[sixties-l] Commune leader claims rebels killed grandson

From: radman (resist@best.com)
Date: Wed Jan 31 2001 - 01:07:47 EST

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    MIAMI HERALD

    Sunday, 28 January 2001

    Commune leader claims rebels killed grandson

    By Margarita Martinez

    PACHO, Colombia -- They came looking for paradise in the Andes and found
    disillusionment and death.

    For Jenny James and the little band of starry-eyed followers who arrived
    in Colombia in 1989 from a commune in Ireland, the verdant mountains of
    the southern part of the country seemed perfect -- so much so they
    abandoned their original plan to settle in Bolivia, to the south.

    James, then 46, found a revolutionary fervor that appealed to her in the
    hinterlands of Colombia, where guerrillas have waged a war against the
    government since the 1960s under the banners of agrarian reform and
    justice for the poor. Her own leftist activism was born of the social
    revolt of the '60s.

    ``I was impressed by the people's high level of political consciousness,''
    she recalled in an interview on a farm in Pacho, 30 miles from Bogota,
    Colombia's capital.

    James had begun her search for a new life with ``primal scream'' therapy
    in her native England and ran a commune at Burtonport in Ireland's County
    Donegal before coming to Colombia.

            Lived on rebel land
            -------------------
    Pursuing free love and back-to-the-roots living, her Atlantis commune
    bought land in the rebel-controlled mountains of Tolima state. Reaching
    the commune near the town of Icononzo, 50 miles southwest of Bogota,
    required hours of walking and sometimes a machete to clear overgrown
    paths.

    James and the others, including Ann Barr, a commune member from County
    Donegal who earns cash for the group as an astrologer to Bogota's
    well-to-do, lived in simple wooden houses and tended vegetable plots some
    6,600 feet above sea level.

    The commune members freely exchanged sexual partners and raised several
    children with no formal education but a love for art and nature.

    To many, life seemed idyllic. At its height in the mid-1990s, it had about
    60 residents.

    But Atlantis' peaceful illusions were shattered by the slayings of two of
    its teenagers -- one of them James' own grandson -- allegedly by leftist
    guerrillas. The killings happened last July, but details only recently
    emerged.

    James described how the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as
    FARC, turned against her group -- and she against them.

    For 10 years, relations were harmonious, she said. Then, two years ago,
    the rebels abruptly expelled a group of about a dozen Atlantis members
    that had branched out onto lands in Caqueta province, about 190 miles
    south of Bogota.

    The FARC never explained its action, but James believes the group's
    mistrust of foreigners was growing as the United States increased military
    aid to Colombia to help counter the rebels.

    The guerrillas had become ``like a domesticated wild animal,'' she said.
    ``We lived close to them for several years, but you never know when they
    are going to take a swipe at you.''

    Relations between the Atlantis commune and the FARC worsened.

    In mid-1999, FARC rebels expelled Atlantis' nearly two dozen remaining
    members from Icononzo, its original base. James fled with her closest kin,
    15-year-old daughter Katie and 19-year-old grandson Tristan, to a farm in
    Pacho where a friend raises honey bees.

            They never returned
            -------------------
    While at Pacho, Tristan got an itch to see Ireland, which he had left as a
    young boy. Before making the trip, however, he went back to Icononzo to
    say goodbye to a half brother living in the town.

    The youth, tall and blonde with a talent for acting and juggling, never
    returned. Nor did his traveling companion, 19-year-old Javier Nova, a
    child of one of the handful of Colombians belonging to Atlantis.

    James said witnesses told of seeing drunken rebels take the youths away.
    The two reportedly were ``tried'' and convicted of collaborating with
    right-wing paramilitary groups. They were then killed with machetes and
    their bodies burned, James said.

    Police said they had conducted preliminary investigations into the youths'
    ``disappearances.'' The case has not been classified as murder yet
    because no corpses have been found.

    A spokesman for the British Embassy, Johnny Welsh, said the Atlantis
    commune called the diplomatic mission and denounced the FARC, but ``prefer
    not to deal with the establishment'' and didn't ask for diplomatic
    assistance.

    The FARC did not respond to repeated efforts by journalists to obtain
    their version of events.

    The dozen Atlantis members who remain in Colombia insist they will stay in
    the country. James is trying to pick up the pieces of Atlantis' broken
    dream, but the whole episode has shaken her faith in nonviolence.

    ``In the 1960s everything was very clear to me,'' she said. ``I don't know
    how to be a pacifist anymore.''



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