Cuando Callaron Las Armas is not a single story but a collection of short stories, each narrated by a child protagonist who lived through the Guatemalan Civil War (1960–1996). Through the eyes of indigenous Maya children, orphans, refugees, and survivors, the book chronicles the pain of disappearances, the fear of military repression, the flight into the jungle, and finally, the fragile hope that comes with the peace accords. The title refers to the moment the fighting stops, but the book asks: What happens to the children when the silence returns?
Edna Iturralde is arguably Ecuador’s most prolific and beloved children’s and young adult literature author. Known for her ability to weave historical events into digestible, empathetic narratives, she tackles a monumental subject here: the internal armed conflict in Guatemala. Unlike many authors who approach war with graphic realism, Iturralde is famous for treating sensitive topics with a "velvet glove"—honest but not traumatic. -PDF- Cuando Callaron Las Armas By Edna Iturralde
“The noise of the weapons is loud, but the silence afterward is even heavier. That silence is where the children live.” Cuando Callaron Las Armas is not a single
Cuando Callaron Las Armas is not entertainment; it is a memorial. Edna Iturralde has done something remarkable: she has taken one of the darkest chapters of Central American history and turned it into a tool for empathy. The prose is simple, but the echo is profound. You close the book grateful for the silence of your own home, but haunted by the millions of children who had to wait thirty-six years to hear the guns fall silent. Edna Iturralde is arguably Ecuador’s most prolific and
A Necessary Bridge Between History and Childhood