“I was taken to a room of which I never knew the colour of the walls.”
Manuel Rojas Boyan is a survivor of one of the darkest chapters in modern history. Confined underground in the pitch-black and tortured for his support of revolution against the military dictatorship of Bolivia in the 1970s, Manuel refused to give up the names of friends and very nearly paid with his life.
Tormented by the death of his mother as he knelt, hands bound behind his back, eating scraps off the filthy floor of his cell, Manuel came close to total despair.
“I actually think that there is perhaps no other point that could be more damaging. That you totally lose all notion. I mean, you don’t know if you’re on this planet, where you are, or what you are. You lose all notion.”
The pain and suffering of Manuel’s physical torture by the Bolivian military was made even more severe by systematic psychological torture and its mental impact. Those two elements, physical or mental suffering intentionally inflicted by the State, form the core elements of the Article 1 definition of torture in the Convention Against Torture, adopted by the United Nations 40 years ago.
Speaking to the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRCT), a member of the United Against Torture Consortium, 50 years on from his ordeal, Manuel’s coping mechanism for his psychological torture gave him the simple but beautiful title of his memoir of that time.
“Then, since nobody spoke to me, I had no contact with anybody except for that plate that came through the hole at the bottom [of the cell door]. So, I would try to talk to the person who brought me the food, saying, ‘Hey, what’s your name? How are you? Tell me something.’ Nothing! He wouldn’t answer me. They were forbidden to talk to me.
Then, one day, it occurred to me to ask, ‘Is the sun shining? Is it sunny?’ And until now, I’m not sure if he answered me or if I imagined it. ‘Yes.’ Just one word.
So, for me, the question, ‘The sun is shining?’ was a way of showing myself that I was alive. The sun shines because it is to return to life, to feel the brightness and warmth of the sun that brings me back to life.”
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Publish date : 2024-08-29 18:45:00
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Author : theamericannews
Publish date : 2024-08-30 06:41:04
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