The Injustice Never Leaves You, Monica Munoz Martinez
The Injustice Never Leaves You, Monica Munoz Martinez
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The Injustice Never Leaves You
Anti-Mexican Violence in Texas

Author: Monica Muñoz Martinez

Narrator: Kyla García

Unabridged: 13 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 12/10/2019


Synopsis

Between 1910 and 1920, vigilantes and law enforcement—including the renowned Texas Rangers—killed Mexican residents with impunity. The full extent of the violence was known only to the relatives of the victims.

Operating in remote rural areas enabled the perpetrators to do their worst: hanging, shooting, burning, and beating victims to death without scrutiny. Families scoured the brush to retrieve the bodies of loved ones. Survivors suffered segregation and fierce intimidation, and yet fought back. They confronted assailants in court, worked with Mexican diplomats to investigate the crimes, pressured local police to arrest the perpetrators, spoke to journalists, and petitioned politicians for change.

Martinez reconstructs this history from institutional and private archives and oral histories, to show how the horror of anti-Mexican violence lingered within communities for generations, compounding injustice by inflicting further pain and loss. Yet its memorialization provided victims with an important means of redress, undermining official narratives that sought to whitewash these atrocities. The Injustice Never Leaves You offers an invaluable account of why these incidents happened, what they meant at the time, and how a determined community ensured that the victims were not forgotten.

About Monica Muñoz Martinez

Monica Munoz Martinez is Stanley J. Bernstein Assistant Professor of American Studies and Ethnic Studies at Brown University and an Andrew Carnegie Fellow. She is cofounder of the nonprofit organization Refusing to Forget, which calls for a public reckoning with racial violence in Texas. Martinez helped develop an award-winning exhibit on racial terror in the early twentieth century for the Bullock Texas State History Museum and worked to secure four state historical markers along the US-Mexico border.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Laura Jean on February 20, 2019

This book fills a gap in Texas history. It covers the vigilante and extralegal violence against ethnic Mexican Americans on the Mexican/Texas border in the early 20th century. The introduction is a bit scholarly in nature, but don't let it scare you off. The first three chapters each deal with an oc......more

Goodreads review by Rosa on August 27, 2019

All libraries need this book. I learned so much I didn’t know about the Texas Rangers and what purpose they served. It is very important everybody reads this or reads the history in this book.......more

Goodreads review by Cameron on August 31, 2024

14 hours on Audible. A shocking account of white supremacy, racism, lynching, and murder by Texas mobs and the Texas Rangers from 1910 to 1920. Eye-opening and gives the reader pause.......more

Goodreads review by Francesca on December 07, 2020

Considering that most history textbooks used in U.S. schools are actually printed in Texas, I always felt that there was likely a number of blind spots in the general narrative due to this prevalent setup. Exploring the activity between 1910 and 1920, Monica Muñoz Martinez does an excellent job of d......more

Goodreads review by Raul on October 25, 2018

For me, the most unsettling, and telling, chapter began with the author describing what she found in a rural town in central Texas, inside a fast-food eatery (part of a chain that has become a Lone Star staple). She found a display honoring Texas Rangers that casually included photos of lynchings. T......more