Writing in Captivity
Behrouz Boochani and Mohamedou Ould Slahi have written two of the most harrowing accounts of imprisonment in the 21st century. In this program, they first enter into a conversation. What does it mean to write when you are in prison? How do you convey the horrors of the system in which you have unexpectedly found yourself? Ould Slahi and Boochani will discuss writing as testimony, as resistance and as resilience. Join at De Balie.
Writing in Captivity
Writing in Captivity
Born in Mauritania, Mohamedou Ould Slahi (1970) was held in the infamous Guantánamo Bay prison for 14 years. He was tortured there, but no charges were ever brought against him. In 2015, while Ould Slahi was still incarcerated, his book Guantánamo Diary was published. In 2016, Ould Slahi was released. His story was adapted into the Hollywood film The Mauritanian.
When Kurdish-Iranian poet and journalist Behrouz Boochani (1983) attempted to flee to Australia in 2013, he was captured at sea and transported by plane to the island of Manus. There, he was unlawfully imprisoned in the so-called “Australian Guantanamo”. While in jail, Boochani secretly wrote Only the Mountains Are My Friends on a phone smuggled into the prison. His first-hand account is gruesome but poetic. Boochani has recently released a new book: Freedom, Only Freedom: The Prison Writings of Behrouz Boochani.
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