Haverford College
Quick Access
Human Rights in El Salvador >

Human Rights in El Salvador

  • Home
  • About
  • Who's Blogging

    • Quaker & Special Collections
    • 8th Dimension
    • Women's Center
    • Reggae in Prague
    • CPGC Blog
    • Mapping Identity
    • Haverford House
    • Helen K White Lab
    • The Haverblog
    • Going Green @ Haverford
    • Cape Town South Africa | Alexa Kutler '11
    • Screening Music: An Aural Look at Film
    • Haverford Blogs
    • Democracy in Niger
    • CPGC Guatemala
    • Peacebuilding: Architecture in Belfast
    • Postcards From Paris
    • Ahmedabad, India
    • Organic Farming in France
    • From Shanghai to Guatemala
    • Health Care in Bangladesh
    • Community Health
    • Nanjing, China
    • A Travelling Medievalist's Blog
    • New Delhi, India
    • Tres físicos no hispanohablantes
    • Leaping Lizards!
    • X-Street Children in Nicaragua
    • Urban Farming
    • Philadelphia Community Gardens
    • Fashioning the Self
    • among friends
    • among friends Field Trip Blog
    • Indonesia Research Program
    • Speech Acts
    • Alternative Spring Break
    • Digital Du Chemin
    • EHAUS
    • 127 Egyptian Nights
    • Research Cruise
    • Hoang Research Lab
    • Emerson Research Lab
    • Superlab
    • Men's Basketball in Ireland
    • Field Hockey in Buenos Aires
    • Human Rights in El Salvador
    • Resident Services in Denver
    • Teaching English in China
    • 'Ford Scientists in Southern California
    • Peace-building in Rwanda
    • Oral History in Bali
    • Koforidua, Ghana
    • Teaching English in Tibet
    • CPGC: The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
    • Humane Education in Cape Town
    • Community Murals in Portland
    • Fords Down Under
    • Poli Sci/Hist 233: Guatemala
« Like someone moving in before I’m moved out
Yes, I’m back »

Goodbye, Ruby

Last year, on our last full day in the country, Ruby took the testimony of one of the founders of the Committee. I was incredibly sick so I stayed at the house. Unfortunately, incredibly unfortunately, something went wrong and Side B didn’t record. That is, after the point in which she was put in a truck and captured, there was nothing recorded.

So on Monday we redid it, her testimony. The worst part of the hardest testimony we’ve heard. I want to talk about it, but it seems inappropriate on something as impersonal as a blog. I don’t know who’s reading and who’s not and what they’re getting out of it, but I want to say this: this shit is not easy. It weighs on me. You may have noticed my lack of details in writing these posts? Maybe you haven’t, because you haven’t heard it and don’t know what I could be telling you but am not. Well, it’s not because we’re not being told details, it’s because I don’t think about the details. While I’m here, I don’t name the details. Right now, as I’m writing this, only one detail from her testimony comes to mind unbidden, and it’s the one detail I’ve spoken aloud: that of the soldiers who captured her, before taking her out of her house, burning her underwear and raping her with their rifles. This is before taking her, this is the precursor to her capture.

I’m really glad it’s my last week. I don’t think about the details and I don’t talk about the details while I’m here because I don’t think I can. I don’t think I can think about it in the evening and then get up in the morning and do it again. But, after three weeks and a lot of details, I can’t not think about it and I can’t not talk about it and I need to go home and sleep on a mattress which isn’t box springs and I need to not eat meat every day and I need to talk about it.

This morning I said goodbye to Ruby and Alex, who both fly today. I wanted so badly to go with them. I don’t want to be here alone and I don’t want to come in to the office tomorrow and I don’t want this work. Someone else, take it, please. Write this book for me, carry these details for me.       –Which is of course precisely why I don’t talk about it in detail with 99% of people I know: no one should have to hear these stories and carry them every day. I don’t want to put that on anyone.

This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008 at 6:13 pm by Inez Steigerwald and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

2 Responses to “Goodbye, Ruby”

  1. Sue Cairn Says:
    July 23rd, 2008 at 11:13 pm

    Hi Nezi,

    I am holding you in the light…..really tightly…..hoping that some of that light can show you the way back out of that dark place your heart and head go when you hear the stories. I can’t say I wish I were there hearing the stories you are witnessing. But I wish I were there to give you a hug. To tell you that you are strong and brave and kind and compassionate. And that you are doing a good thing. And to thank you. Hang in there, and remember that there are many of us out here who are with you in spirit!

    - Sue

  2. Iris '06 Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 2:21 pm

    Hey Inez,

    It’s so great to see the wonderful things you are up to. I can’t believe how time flies and now you are a senior. Good luck.

Haverford College • 370 Lancaster Avenue • Haverford, PA 19041
Human Rights in El Salvador is proudly powered by WordPress