An Indian woman living in Guatemala in Guatemala is a country of eternal fountain, the hometown of Maya blessed with culture and history. It is also a country of illiterate farm worker, Rigoberta Menchu, where the voices of repressed people are voiced everywhere. Guatemala is also the tragic region of the oldest civil war in Latin America. "For over 30 years left-wing guerrillas have fought against a series of right-wing governments of Guatemala, which brought about 140,000 deaths throughout the country, including 11 million."
Menchú tells this horrible story to Guatemala's Indian lady RigobertaMenchú. It consists of a series of memories by Spanish anthropologist Elisabeth Burgos-Debray. Menchú did not look at violence, but turned her attention to the political and social work of her people, so she won a prize. She became an active member of the Campesino Unity Committee and helped to create revolutionary Christians. Menchu understands "the real meaning of the revolution with the word" transformation ". If you choose armed struggle, you are now in the mountains. "
Menchú's actions and speech are considered controversial. Conservatives condemned her as being related to the communist group and the story of her life in I: Rigoberta Menchú in Guatemala was interrogated by journalist David Stoll in 1998. In his own book, Rigoberta Menchú and all the poor Guatemalan stories, Stoll believes that Menchú distorted the important facts of her autobiography. However, Menchú is a positive spokesperson for those who are still not representative. In 2000, she staffed several officials of the former military regime of Guatemala in the Spanish court on genocide (genocide), torture and state terrorism against about 200,000 people murdered in the 1980s in the country Appealed. Menchú is also a strong opposition of multinational companies in globalization and world economy.
• Guatemala is the world's largest cardamom producing country, almost twice the size of the next largest producer (India). Cardamom is a commonly used ingredient in Indian cuisine, but it is not widely used today in Guatemala. For other countries of the world it is not uncommon to find in special drinks such as hot wine, egg nogs, arabica. • Visit Starbucks (or other gourmet coffee shop) and discover that Guatemala's coffee is widely recognized as one of the best coffees in the world. Coffee exports are actually the largest domestic economic engine in the country. It is cultivated primarily in the central highlands of the country, and beans around Antigua are the most precious. From luxury clothing to small cooperatives, you can visit the area's coffee.