One element of this campaign was the massacre of entire villages.
During the summer of 1983, nearly three hundred residents of
Kraras,
thereafter known as "the village of widows," were killed by Indonesian
troops.
John Pilger reported on one of the East Timorese resisters, identified
only as Domingos:
Domingos is 40 and has been in the jungle since 1983. "My
wife was tortured and burned with cigarettes," he said. "She was
also raped many times. In September [1993] the Indonesians sent
the population of her village to find us. My wife came to me and
said, `I don't want to see your face because I have been suffering
too much.' At first I thought she was rejecting me, but it was the
opposite; she was asking me to fight on, to stay out of the village
and not to be captured and never to surrender. She said to me,
`You get yourself killed and I shall grieve for you, but I don't
want to see you in their hands. I'll never accept you giving up!' I
looked at her, and she was sad. I asked her if we could live
together after the war, and she said softly, `Yes, we can.' She
then walked away."
Domingos and his wife came from Kraras, now known by the
Timorese as the "village of the widows." During the summer of
1983, 287 people were massacred there. Their names appear on an
extraordinary list compiled in Portuguese by the church. In a
meticulous, handwritten script, everything is recorded: the name
and age of each of the murdered, as well as the date and place of
death and the Indonesian battalion responsible.
Every time I pick up this list, a testimony of genocide, I find
it strangely compelling and difficult to put down, as if each death
is fresh on the page. Like the ubiquitous crosses, it records the
slaughter of whole families, and bears witness to genocide: Feliciano
Gomes, 50; Jacob Gomes, 50; Antonio Gomes, 37; Marcelino
Gomes, 29; Joao Gomes, 33; Miguel Gomes, 51; Domingos Gomes, 30;
Domingos Gomes, 2 -- "shot."
So far I have counted forty families, including many children:
Kai and Olo Bosi, 6 and 4, "shot"; Marito Soares, 1, "shot"; Cacildo
Dos Anjos, 2, "shot." There are babies as young as 3 months.
Source: "Journey to East Timor: Land of the Dead," by John Pilger, in
in the April 25, 1994, issue of
The Nation.