[1] By profession, Celina Kofman was one of the important members of the organization that was launched in the 1970s in the midst of the National Reorganization Process, after her son was kidnapped.
[2] One of her sons was Jorge Oscar Kofman, a 23-year-old student and worker, the father of a child and another on the way, who was kidnapped and disappeared by murderous military men in Tucumán.
After the kidnapping, Jorge was taken to the Famaillá School, the first clandestine detention center in the country, lodged with other illegal detainees and interrogated under torture.
In 2013, it was news when her house located in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina, was attacked with offensive graffiti on the day that the Mothers celebrated the 36th anniversary of their first wheel.
In that same year, the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo were honored by SADOP at the Solar de las Artes, for International Women's Day.7 Her other son, Hugo Alberto Kofman, presented a book titled Look at the Earth until you find yourself, which recounts the vicissitudes of the investigation that allowed in 2010 to find the remains of eight popular militants in a mass grave in the San Pedro Military Camp in the province of Santa Fe.