History itself speaks. His atrocious genocide, repression, its sultanism not allowed to tie to any rules, even to themselves, and poor mental structure was evidenced in the services rendered to his personality.
Not enough space to mention the atrocities of the dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina, whose hands are hard and railways, heavy rough and games, able to use any degree of force to exert their personal will to prevail over the legislative, executive and judiciary and have the Treasury without the prior consent of the people.
Still, their tyranny, considered one of the bloodiest of the 20th century, remain dormant forever in the memories of the Dominicans and the narratives that have as their object of study last .
For his immense black holes, accumulated in the dark and recorded in the historical books, some of which also cited "the restoration of public order and economic progress", a museum was to enable national and foreign , and especially students, get a historical and educational perspective of the despot and his regime crude, beyond those who loved him and hated.
The Museum Dr. José Gaspar RodrÃguez de Francia in Paraguay allows visitors to see South American possessions of the former dictator, from his student days to his last days of existence.
Chileans may feel the uniforms, medals, desks and even a collection of soldiers that belonged to the late Augusto Pinochet, while Russians can see the exhibits in the museum of Stalin in Gori.
momentum "would wake students study and curiosity of tourists, learn more about the original manuscripts signed by the indolent Trujillo, their tools of torture and some of its acquisitions?.
Play and display of sympathy not meanings. The total knowledge and palpable history does not imply transmission of worship is surrender or distortion of facts.
Democracy is not a speech, is a practice and therefore the anti-Trujillo should not act with the same overtones of intolerance that the dictator. The need to pay for outstanding crimes to pay.
for effort made, history can not erase the horror and the events that helped create the foundations of modern capitalism in the Dominican Republic, and the museum should serve to present and future generations to see what crudely happened so it does not happen again.
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