- Source: Taty Almeida
Lidia Stella Mercedes Miy Uranga (born June 28, 1930, Belgrano, Buenos Aires), better known as Taty Almeida, is an Argentine teacher and human rights activist. She is a member of Madres de Plaza de Mayo Línea Fundadora, the founding lineage of the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo.
Early and personal life
She was born on 28 June 1930 in the Belgrano neighborhood of Buenos Aires to Alicia Uranga and cavalry officer Carlos Vidal Miy. Her uncle, Raúl Uranga, was governor of Entre Ríos during the presidency of Arturo Frondizi. She had three sisters and one brother: Her brother was a colonel, and her sisters married aeronautics officers.
Her childhood was spent in the province of Mendoza and Buenos Aires. She studied teaching at the Escuela Normal Superior N° 7 in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Almagro. She taught for a few years. She married a fellow teacher, Jorge Almeida, in 1953. The couple had three children: Jorge, Alejandro and Fabiana.
Activism
On 17 June 1975, her 20-year-old son, Alejandro Almeida, was kidnapped by the right-wing paramilitary organization Triple A. In 1979, she learned about the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo and decided to join them. She has participated in countless protests at Plaza de Mayo. As part of the collective of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo Founding Line, she has given interviews and talks, and has attended conferences and other events.
In 2008, she published Alejandro, por siempre… amor (English: Alejandro, forever… love), a book which compiles stories, memories, and 24 poems written by Alejandro.
In 2011, the Legislature of the City of Buenos Aires declared her an Outstanding Human Rights Personality.
In 2015, a portrait of her was installed in the permanent exhibition of the Bicentennial Museum located behind the Casa Rosada .