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The electric shock had dried up Farid’s tongue, lips, and gums. They were all as dry and rough as wood. The electricity jolted through his body again.

“Farid, you can talk and then we’ll stop.”

Burning thirst tormented him. Shanklish, the German with the terrible body odor, rose to his feet and poured water from an earthenware jug into a glass with ice cubes in it. The sound of the ice cubes clinking made Farid’s eyes pop out of his head. “Talk, and you can drink all you like,” said Garasi.

Farid’s refusal made the captain even angrier. It was obvious how hard he was having to work to control himself. He signalled to the guard again.

“Open your mouth,” said the man, and when Farid did not react he took his jaw in his powerful hand. Terrible pain caught Farid’s face, as if it were wedged in a vice. He was afraid his lower jaw would break. Resistance was useless. The guard put a piece of bare wire in his mouth, and the officer at the console started the device. Farid felt the strength of the current increase, and his throat, jaws, face muscles, and eyelids all twitched in painful spasms.

“Let go of the wire,” said Garasi, “it will hold of itself now.” And indeed, Farid’s upper and lower jaws were numbed by the current, biting down on the piece of copper wire. He wanted to spit the diabolical thing out, but his jaws would not obey him.

The burning elm danced in the firelight, crackling as it sent out sparks that painted dazzling geometrical patterns in the air. Jagged green lightning kept emerging from the darkness and striking his eyes.

To end his torments, and with a huge effort of will, Farid threw himself backward with all his might. His head hit the floor, and he immediately felt relief as consciousness left him.

261. The Guardian Angel

When he came back to his senses he was still strapped to the chair in front of Garasi’s desk. The room was empty. His mouth and the back of his head hurt. He tasted blood; the bare wire had cut his gums as he fell.

There was complete silence, as if the entire camp had been abandoned. To his surprise, the clock on the wall showed that it was one in the afternoon. Had the torture lasted that long, or had he been lying unconscious all those hours?

He heard the door opening, but he did not turn. His heart was thudding. Then he felt a hand on his head.

“What have those bastards done to you?” whispered Samih, moving in front of Farid so that they could see each other. He was carrying an earthenware water jug. Farid sucked from the spout. The water sizzled in his hot, dehydrated body. He drank and drank, feeling Samih’s cool hand on his forehead, and as if the water were running over, tears came to his eyes.

“Darwish sends you greetings. And I’m to tell you, laddie, Darwish admires you!”

Farid smiled and moved his head away from the jug. Without any word of goodbye, swift and soundless as a cat, Samih disappeared again.

Farid wondered why he never thought of death under torture: not of dying and going to Paradise, like the Muslim Brothers, nor of a heroic death for the communist cause. Many prisoners sang the Internationale or recited from the Koran while they were being tortured. He felt almost ashamed of it, but under torture he always thought of Rana’s beautiful hands, and how she laid them on his forehead when he was sad. He longed for those hands now.

He heard steps in the stairwell. Garasi, followed by the Germans, entered the room. “Take him away and fetch me Muhsin Abu Khal from Hut 9,” he said, sitting down at his desk.

“And as for you,” he told Farid as the guards undid the straps, “I’m going to crush you like a cockroach, and no Guevara or Castro will be able to save you.”

262. The Rising

January 1969 was icy cold. Snow had fallen all over the country for the first time in forty years. The prisoners were freezing in their unheated, open huts.

At the end of January Hamid Tabet, a teacher with heart disease who was one of the Muslim Brotherhood, died under torture. During a raid the evening before, the guards had found the unfortunate man’s secret diary in which he had been carefully recording life in the camp in detail. Captain Garasi regarded the mere possession of paper and pencil as an unforgivable personal attack on him. A knife, and even a pistol and a kilo of hashish were discovered in the same raid, but the owners of these items got off lightly, just a few punches in the camp commandant’s office. But the diary infuriated the captain, and when the timid teacher, with unexpected courage, called Garasi an enemy of Islam and a lackey of the unbelievers, the commandant’s rage knew no bounds.

Beside himself with anger, he went over to the young officer operating the electric shock button, pushed him abruptly aside, cursed the prisoner, and turned the current up to maximum. No one stopped him. One of the Germans had leaped to his feet, and tried to revive the teacher, but Hamid Tabet was no longer reacting. The Germans went straight off to Damascus and didn’t come back until next day, after the corpse had been smuggled into the hospital there. The camp commandant received a medical certificate stating that Hamid Tabet had died in the military hospital after a long-standing history of heart disease.

Such a false certificate was nothing new either to Captain Garasi or the doctors. A routine case, but just as no one life is like any other, so no death resembles another. Hamid Tabet had not, perhaps, been a charismatic and eloquent leader, but his friends loved him for what he was.

He died at a time when the prisoners needed little more to overcome their fears at last. Hamid did more by his death than he had ever done in life. He gave the others the final incentive to free themselves from the pit. There was no going back now. And Captain Garasi, with his bulldog’s nose, soon scented it.

He panicked, for he had much at stake. His promotion to the rank of major was to be the culmination and end of his military career, and at the same time the basis for his pension. Nothing else must happen in his camp until he got that promotion. So he set his informers to work, and talked to some of the prisoners himself, deploring the unfortunate slip-up. He tried to pacify the communists and Satlanists with the argument that the dead man had been only an insignificant Muslim Brother. Garasi also put a stop to the torture, and even the food was slightly better again. But the prisoners’ committee saw their one and only chance, and undeterred they called for a hunger strike. That was on 14 February 1969.

The camp commandant didn’t understand the reports of his informers in Huts 1 and 3, who went to see him early in the morning and told him about the hunger strike. “Then let them starve!” But his smile died away when the guards said that not just one or two but all sixteen huts were refusing food.

Around ten o’clock, one of the officers came and put a sheet of paper in front of Garasi. The prisoners’ missive addressed neither him nor the Syrian government, but world opinion. And in succinct, but clear language, they demanded:

1. The immediate removal of the East German torture experts.

2. The cessation of all torture and degradation of prisoners held at Tad.

3. The cessation of slave labour in the basalt quarry.

4. A public inquiry into the wrongs that have already been suffered.

5. The free choice of a legal representative.

6. Better provision of food and medicaments.

7. The release of all young offenders under twenty.

8. More freedom to exercise in the yard.