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  • 10 months ago
Four lucid grandmothers tell their story forgotten by history: the militancy and resistance of the young women of the le | dG1fWGwwTWRDck5sTGs
Transcript
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00:16How did she discover that I could have
00:18as diriger's attitudes?
00:20I don't see anything.
00:22I only knew that I had to say
00:24that if I entered politics
00:26I would close the piano.
00:28I was going to close the piano because the politics is very observable.
00:39I followed the house and I saw how women treated me.
00:44And she loved me and gave me an eye.
00:48And at a little time she told me,
00:50I said, I'm going to take you from here because with a group of women we're going to build something political for women.
01:07And I was born on May 10th of 1920.
01:13She had just one year more than me.
01:20I was 26 years old.
01:24And you're doing things like that because you feel like you want to do well.
01:30And because you wanted to do well,
01:34so that you told me that you did well,
01:37because I loved them.
01:50And I asked her,
01:52She asked me,
01:53What does she do?
01:55At Corriente?
01:56Why did she not come here?
01:57No, I'm a teacher.
02:01And as a teacher, I am going to continue working and fighting.
02:07But we had so many things in it, so much desire to help, that we had that opportunity that we had, that we had a soul.
02:27If you saw her, you couldn't let her back. You had to try to run more than her.
02:36That was not possible. No, no, no, no.
02:44Do you know how this document is called? It's called The Boys.
02:49The Boys.
02:51It's for the girls.
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