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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Álvaro Varela Walker

Interviewed May 20, 2024

We were always hopeful, all Chileans, that this very dark period in life of Chile, the dictatorship, was not going to last long. We always had hope that at any minute there would be some response but it took much longer than we ever imagined.

Therefore, it was much more painful. But at the same time, without a doubt, it meant that as the end of the dictatorship neared, it stirred enormous hope.

The night of the referendum, the night in which “no” triumphed in spite of the difficult circumstances, because it was very hard for people in fear to vote “no” … but victory was achieved.

[The “No” campaign was a Chilean campaign to pursued citizens to vote “No” in the 1988 nation-wide plebiscite that would have prolonged the rule of the Pinochet regime.]

I remember the first thing I did after learning the results: I went home, it was very late at night, my three children slept, they were very young, and I went home to give each one a kiss as a sign that they were going to live in a different country.

I think that that essentially speaks to what one could feel at that moment.