
Stake attention in this memory
The image depicts an indoor scene within the Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos in Santiago, Chile. The central subject is a large, vertically oriented, off-white poster, approximately A1 size, mounted on a light purple-grey wall with a subtle texture. The poster prominently displays the headline "¿NO MAS DESAPARECIDOS EN CHILE!" (NO MORE DISAPPEARED IN CHILE!). It features six black-and-white portrait photographs of men, arranged in two rows of three. Diagonal text banners traverse the poster, reading "¿DONDE ESTAN? ¡AYUDANOS A ENCONTRARLOS!" (WHERE ARE THEY? HELP US FIND THEM!) and "¿UD. LOS HA VISTO? ¿UD. PRESENCIO SU SECUESTRO?" (HAVE YOU SEEN THEM? DID YOU WITNESS THEIR KIDNAPPING?). A bottom banner states "¡MOVILIZATE PARA SALVAR SUS VIDAS!" (MOBILIZE TO SAVE THEIR LIVES!). Contact information for the "Vicaría de la Solidaridad" and "Comisión Chilena de Derechos Humanos," including addresses in Plaza de Armas, Santiago, and phone numbers, is listed. The poster is attributed to the "Agrupación de Familiares de Detenidos-Desaparecidos, Santiago-Chile, 1987." Directly below the poster, a block of Spanish text provides further contextual details. It describes the disappearance of five young Communist Party militants: José Peña Maltés (36), Julio Muñoz Otárola (33), Manuel Sepúlveda Sánchez (28), Alejandro Pinochet Arenas (23), and Gonzalo Fuenzalida Navarrete (26). The text states their detention by the CNI at Cuartel Borgoño and the subsequent transport and disposal of their bodies by helicopter years later from Fuerte Peldehue to Quintay, thrown into the sea tied to railway tracks. On the far left of the frame, the back of a person's head and shoulders is partially visible, indicating an observer. The individual is wearing a dark grey hooded garment. A white architectural element separates the observer from the wall display. In the upper left corner, a portion of a white ceiling with recessed lighting and a black dome security camera is visible. To the right of the main poster, a fragment of another framed exhibit is discernible.
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