Guantánamo Public Memory Project

Category: National Dialogue and Traveling Exhibit

Regina José Galindo’s Confesión and the Power of Performance Art

Regina José Galindo’s Confesión and the Power of Performance Art Thumbnail Image

Regina José Galindo is a contemporary Guatemalan artist who often uses performance and her own body to comment on international political and social issues.  Often, Galindo will put her body in difficult, violent, and compromising positions as a way to bring attention to ignored or hidden abusive acts by the powerful over the vulnerable.  She…

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“Accommodating ‘our boys’ in ways Mother never intended”: The Sexual Politics of Guantánamo Bay

“Accommodating ‘our boys’ in ways Mother never intended”: The Sexual Politics of Guantánamo Bay Thumbnail Image

At the turn of the twentieth century, the regular enlisted men of the U.S. Navy stationed at Guantánamo Bay were enmeshed in a culture of intense masculinity and sexual isolation, with no American women on the base, except for the wives of high-ranking officers. The raucous activities that took place just outside the walls of…

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Children at Guantánamo Bay Naval Base

Children at Guantánamo Bay Naval Base Thumbnail Image

Despite the Guantánamo Bay base’s military purpose, it has also been home to a number of children over the years. In 1931 the W.T. Sampson School was founded to accommodate the children of military personnel and continues to operate today. The school was closed and students evacuated to the mainland during three periods of intense…

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Interview with Dr. Eugenio M. Rothe

Interview with Dr. Eugenio M. Rothe Thumbnail Image

Video produced by Debbie Rolf. My project focused on the time period where Cuban rafters were the primary occupants of the Guantánamo Bay naval base. I had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Eugenio M. Rothe about his experiences treating Cuban refugee children. I was floored by the level of psychological damage that these children endured.…

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Interview with Raul Hernandez

Interview with Raul Hernandez Thumbnail Image

Video produced by Bryan Trotman and David Laffey. This personal memoir is part of the Guantánamo Public Memory Project. The University of Miami is participating in the Guantánamo Public Memory Project‘s National Dialogue and Traveling Exhibit. Opening at NYU’s Kimmel Center for University Life Windows Gallery in December 2012 and traveling to 9 sites (and…

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The Haitian Guantánamo Bay Experience : The Legal Journey

The Haitian Guantánamo Bay Experience : The Legal Journey Thumbnail Image

Video produced by Rachelle Salnave and Phil Bouknight. This personal memoir is part of the Guantánamo Public Memory Project. Mr. Ira J. Kurzban litigated over fifty federal cases concerning the rights of immigrants, including Jean v. Nelson, Commissioner v. Jean, and McNary v Haitian Refugee Center, Inc., all of which he argued before the United…

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A Fight For Due Process

A Fight For Due Process Thumbnail Image

The image above is of a group of Haitian refugees who are making their way toward Cuba. This image reveals the terrible conditions of the boats and journey the Haitian people endured during their travels. The over-crowding of people shows how many individuals searched and dreamed of freedom to the west. By Antoinette Strickland In…

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Locating in Obscurity: Cuba and Guantánamo Bay

Locating in Obscurity: Cuba and Guantánamo Bay Thumbnail Image

Present day Guantánamo Bay is a space that exists in obscurity, both in terms of geography and public imagination. Locating it on a map might involve a simple rendering of the Caribbean islands or, specifically, the southeastern region of Cuba; but to identify the space as a land once colonized by Spain where native Cubans…

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Reflection: The American Dream in Action

Reflection: The American Dream in Action Thumbnail Image

After reading all of the articles provided at the Guantánamo Public Memory Project website, seeing all the images and hearing all of the testimonies, I feel so entrenched in the site and its situation that I want to take the next personnel flight back stateside. Just like many others who visit, part of me remains…

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Reflection: Ambiguity in Memories of Guantánamo Bay

Reflection: Ambiguity in Memories of Guantánamo Bay Thumbnail Image

  The story from our short study of Guantánamo Bay’s history that I found the most compelling is Janet Miller’s narrative in Memories of Guantánamo Bay, 1960-1962. What I find so striking is how incongruent her experience at the base is with my prior understanding of Guantánamo. How can a place that has witnessed so…

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