I, Rigoberta Menchú

by

Rigoberta Menchu

Altiplano Term Analysis

The Altiplano is the mountainous region in northwest Guatemala where Rigoberta and her fellow villagers live. It is where most of the country’s Indigenous population lives.

Altiplano Quotes in I, Rigoberta Menchú

The I, Rigoberta Menchú quotes below are all either spoken by Altiplano or refer to Altiplano. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Tolerance vs. Resistance Theme Icon
).
Chapter 4 Quotes

I remember going along in the lorry and wanting to set it on fire so that we would be allowed to rest. What bothered me most was travelling on and on and on, wanting to urinate and not being able to because the lorry wouldn’t stop. […] It made me very angry and I used to ask my mother: ‘Why do we go to the finca?”. And my mother used to say: ‘Because we have to. When you’re older you’ll understand why we need to come.’ I did understand, but the thing was I was fed up with it all. When I was older, I didn’t find it strange any more. Slowly I began to see what we had to do and why things were like that. I realised we weren’t alone in our sorrow and suffering, but that a lot of people, in many different regions, shared it with us.

Related Characters: Rigoberta Menchú Tum (speaker), Rigoberta’s Mother (speaker)
Page Number: 27
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

They turned us out of our houses, and out of the village. The Garcías’ henchmen set to work with ferocity. They were Indians too, soldiers of the finca. First they went into the houses without permission and got all the people out. Then they went in and threw out all our things. I remember that my mother had her silver necklaces, precious keepsakes from my grandmother, but we never saw them again after that. They stole them all. They threw out our cooking utensils, our earthenware cooking pots. We don’t use those sort of…special utensils, we have our own earthenware pots. They hurled them into the air, and, oh God! they hit the ground and broke into pieces. All our plates, cups, pots. They threw them out and they all broke.

Related Characters: Rigoberta Menchú Tum (speaker), Rigoberta’s Mother
Related Symbols: Maize, Tortillas, and Tamales
Page Number: 125
Explanation and Analysis:
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Altiplano Term Timeline in I, Rigoberta Menchú

The timeline below shows where the term Altiplano appears in I, Rigoberta Menchú. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1: The Family
Tolerance vs. Resistance Theme Icon
Class, Race, and Inequality  Theme Icon
Spirituality, Nature, and the Sacredness of Life Theme Icon
Rigoberta’s parents met in the Altiplano (highland). After getting married, they set up a village in the mountains. Thanks to the... (full context)
Tolerance vs. Resistance Theme Icon
Class, Race, and Inequality  Theme Icon
...begin when she is five. She remembers spending four months in their home in the Altiplano and the remaining eight months down at the coast, working in fincas. Her family would... (full context)
Chapter 4: First Visit to the Finca. Life in the Finca
Tolerance vs. Resistance Theme Icon
Class, Race, and Inequality  Theme Icon
...to Rigoberta’s family. The overseers are usually ladinos but are also occasionally Indians from the Altiplano. These Indian behave in harmful ways toward their own community, stealing from them in order... (full context)
Chapter 6: An Eight-Year-Old Agricultural Worker
Class, Race, and Inequality  Theme Icon
Ancestors, Tradition, and Community Theme Icon
Spirituality, Nature, and the Sacredness of Life Theme Icon
When Rigoberta fell ill, she returned with her family to the Altiplano, where it was time to begin cultivating maize anyway. Her family was happy in the... (full context)
Chapter 8: Life in the Altiplano. Rigoberta’s Tenth Birthday
Ancestors, Tradition, and Community Theme Icon
Gender and Sexuality Theme Icon
Spirituality, Nature, and the Sacredness of Life Theme Icon
In the Altiplano, Rigoberta worked with her father, chopping wood like a boy. With the bare minimum that... (full context)
Chapter 27: Kidnapping and Death of Rigoberta’s Mother
Tolerance vs. Resistance Theme Icon
Class, Race, and Inequality  Theme Icon
Ancestors, Tradition, and Community Theme Icon
...eight compañeros from the village in the Spanish embassy, she decided to return to the Altiplano to help the community. Although the priests and nuns tried to convince her to become... (full context)
Chapter 32: Strike of Agricultural Workers and the First of May in the Capital
Tolerance vs. Resistance Theme Icon
Class, Race, and Inequality  Theme Icon
Ancestors, Tradition, and Community Theme Icon
...they succeeded in maintaining the strike for 15 days. Rigoberta joined the strikers in the Altiplano, many of whom were not organized collectively, to tell them about the CUC. In the... (full context)