Update: This week Argentine forensic experts in the investigation said the Mexican government “had no scientific evidence” to declare the 43 disappeared students was a closed case. Mexico’s justice minister last month had claimed gangsters killed the students, burned their bodies and dumped them in a river. Family members of the students continue to raise doubts about the official version.
In Iguala, a city in Mexico, it's impossible to forget what's happened. Everywhere, there are reminders of Sept. 26, the day when local police and drug cartel gunmen killed six people and kidnapped 43 students at La Escuela Normal Rural Isidro Burgos de Ayotzinapa. The 43 are still missing — presumed dead and buried in a mass grave somewhere in the state of Guerrero.
Reminders like this sign.
A photo posted by Ronaldo Schemidt (@rschemidt) on
And demonstrations.
A punto de iniciar la marcha por los 43 desaparecidos #Ayotzinapa #HastaEncontrarlos #Guerrero
A photo posted by Jésica Zermeño (@jexjexx) on
And memorials.
#cruz por #julioCesar #ayotzinapa #todossomos43 #desapariciones #estudiantes #normalistas #justicia
A photo posted by Paula Escalada (@paula_pem) on
For those of us who live far from Iguala, there are fewer reminders, except for news headlines about the disappeared "43."
43.
The number has already become iconic — two digits that now represent the indescribable harm that Mexico's drug war has inflicted on the country, its institutions, and its people.
But "43" doesn't tell the stories of these missing young students. And so Mexican artists are doing something that headlines and this single, weighty number can't do: Force us to recognize each and ever missing student as an individual. As part of a project they call #IlustradoresConAyotzinapa, they've taken deconstructed missing posters like the one above, that show the students as a single mass of faces, and created individual portraits for every one of the 43. The results are haunting, beautiful, and enraging.
43 young people are missing. Here are their faces.
h/t @ErinSiegal
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