Some Argentinians carry a heavy family secret. Under the country’s military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983, their fathers were police or military officers. As such, they were responsible for the disappearance of up to 30,000 people, according to human rights groups. These men have since been accused – and sometimes convicted – of crimes against humanity. After decades of living in shame and silence, some of their now grown-up children have decided to make their voices heard and recount their terrible family legacy. They call themselves "the children of those who committed genocide".
Some in Argentina have known about their family's dirty secret since they were very young. Others lived for decades without suspecting anything, until the opening of trials for crimes against humanity committed under the dictatorship. These trials began in 2009 and continue to this day. How do you shape your personality or rebuild your life when you discover that your own father is guilty of torture, rape and sometimes even murder? How do you coexist alongside children of the victims?
Forty years after the end of Argentina's dictatorship, we went to meet those whose families were on the wrong side of history. We followed them on the long road to acceptance they have had to take: some by campaigning against historical negationism or setting up an NGO, others through psychoanalysis or writing a play.
Read moreStolen children of Argentina’s dictatorship search for the truth