Politics

Learn the stories of political prisoners interned in shelters.

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Unpublished review UOL uncovered 24 cases of internment of political prisoners by the military dictatorship in psychiatric institutions. There are 21 men and three women in nine federation units. The number may be greater than the one indicated in the report.

Find out more about the history of some of these political prisoners below. ABOUT UOL it only publishes the full names of those who have already died, or, in the case of the living, with the permission of the individual or family. The rest of the cases are indicated with initials only.

Of the 24 cases, at least 22 were tortured in regular prisons prior to internment. This is the case of Paulo Benhimola, who began to hear voices similar to ” [a voz de] one of those agents who interrogated me “and who said that” it is in the hands of the devil again. “SR lost his memory after ten days of electric shock.

In the institutions where they were interned, some political prisoners continued to be ill-treated. In Pernambuco, JS spent “two years with speech and movement difficulties” due to high doses of psychiatric drugs. In Rio, Solange Gomez was treated with electroshock and seizure therapy (seizure induction).

In response to an inquiry, the Department of Defense stated that “facts relating to the period from 1964 to 1973 are subject to the Amnesty Act.”

Aparecido Galdino Jacinto, Sao Paulo

Aparecidao spent seven years at the Franco da Rocha orphanage.

Image: Reproduction

An illiterate farmer, Aparecidao, as he was called, was a religious leader in Rubinea, deep in São Paulo. In 1970, he and his followers opposed the flooding of their lands for the construction of the Ilha Solteira hydroelectric power plant – the work of the dictatorship. They were arrested for resisting police violence at the temple where they were gathering.

According to military justice, Aparecidao had “delusional ideas of a mystical nature.” Under the National Security Act, he was sentenced to two years in the Franco da Rocha asylum. As a result, he stayed for seven years.

He was released after a new forensic scientist declared that he could not be considered insane because of his belief: “The idea of ​​a man in [ser] healer, preach peace, goodness, say that his power was a gift lent to him by God? If this were so, justice would be full of criminal acts against the Pope, cardinals, bishops, priests, pastors, mediums and all others who call on the name of the Lord. “

MR, Rio de Janeiro

When a political prisoner walked in front of Sir’s cell at the Ilha das Flores prison in Rio de Janeiro, he heard the call: “I can’t take this anymore.” He asked them to report his situation abroad because the military wanted him to report facts he did not know. He was accused of organizing the Brazilian Revolutionary Communist Party.

One of the activists, who lived with the SR on Ilha das Flores, included his case in the text of the accusation: “A prisoner at the age of 20 spent 20 days in solitary confinement, beat him daily for a month; memory loss after 10 days of electric shock, stick. -de-arara. He was interned in a court shelter because of his mental state. “

Reception took place from 1964 to the mid-1970s.

Image: Art / UOL

Nilo Sergio Menezes de Macedo, Rio de Janeiro

After a period of imprisonment in Minas Gerais, Macedo was sentenced to four years of imprisonment at the Judicial Hospital. Heitor Carrillo in Rio. “They claimed that I had mental problems. I was crazy, not at all, says Macedo.

“The orphanage was a hell of a place, a very tough environment. [Quem estava lá eram] people with serious mental health problems who have committed common crimes such as murder. I got an electric shock, I had to take very strong drugs. I stayed there for about seven months. Then I thought: if I stay here, my life will be in jeopardy. I hate being here. Then I tried to escape and I was caught. “

After attempting to escape, Macedo was taken out of the orphanage and sent back to a regular prison on the island of Ilha Grande. “This is what saved me.”

Roberto Joao Motta, Santa Catarina

Mott’s lawyer was arrested in Santa Catarina on charges of belonging to the Brazilian Communist Party. In a letter to the Archdiocese of São Paulo, his wife condemned “the torture to which her husband was subjected by the army and the police. Unable to bear the suffering any longer, he tried to commit suicide three times. Then he was sent to prison. Judicial asylum.”

Finally, the military court authorized his transfer to a private psychiatric clinic, the costs of which were paid by the family, but did not cancel his arrest – the family also had to pay the costs of the police officers who guarded him.

JS, Pernambuco

Political prisoner reported ill-treatment during psychiatric treatment

Image: Truth Commission House Helder Kamara

ALN (Aliança Libertadora Nacional) member JS was arrested, tortured and sent to various institutions for psychiatric treatment under police escort.

In documents sent to the Pernambuco Remembrance and Truth Commission, he said that he had received very high doses of psychiatric drugs, “almost died of an overdose”, and in another situation – “two years with difficulties in speech and mobility.”

Paulo Roberto das Neves Benjimol, Rio de Janeiro

The journalist Benchimol was imprisoned in Ilha das Flores on charges of belonging to MR-8 (Revolutionary Movement of October 8).

Exhausted, he began to hear voices “saying that I am back in the hands of the devil.” “The voice is similar to the voice of one of those agents who interrogated me. Sometimes the voice spoke directly to the agent, accusing me, exactly at the moment when the interlocutor accused me, ”Benchimol told the experts who drew up his psychiatric report.

He was sent to a court asylum, where he was “subjected to intensive psychiatric treatment,” according to a report from the time. He received “a series of eight electric shocks, and the changes in his depression are not yet noticeable. There are still three suicide attempts recorded in the medical record. ”

After his arrest, Benchimol left for Chile. In 1973, as a result of the coup by Augusto Pinochet, he was detained and tortured at the National Stadium in Santiago.

Solange Lorenzo Gomes, Bahia and Rio de Janeiro

Solange Gomes has been featured in the newspapers as a “repentant terrorist.”

Image: Brazil Never Again

A member of MR-8 (October 8 Revolutionary Movement), Solange was wanted when she began hallucinations. He decided to give up. In the newspapers of the time, she was portrayed as a “repentant terrorist” attracted by “sex” to subversive activities. In prison, “he was the victim of horrific visions.”

At the trial in a military court, she was found incapable of responsibility, that is, unable to answer for her actions, and sentenced to a term of compulsory placement in psychiatric institutions. She was treated with electroshock and convulsive therapy (induction of seizures).

After being released, she did not recover. “I have witnessed her tremendous efforts to recover from a serious mental, psychotic condition as a result of her arrest,” her husband told the Commission on Political Disappearances. Solange committed suicide in 1982.

Vitor de Sousa Couto, Rio Grande do Sul

A soldier of the Rio Grande do Sul military brigade, Couto was guarding Leonel Brizola’s house when the military coup took place. After Brizola went into exile in Uruguay, Koutu went to the barracks and was immediately arrested.

Expelled from the troops, he was placed in a court shelter, from which he sometimes escaped.

In his testimony, he said that he was forcibly hospitalized on the grounds that after falling while serving in the army, he “began to suffer from epilepsy.” In one of his escapes, he went to Uruguay, where he attempted suicide, “because he was desperate, afraid to return to Brazil and be arrested again.”

The number of cases may be more than the UOL defined

Image: Yasmin Ayumi / UOL

Manuel Domingos Neto, Ceara

A member of the AP (People’s Action), he was arrested and physically and mentally tortured. He could not sleep because he was awakened by the blows or screams of women – which he thought came from a militant friend who was also in prison, or from her sister, who, according to the torturers, was “on a stick.”

He walked in “desperate and thought of suicide.” “I was very frail, weighed 40 kg. I passed out and spent ten days without the slightest idea of ​​things. Then they took me to a military hospital, where I was imprisoned for many months, ”the armed men observed.

“His mental state” was such that he “had to take 20 psychotropic pills every day.”

Wesley Macedo de Almeida, Bahia

Photo of Wesley Almeida on his prison file

Image: Bahia State Archives

A student in Jackie, Bahia, and one of the founders of the city’s film club, he and his colleagues were arrested after “a veritable avalanche of subversive brochures swept across the city.” Sent to El Salvador, he was greatly tortured. His family went to the state capital of Bahia to look for him, but Wesley was not imprisoned. “When they found him, he was already at the orphanage,” says the younger brother.

To this day, he still needs psychiatric treatment. “Before the prison he had nothing. It could even be latent, but it developed in prison, ”says a relative. “The torture affected him, people cannot bear what he went through. In a sense, he remains a political prisoner. He remains a recluse, does not leave the house due to injuries and illnesses. [psíquica]… “

IV, Rio Grande do Sul

Arrested by the military dictatorship, he was sent to the Porto Alegre military hospital for psychiatric treatment in 1970. “In prison, he felt deprived of everything, he cried all day, covering his head with his hands, he could not eat, he could not sleep,” says one of the documents of the military justice about him. “I was living in anticipation of something worse,” and I had “symptoms of severe nervous depression.”

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