Thursday, March 10, 2011

Even Silence Has An End by Isabel Betancourt ✔✔✔

This is the story of the author's six-year captivity by FARC - the people's army of Columbia - in the jungles of the Amazon. It was an interesting contrast to Unbroken, which I read earlier this year, because this book explores the relationships between people under such constant stress much more deeply.

"When you're chained by the neck to a tree, and deprived of all freedom - the freedom to move around, to talk, to eat, to drink, to carry out your most basic bodily needs - well, it took me several years to realize it, but you still have the most important freedom of all, which no one can take away from you: that is the freedom to choose what kind of person you want to be".

Ingrid never stopped dreaming of escape and did get away several times, only to be re-captured. The book is a treatise on the basics of life - fear, freedom, hope. She was often derided by her fellow captives, and suffered many indignities from her captors, forced to march many miles through dense jungle, with only her mother and children's broadcasts to hostages over the radio sustaining her - she was never allowed to speak to them, and they broadcast every day not knowing whether she was alive to hear them.

After finishing the book, I read some reviews, and found the readers' comments following them very interesting. Many people absolutely hate this woman, for being part of the "elite" in Columbia, for going into a dangerous region in the first place, and especially for suing the Columbian government after her release on the basis that she was not sufficiently warned about the area she was visiting at the time of her capture.

So the controversies that followed her time in the jungle have not really been resolved, including scathing remarks from some of her fellow hostages. But, for me, it was a good read, and I admired her spirit in facing each day with hope that this one might be the last in the jungle.

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