135 results where found for «Recinto CNI, Cuartel Central Borgoño»


Recinto: Recinto CNI, Avenida República Nº 517
There are no testimonies about this detention centre.
If you had a musical experience about this detention centre, please share it here!

Recinto: Recinto CNI, piscicultura de Curicó
There are no testimonies about this detention centre.
If you had a musical experience about this detention centre, please share it here!

Recinto: Recinto CNI, cerro Quilipín
There are no testimonies about this detention centre.
If you had a musical experience about this detention centre, please share it here!

Recinto: Recinto CNI, calle Dos Sur Nº 1403, Talca
There are no testimonies about this detention centre.
If you had a musical experience about this detention centre, please share it here!

Recinto: Recinto CNI, Casa-habitación en Obispo Michelatto con Carrera
There are no testimonies about this detention centre.
If you had a musical experience about this detention centre, please share it here!

Free (Libre)

Music piece by:
José Luis Armenteros and Pablo Herrero, popularised by Nino Bravo.
Testimony by:
Marianella Ubilla
Experience in:
« I was taken prisoner on 23 November 1973, at the University of Concepción. In the Regional Stadium of Concepción, we had to sing the National Anthem every day. »
[...]
« After Christmas, I was taken to Fort Borgoño in Talcahuano. There I just heard screams and bayonets. »
[Read full testimony]

Recinto: Destacamento de Infantería de Marina Fuerte Borgoño
There are no testimonies about this detention centre.
If you had a musical experience about this detention centre, please share it here!

Anthem of Puchuncaví (Himno de Puchuncaví)

Music piece by:
Sergio Vesely
Testimony by:
Sergio Vesely
« A few weeks before being transferred to Valparaíso Jail - where I would face a war council on account of alleged violations of the State Interior Security Law and other military regulations that existed during the state of siege - I wrote a song that I called anthem, because I wanted it to be sung as a group at the end of our cultural events on Fridays. »
[...]
« crossing central valleys »
[Read full testimony]

National Anthem of Chile

Music piece by:
Eusebio Lillo and Ramón Carnicer
Testimony by:
Boris Chornik Aberbuch
« The Puchuncaví detention camp’s daily routine included mandatory participation in the ceremonies of raising and taking down the Chilean flag on the flagpole at the entrance to the camp. »
[...]
« The process began by assembling the prisoners. On the camp’s central square, the commander and some of the soldiers would take roll call. Afterwards, we were marched to the camp entrance, singing military songs such as 'Lili Marlene' in unison (yes, indeed, the same one sung by the Nazi armies, but with the lyrics translated into Spanish). »
[Read full testimony]

Priests and Soldiers (Curas y milicos)

Music piece by:
Sergio Vesely
Testimony by:
Sergio Vesely
« I don’t want to exaggerate but Camp Melinka became not only a factory that produced handicrafts and a performance hall but also a university. »
[...]
« While listening to one of those professors, I learned about Father Bartolomé de las Casas, a priest who lived in Central America and earned the title of Defender of the Indians during the harshest period of the Spanish Conquest. His life was marked by defeat. He was unable to stop the abuses committed with the consent of the Catholic Church, which was his spiritual home. »
[Read full testimony]