo crushed an attempt to overthrow him in 1959, they began to prepare a revolution of their own.

The Mirabal sisters and their husbands formed the June 14th movement along with many others from the middle class. Codenamed Las Mariposas, or the Butterflies, the three sisters organized and attended clandestine meetings and distributed pamphlets detailing Trujillo’s violations. In January of 1960, they called representatives together from all over the country to establish the movement’s structure and prepare an uprising. But it was not to be. Trujillo had spies everywhere. Soon, many revolutionaries, including Minerva and María Teresa, were arrested.

During this time, Patria found creative ways of transmitting information to and from imprisoned rebels. Fearful of losing the support of the U.S. and the Church, which had recently begun to criticize him, Trujillo released the sisters while leaving their husbands imprisoned. But they continued to threaten his regime’s stability—and his ego.

On November 25th, as the three sisters were returning from visiting two of their imprisoned husbands, Trujillo’s men stopped their car. The sisters, along with their driver, Rufino de la Cruz, were asphyxiated and beaten to death. The men rolled the Jeep off a hill to frame the murder as a car accident. Patria was 36, Minerva was 33, and María Teresa was 25.

But Trujillo's plan to silence the Mirabal sisters and stabilize his regime backfired. Much of the public wasn’t fooled by the flimsy coverup. The international community condemned the assassination. And the U.S. closed its Dominican embassy and secretly invested in the anti-Trujillo movement. Months later, former members of the Dominican military killed the dictator, bringing his violent, 31-year reign to an end.

Thanks to their family, especially their surviving sister, Dedé, the legacy of the Mirabal sisters would surpass the clutches of Trujillo’s tyranny even long after their deaths. Today, the Mirabal sisters are national heroes with monuments and honors commemorating their struggle. In 1999, the United Nations declared November 25th, the anniversary of their deaths, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. Their courageous fight for justice has inspired generations.

More Articles

View All
The Million Mile Battery
Lithium-ion batteries have been a regular part of our daily lives for the past 50 years. These batteries power almost everything—from phones and laptops all the way to vacuum cleaners and lawnmowers. Monitor technology, though, has taken them to another l…
Why the Stock Market Might Not Crash...
So I like to think I make pretty down-to-earth investing videos. I generally try and avoid speculation, I avoid trendy stocks, I avoid hype, and instead, I just focus on rational thinking and rational investment. That has led, you know, to a fair bit of c…
Preparing for Breakup | Life Below Zero
This is kind of an exciting time of year for me. My blood gets pumping a little bit ‘cause it’s breakup, and breakup to me is like New Year’s to most people. So I start my calendar year the day the river breaks up, and looking at the river, breakup is goi…
Small Talk Tip - How To Introduce Yourself To Someone New!
Emma: This is my best small talk tip, how to introduce yourself to someone new. Right now I’m going to teach you my four-step method to make introducing yourself to someone in English easy and enjoyable. You can use these steps to introduce yourself at wo…
Surprises Ahead | Barkskins
My mother was a witch. And I know that I said my favorite of her sayings was the one about the bloated monk who feared his vow of silence covered farts, but I didn’t have a way with the phrase. I’m afraid that I’ll word it wrong. Tell it another time, [in…
The Immigrant Journey Behind A Silicon Valley Success Story
Immigrants, we get the job done. Today we’re sitting down with one of the best founders of a generation, Tracy Young, co-founder of PlanGrid, which sold to Autodesk for 875 million dollars, who’s back with her new startup called Tiger Eye. But today, sinc…