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Their hands were tied or handcuffed, yet their fingers danced, drew words. The prisoners were hooded, but leaning back, they could see a bit, just a bit, down below. Although it was forbidden to speak, they spoke with their hands. Pinio Ungerfeld taught me the finger alphabet, which he had learned in prison without a teacher:

Some of us had bad handwriting” he told me. “Others were masters of calligraphy.”

The Uruguayan dictatorship wanted everyone to stand alone, everyone to be no one: in prisons and barracks, and throughout the country, communication was a crime.

Some prisoners spent more than ten years buried in solitary cells the size of coffins, hearing nothing but clanging bars or footsteps in the corridors. Fernández Huidobro and Mauricio Rosencof, thus condemned, survived because they could talk to each other by tapping on the wall. In that way they told of dreams and memories, fallings in and out of love; they discussed, embraced, fought; they shared beliefs and beauties, doubts and guilts, and those questions that have no answer.

When it is genuine, when it is born of the need to speak, no one can stop the human voice. When denied a mouth, it speaks with the hands or the eyes, or the pores, or anything at all. Because every single one of us has something to say to the others, something that deserves to be celebrated or forgiven by others.

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- Eduardo Galeano, translated by Cedric Belfrage

@ Affinity’s Burning Bowl event in early January, slipping a piece of paper into the fire with aspects of past years that I’d like to let go of, and say goodbye to. “Thanks for being a part of my life, for being the negative that, along with the positive, has helped me to grow. But now, it’s time for you to leave. C’est la vie!” 

@ Affinity’s Burning Bowl event in early January, slipping a piece of paper into the fire with aspects of past years that I’d like to let go of, and say goodbye to. “Thanks for being a part of my life, for being the negative that, along with the positive, has helped me to grow. But now, it’s time for you to leave. C’est la vie!” 

I believe that this is important. I also will say that anyone who cannot see the beauty in these landscapes has lost soul. How is it that politics allows people to loose their humanity, to become ignorant to how beautiful the environment around us can be? It is nothing less than incredibly sad. 

& I’ll try to be back, looking for that cozy place.

(via okcaro)

youarebutawitness:

Spring / Hope

july 3, 2011. home.

"the dread of being a bystander"

"Don’t you hear it? she asked & I shook my head no & then she started to dance & suddenly there was music everywhere & it went on for a very long time & when I finally found the words all I could say was thank you."

- Brian Andraes

"there was a single blue line of crayon drawn across every wall in the house. What does it mean? I asked. A pirate needs the sight of the sea, he said, & then he pulled his eye patch down & turned & sailed away."

- Brian Andraes

الحب ينتصر, אהבה מנצחת