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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Wei Jingsheng

Interviewed January 7, 2010

I know in prison, for example, there were many people who were incarcerated in isolation. After a long period of time you would be driven crazy. Then under such circumstances many people might have surrendered. Another thing was to impose lots of — oh, to make you feel very distressful. Of course it was not like whipping you with a lash, but, for example, if you went on a hunger strike, they would say they were humanitarian and then they tortured you, using various methods to torture you. There were many people who surrendered under this kind of circumstance.

Of course there were people who surrendered because of missing family members, et cetera. In various circumstances, while in prison many people succumbed. But in each case, they made it unendurable, beyond what a human being could possibly bear. These were the techniques that were widely used in the prisons of the Communist Party.

We political prisoners all had a big problem, even those arrested political prisoners who had previously been members of the Communist Party. They put you in a very small environment, absolutely quiet, nobody was allowed to talk to you, nobody was allowed to contact you either. You could not hear a single voice from the outside world. In this kind of circumstances, after a period of half a year to two years time, people’s brains would start having problems; they’d become insane.

We found many political prisoners who were incarcerated, including non-Communist Party people and previous Communist Party members, had problems after they were released from the prison. Sometimes because of this the other people would think they are insane and condemn them. But I feel, I know that was because of the torture of the long lasting isolation in prison, which caused these people to develop problems in their minds.