LOS ANGELES UNITED METHODIST MUSEUM OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
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VISUALIZING THE PEOPLE'S HISTORY
VIDEOS AND PODCASTS

EXHIBITION VIDEOS 


Visualizing the People's History
Border Vistor

PODCASTS


EMANCIPATED: VOICES AND IMAGES FROM THE ARCHIVES

The CSUN Tom & Ethel Bradley Center has over one million images produced by photographers that document the social, cultural, and political lives of the diverse communities of Los Angeles and Southern California. The archives contain one of the largest collections of African American photographers west of the Mississippi. We also have collections on the Farm Worker Movement, Central America, Mexico, the U.S.–Mexico border, and Africa.
Voices and Images from the Archives is produced and hosted by archival researcher Marta Valier. 

Toña’s Crossing the River and Other Stories of Fight and Resistance from El Salvador. 

In this first chapter, we hear from Linda Garrett, a senior policy analyst at the Center for Democracy in the Americas; and Toña Rios, who migrated to Los Angeles from El Salvador in 1981 and is now a pastor at Baldwin Park United Methodist Church in Los Angeles County. Marta Valier produced and hosted this series based on oral histories with people that lived in El Salvador during the liberation war (1980–1992). The 1970s brought to El Salvador increasing government repression, including the creation of government-organized death squads to combat opposition movements and in 1980 a series of failed military juntas took power. By 1981, leftist guerrillas and political groups joined forces, forming the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, the FMLN. Then, throughout the 1980s, a civil war was waged between the FMLN and the U.S.-backed Salvadoran military forces.
The second chapter of Toña’s Crossing the River and Other Stories of Fight and Resistance from El Salvador, a series produced and hosted by our archival researcher Marta Valier, using oral histories with people who lived in El Salvador during the Liberation War (1980–1992). In the second chapter, we keep following Linda Garrett on her trip to San Salvador as a human rights representative for El Rescate and we meet Carlos Henríquez Consalvi, known as Santiago, who also traveled to San Salvador from Nicaragua with the intention to establish Radio Venceremos, a radio station that operated in areas controlled by the insurgency and that he kept clandestine for 11 years (episode hosted & produced by Marta Valier). Both of them traveled to San Salvador after the assassination of Salvadoran Archbishop Óscar Romero in March 1980, a time where thousands of Salvadorans were fleeing the country.
The third chapter of Toña’s Crossing the River and Other Stories of Fight and Resistance from El Salvador, a series produced by our archival researcher Marta Valier and co-hosted by Rosie Rios and Marta Valier, using oral histories with people who lived in El Salvador during the Liberation War (1980–1992). This chapter centers on El Rescate human rights representative Linda Garrett’s encounter with Salvadoran political prisoner Héctor Bernabé Recinos Aguirre, illegally detained for more than four years for organizing the first national strike in 1980. Recinos Aguirre co-founded the Committee of Political Prisoners of San Salvador (COPPES) while Garrett worked on the Index of Accountability, a database used by the United Nations Truth Commission for El Salvador, linking military officers to human rights violations committed during the war. This episode discusses the significance of accountability, reparation, and the weight of impunity on both the old and younger Salvadoran generation.

Richard Cross's anthropological work at Palenque de San Basilio

​Marta Valier talks to Guillermo Márquez about the visual anthropology work that photographer Richard Cross did in Colombia, where he was invited in the late 1970s by anthropologist Nina S. de Friedemann to visually document life in the Afro-Colombian community of San Basilio de Palenque. #BradleyCenterCSUN #Palenque #SanBasilio #Colombia

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Copyright  2013–2025 Museum of Social Justice | Los Angeles ​
  • Home
  • About
    • Board of Directors
    • Museum & Education Partners
    • Get Involved
  • Board of Advisors
  • Exhibitions
    • Comrade Sisters: Women of the Black Panther Party
    • Future Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions >
      • That Stubborn Resistance
      • Hope and Dignity: The Farmworker Movement
      • "Comfort Women" Then and Now: Who They Were and Why We Should Remember Them
      • Finding Sequins in the Rubble: Archives of Jotería Memories in Los Angeles
      • La Plaza: A Center of Injustice and Transformation
      • Ink Tributes
      • Deported Veterans
      • Caravanas del Diablo
      • Thai El Monte Garment Workers >
        • Quilting Project
      • New Black City
      • Impact on Innocence >
        • Lies by Deborah McDuff
      • One of Us: How We See It
      • Transportapueblos: The Resilientes
      • Visualizing the People's History
      • Goodwill: Its Founding and History in Southern California
      • Greyhound Diaries
      • One of Us
      • California Dream: A Community Response
      • In Memoriam: Los Angeles
      • Shattered Mural
      • Con Safos: Reflections of Life in the Barrio
      • African American Civil Rights Movement L.A. Exhibition
      • Exodus
  • Support/Membership
  • Visit
  • Supporters
  • Educational Tools and Resources
  • Historical Archive
  • Allyship and Support
    • BLM Resources for Kids
  • Tardeada 2022
  • Tardeada 2021
  • Tardeada 2020
  • Contact
  • Link Page