On the thirteenth day of resistance to the military
government, my father and other members assembled peacefully to plan a
nationwide strike and a demonstration. My father was arrested and hit with batons on his face and head. He was
kicked, pushed into a police van and imprisoned with ten other men in a cell
meant for two. Every few hours, one or two men would be taken from the cell
into an interrogation room where they were tortured. My father was beaten with
electrical wire, stripped to his underwear and doused with cold water. The
police wanted him to reveal the whereabouts of the key members of NADECO, and
when my father remained silent, they threatened to charge him with plotting to
overthrow the government. This charge meant death by firing squad.
After being held for weeks in the darkness of his prison
cell, my father was saved by his uncle. He became a refugee, traveling through
Africa until he found asylum in Canada. He arrived in the United States in
1995, where he is free to speak about the government and assemble peacefully in
a group to discuss politics without fear or torture and death.

3 comments:
I agree that your father is a hero, and brave. I admire him so much for standing up for the freedom to speak.
Your father seems like a good man. Also this is proof that not all governments are good or care about the well being of their citizens.
MF-8
Your father is a very courageous man. I bet he is an inspiration to everyone he sees based on what he does and his past. One day I would like to be an inspiration just like your father.
-ET 7 Gold
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