"Love casts out
fear; but conversely fear casts out love. And not only love. Fear also casts
out intelligence, casts out goodness, casts out all thought of beauty and
truth. What remains is the dumb or studiedly jocular desperation of one who is
aware of the obscene Presence in the corner of the room and knows that the door
is locked, that there aren’t any windows." (Aldous Huxley)
Eduardo Vargas |
In this world, there
is a lot to be afraid of: unemployment, poverty, financial crises, terrorism,
chemical warfare, the South, the North, the stranger, the Other. In Colombia in
particular, with its years of civil war and its high crime rate, people live in
the constant fear of being assaulted, violated or killed in any space. We are
afraid that the bus or train we take might be hijacked or blown up; we are
afraid of being labelled a subversive element if we speak our minds; we are
afraid that anything we own or love could be taken from us in a split second.
All of this reinforces mutual distrust and encourages the spread of fear.
“Fear is a cognitive
distortion,” explains biopedagagy specialist Eduardo Vargas. “It is a thought
that disguises reality in a way that paralyses the individuum.”
Andrés Gómez,
freelancer: “Fear of love, fear of destruction, fear of the Other, fear of the
unknown, fear of being happy.”
The strongest human
emotion
Throughout history,
from the Middle Ages to today, fear has been an effective social device used by
the military, by political tyrants, by conquerors or religious communities to
implement a permanent state of instability, uncertainty, and a collective
paralysis of the people. It is the most destructive weapon that does not kill,
but rather annihilates people’s ability to act. It is the greatest enemy of and
obstacle to happiness.
Fear is the most
destructive weapon that does not kill. It is the greatest enemy of and obstacle
to happiness.
"Behind every
conflict there’s fear," writes poet and essayist Santiago Trancón [1].
"Fear is the strongest human emotion – even stronger than sex – and therefore
the most dangerous one. The worst thing is that fear suppresses the attack
instinct. Escape and paralysis are left as the last resorts."
Álvaro Moreno Hoffman,
biologist, psychologist, researcher and artist: “In traditional and natural
societies, fear is the instinct that makes you run. It helps with hunting, it
gives a shot of adrenaline which helps us react effectively in case of
immediate danger. But in urbanised, mediatised, human societies, fear doesn’t
really lead to effective reactions; it results in blockages, and in the
inability to react adequately.”
Fear manipulates minds
and wills. "Today, more sophisticated methods of spreading fears exist,
mainly through mass media," highlights psychoanalyst and neurologist Jorge
L. Tizón [2]. "Every government tries to manage these media because it
understands their power to control citizens."
Fernando López,
geography student: “I think there are strategies that use terror, for instance
in wars. They demonize others and their cultures. No doubt, there is a powerful
and macabre alliance between the state, private entities and the media, which
undoubtedly use terror policies.”
After September 11th,
professor of linguistics and American critic Noam Chomsky warned that the world
powers could use the fear created by "the threat of terrorism" for
their purposes. His warnings have become reality in many countries.
A society rent by fear
Colombia has also not
been immune to this “crusade against terrorism”. Between 2002 and 2010, Álvaro
Uribe Vélez [2] (alleged by the Colombian court Tribunal Superior de Medellín
to have been involved in paramilitarism) [3] implemented the so-called democratic
security policy [4]. It was aimed at eliminating the oldest guerrilla group in
the world, the FARC, by any means – without rules or limits. All the secret
security agencies and the State Armed Forces were ready to use dispossession,
forced internal displacement and extrajudicial killings. They intimidated and
illegally persecuted citizens, journalists, trade unionists, and human rights
defenders, and committed thousands of extrajudicial killings of intimidated and
helpless civilians.
However, those eight
years are only one part of Colombia’s [5] long, 50-year history marked by the
horrors of civil war. The battle has raged between various conflicting forces:
the regular army of the state, the guerrillas, the drug [6] traders,
paramilitary groups, armed common criminals, and emerging gangs [7]. This has
caused immense suffering, leaving hundreds of thousands of battered and
sexually abused widows and orphaned children in the wake of the violence.
“26 people were
displaced every hour, and 1 person was kidnapped every 12 hours.”
1,982 massacres were
perpetrated over the past three decades. 26 people were displaced every hour,
and 1 person was kidnapped every 12 hours. 81% of the victims were civilians,
mostly farmers and indigenous people. According to the report “¡Ya Basta! [8]
Colombia: memorias de guerra y dignidad” (Colombia: Memories of War and
Dignity, Official Report) published by the Centro Nacional de Memoria
Histórica, 220,000 civilians were killed during the internal armed conflict
between 1958 and 2012, while only 40,000 combatants lost their lives.
The “law of the
machete” and the “law of the gun” are nothing new to Colombians. Fear and
threat have been their constant companions through these years. Targeted
assassinations, massacres, terrorist attacks, torture and forced disappearances
were tools powerful enough for panic to get a firm hold.
Yesika Toro, domestic
servant: “We live in a world and in an environment where fear is all around.
Because of the political situation and lacking security, we always need to be
careful. We are in fear of so many things, fear of war, fear of dying, fear of
losing a loved one – or fear of losing the children, who are most important to
me.”
Emilia Batista,
displaced person due to political violence: “The war, the armed conflict – I
come from a region that is exceptionally terrible. It is very difficult to
understand it all. To understand… the humans.”
None of the traumas
and injuries have healed. Colombian society is still ruled by terror. Injustice
and insecurity create an atmosphere of demoralization and silencing among the
victims of human rights violations and war crimes, claims lawyer and university
professor Mario Madrid-Malo.
Forced internal
displacement was used as a war strategy. 266,480 families were forced to
abandon their lands from 1995 to 2010 alone. At the same time, many peasants
decided to voluntarily leave their lands for fear of being robbed and killed.
According to historian and researcher Martha Ines Villa, this created an
internal exodus of millions of peasants, mostly women and children, desperately
looking for a place to live in their own country.
Álvaro Moreno Hoffman,
biologist, psychologist, researcher and artist: "We are facing all kinds
of fears. The fear of being spied on, fear of being monitored, the fear of
being touched, the fear of being caught with strangers in too close spaces,
fear that they will interfere in our personal and intimate affairs. Fear has
become a kind of contagious disease. So there is the fear of getting to know
someone, the fear of falling in love, the fear of growing up, the fear of
learning, the fear of being conscious, the fear of change... a fear of
everything has emerged, and that blocks us completely."
The business behind
fear
Fear is also the raw
material of the prosperous, growing and lucrative industries that sell private
security solutions and social control. These include cars, buildings, doors,
and armored bunkers against criminal attacks, as well as armored clothing and
intimate apparel, weapons, home arsenals, security cameras and all kinds of
other devices.
In an extremely
disturbing comment, the Minister of National Defence emphasised that in
Colombia, the security industry’s products “are tested on the battlefield.”
The products
manufactured by the Colombian military industry include river boats, rifles,
flight simulators and bombs for aircrafts. In an extremely disturbing comment,
the Minister of National Defence emphasised that this industry’s products “are
tested on the battlefield.”
“The market for
private police forces and private prisons is growing, while all of us, some
more, some less, are becoming the surveillants of our neighbors and the
prisoners of fear.”
Columbia spends 13
billion dollars annually, and is by far not the biggest market for the security
and defense industry in Latin America [9]: Brazil spends a whopping 30 billion
dollars a year. The security business "is growing as fast or even faster
than the crimes that generate it, and experts say that this trend will
continue," claims Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano. "The market for
private police forces and private prisons is growing, while all of us, some
more, some less, are becoming the surveillants of our neighbors and the
prisoners of fear."
The truth is that in
Colombia, the use of weapons is not under the control of the government. Arms
are in the hands of the war lords and the various warring parties. This is why
the "Unidad Nacional de Protección" (National Protection Unit)
exists. It spends more than 1,500 million dollars annually to protect the lives
of nearly 1,000 people in mortal jeopardy. They protect entire villages and
activists groups with armored cars, bodyguards and security schemes.
Álvaro Moreno Hoffman,
biologist, psychologist, researcher and artist: "Societies have been
silenced. Fear makes people incapable of criticising, thinking, acting. Fear
makes them think or feel that they are impotent and that they will be
mistreated or end up losing. Fear has conquered us."
“Fear will switch
sides”
Suddenly, however,
things have changed. Colombians are standing up. Between August and the first
weeks of September, they came together in mass protests. People awakened from
decades of apathy, “took fear by the horns”, as we say in Latin America, and
ended their silence.
“We are tired of them
depriving us of our lands; we are tired of exchanging hoes for rifles; we are
tired of our children going to war; we are tired of giving birth to warriors –
we have to do something," says Eduardo Vargas.
“We are tired of them
depriving us of our lands; we are tired of exchanging hoes for rifles; we are
tired of our children going to war; we are tired of giving birth to warriors.”
The whole country has
arisen in protest [10]. The constant fear of being branded a terrorist or a
guerrillero for taking to the streets and the strong fear of repression were
left behind for a few days. Or perhaps even forever.
Students were not the
only ones who took to the streets and squares of major cities: Farmers too
loudly voiced their just demands, protesting against the abandonment of fertile
land due to the North American Free Trade Agreements. They were spontaneously
supported by students, teachers, workers, and housewives. This also encouraged
the lorry drivers and miners to protest.
People have finally
begun to act. They refuse to continue to play only a supporting role in their
own lives. They don’t want to be passive anymore just to ensure that
"nothing happens to us". The dictatorship of fear has ended in
Colombia.
Fear can rule our
minds. It eliminates confidence and happiness.
But in Colombia, fear
will now switch sides.
"@ValenciaCalle
World News. Colombians want peace. But they are at war because they are afraid
to live in a peaceful country."
____________________________________________________________________
Header image © bunkerglo
Links
Tomado de Digital Developmen Debates.
Fear: A Most Destructive Weapon.
For decades Colombians have been ruled by fear. They are now breaking free.
12 comentarios:
Nada más carente de rigor que un blog concebido en español, pero cuyo tema central está escrito en inglés. Y cuando el ingenuo lector recurre al mecanismo de la traducción, se encuentra con que el listado de opciones no incluye el español. ¡Vaya bronca, la que produce esto! Algo así como las trampas y los trucos urdidos por los productores de espacios de televisión, que se gozan a sus víctimas, viéndolas derrotadas o abochornadas a través de cámaras escondidas. Como en "También caerás", un espacio grosero y por mismo irrespetuoso, que alguna vez he visto en la TV de Colombia. ¿Para qué ponen el texto original en inglés? Pero, bueno, el blog es "original", "raro", "moderno", "políglota" y otras bellezas. Sigan así. Atentamente, Mónica Della Savia.
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