The Mirabal Sisters In The Time Of The Butterflies

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The Mirabal sisters are no wilting flowers. The female protagonists in The Time of the Butterflies fought for their rights against a corrupted government using their full blown feminist powers. The citizens know them as “the butterflies” and see them as leaders. The beautiful sisters did what few men had been willing to do. Patria, the eldest, kept herself engaged in her children and religious activities while Dede, the second eldest, focused on pleasing her mother and being a reliable partner and sister. The third sister is Minerva, who is the firecracker in the family. She doesn't fear speaking to a crowd and giving her opinion. Maria Teresa in the youngest. She looks up to her sisters and isn’t loves to charm boys with her looks and spirit. …show more content…

They attended secret meetings with politicals who spoke against Trujillo. Dede and her husband hid them on her property so they wouldn’t be captured while Minerva and Maria Teresa recruited men and women for all over. One evening, Minerva was invited to the Discovery Day Dance with her father where she met the cruel and lustful Trujillo. Not only men feared him, but women as well. He was known to drug women and steal them from their families for his own “pleasures”. Minerva catches his eye and he asks her to dance. Replaying the event, she says, “He yanks me by my wrist, thrusting his pelvis at me in a vulgar way, and I can see my hand in a slow motion rise-- a mind all its own-- and come down on the astonished, made-up face” (Alvarez 100). Nobody manhandles Minerva. She was not afraid to stand up for herself, even against the leader of her desperate nation. Maria Teresa had her own secret, she was smuggling weapons in her house for the revolution. She learns how to make bombs, clean guns, and create code names for the revolution. Maria Teresa explains, “Deliveries coming back from the capital are dropped off here… Certainly some must think the worst, what with men stopping by at all hours. I always make them stay for as long as cafecito to give the illusion that they are real visitors. I’m a natural at this, really. I’ve always liked men, receiving them, paying them attention, listening to what they have to say. Now I can use my talents for the revolution” (Alvarez 143). Maria Teresa may be the youngest, but she in very independent. She uses her charm to get men to spit out secrets from the capital and revolutionary movements that weren’t supposed to be for her ears. Later, Patria joins the cause with her sisters. She initially didn't believe in the violence and looked toward God for wisdom. But that changed on her way home from a church retreat. While up in the

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