Resisting the Right-wing Offensive: Lessons from El Salvador's Grassroots
Growing up in the working-class San Salvador suburb of Mejicanos, which has a long and radical history of organizing for justice, Ramos Castro quickly became part of that tradition, even as she studied at University of El Salvador, where she graduated with a degree in electrical engineering in 2014.
Through her organizing with the Council of Marginalized Communities, Ramos Castro became involved in working with the Popular Resistance Movement- October 12 (MPR-12). Founded in 2002 as a social movement coalition during the fight against the approval of the Central American Free Trade Agreement, it continues to fight.
The MPR-12 has played an important role in the recent historic prohibition of all metallic mining in El Salvador, fought for the human right to water, and joined a movement of agricultural cooperatives that are struggling to reclaim food sovereignty in El Salvador. Popular education schools are at the root of MPR-12 organizing.
The Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador is the host for Ramos Castro’s U.S. speaking tour.