In a statement, the organization urged Peronist militants and citizens in general to come to its headquarters in that capital and make donations to help children in poverty.
As Hebe asked and taught us, let us wait until they continue to help others, the text points out.
After a life devoted to fighting for justice and defending human rights, De Bonafini died on November 20 after being hospitalized for chronic illnesses.
Four days later, thousands of Argentines joined the mothers on their 2.328. March in which they paid tribute and laid their ashes in the Pirámide de Mayo, in the square that gave them their name and in which they took part for more than 40 years to denounce the crimes of the last military dictatorship (1976-1983).
After the kidnapping of two of her children in 1977, De Bonafini did not stop searching for the truth and, along with other women, embarked on a long journey of being followed, watched, arrested and some of them murdered.
In this way they formed one of the main resistance forces in Argentina and their white handkerchiefs became a symbol of the struggle.
The news of his death caused great excitement in Argentina and the world, and figures such as Pope Francis, Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, the Presidents of Cuba (Miguel Díaz-Canel), Venezuela (Nicolás Maduro) and Bolivia (Luis Arce) expressed their regret .
So have former Presidents Evo Morales (Bolivia), Rafael Correa (Ecuador) and Dilma Rousseff (Brazil), as well as the latter country’s recently elected head of state, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
Argentine President Alberto Fernández decreed a three-day national mourning and numerous ministers and social leaders mourned his death.
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