It was wonderful to see so many Maine citizens — at least 1,100 — come to Amnesty International’s replica of a Guantanamo Bay prison cell over the three days that the cell was set up in Portland’s Monument Square. Many were clearly moved and disturbed by the sight and the size of the cell built to hold a detainee for 22 hours per day for a period of long years.

On the other hand, there were some who criticized Amnesty International for its stand seeking the right to a fair trial for people they consider “the worst of the worst.” In our own opinion, the most important people who came to Monument Square were those who had not made up their minds about the rights of those detainees, who were worried both about what terrorists could do to the United States but also about what secret detentions at Guantanamo, Baghram, and other prisons were doing to the Constitutional rights of everyone, American citizens and others, and who were sorting through their conflicting thoughts.

There were also people who had not known anything about Guantanamo before coming to Monument Square last week. We learned a lot by talking with visitors to the cell and trying to sort out the real issues with them.

As Amnesty International volunteers in Portland, it was a privilege to talk with some of these people and let them know our position that torture is always wrong without exception, that everyone is innocent until proven guilty, and that we believe in the worth and dignity of each person. Amnesty International is doing a great service by demanding that our government bring charges against all people for whom there is evidence of wrongdoing or else release them, and by helping to educate the public about the issues.

We were very impressed that an amateur theatrical group, a professional theatre company, a sculptor, several religious groups and congregations, and a veterans group, and a number of peace and human rights organizations lent their voices to this protest in Portland.

Leo and Liz Barrington
Portland, Maine

“These people really do need a fair trial”





OK, I’m exhausted and delirious and it’s past midnight and it’s raining and we just finished unloading 1,650 lbs of Grade A Guantanamo cell replica on Portland’s Monument Square.

cell tour sets up at night in portland maine

The delivery truck was a bit, ahem, late. But you know what’s amazing? There’s a guy spending the whole night alone in the cell. For real. Jeff Inglis, Managing Editor of The Portland Phoenix, donned an orange jumpsuit and will be reading “Poems From Guantanamo,” Amnesty case sheets on GTMO detainees and various and sundry other “GTLit” (you read it coined here first–GTMO Literature, a growth industry) all while listening to an iPod mix of songs (Neil Diamond, Rage Against the Machine, Christina Aguilera…) that real detainees have reportedly been subjected to for days, nonstop, as a form of sensory deprivation–known in my house as psychological torture. Did I mention Neil Diamond?

Look out for Jeff’s account of what it was like on www.thephoenix.com. For a real first hand account of indefinite detention and torture in Guantanamo and elsewhere check out former detainee Murat Kurnaz’s recent book, “Five Years of My Life.” Yeah, five. It’s incredibly powerful. I cried. Multiple times. But I was also inspired to keep up this work.

Jeff Inglis starts his night in the cell.

It can be draining, it can be frustrating, it can be lonely writing a lame blog post in the middle of the night that no one will read, while in an unfamiliar city, in a hotel room, one that smells like smoke because they ran out of non-smoking rooms but didn’t tell us until check-in that they were out of them–but it can also be exhilarating when people like Kurnaz are released, or when you meet other dedicated and talented people working for the same goals, like the AI volunteers in Portland I met tonight at the cell tour orientation, or when someone like Admiral Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledges that Guantanamo reflects badly on the US, or when–hopefully this month–the US Supreme Court restores habeas corpus in Boumediene v. Bush and Congress doesn’t mess it up by passing more bad legislation…OK, I’m dreaming but not getting any sleep–so goodnight. ZJ