It's said that to be a poet you have to
descend to the underworld once.
The first time I entered the prison,
I was not surprised by the noise
of the padlocks, the closing doors,
or the bars,
or anything of all the things
I had imagined.
Maybe because the prison
is in a quite open space.
You can see the sky.
Seagulls fly through the sky and
you think you are next to the sea.
That you are really close to the beach.
But in fact, the gulls go to the dump
near the prison looking for food.
I continued walking in and I suddenly saw
inmates moving across the corridors.
It was as if I stepped back
and thought that
I could have perfectly been
one of them.
If I had another story,
another context, another luck.
Because nobody, nobody,
can choose where to be born.
In 2009 I was invited to join
a project
the San Martín National University
has in the Unit 48,
to coordinate a writing workshop.
The prison service ceded some
land at the end of the prison.
Right there they constructed the
building of the University Center.
The first time I met with the prisoners,
I asked them why they were
asking for a writing workshop
and they told me they wanted
to put on paper
all that they couldn't say
and do.
There I decided that I wanted
poetry to enter the prison.
Then I told them why we don't
work with poetry,
if they knew what poetry was.
Nobody had a clue about what
poetry really was.
Besides, they explained to me
that the workshop was not only
for graduated inmates,
but also for
all the common inmates.
And then I said that to start
this workshop I needed
some tool that we all have.
And that tool was language.
So, we had language, we had the workshop.
We could have poetry.
But what I didn't consider was
the inequality also in prison.
Many of them that didn't even
have a complete primary education.
Many couldn't use cursive,
but hardly print.
They didn't write fluently either.
So, we started looking for short
poems. Short, but powerful indeed.
And started to read, and read
an author and another author
and by reading those short poems,
they all begin to realize
that what the poetic language did
was to break
a certain logic and
it created another system.
Breaking the logic of language is
also breaking the logic of the system
they are used to respond to.
So a new system appeared,
some new rules
that made them understand really fast,
but really fast,
that with the poetic language they would
absolutely say what they wanted.
It's said that to be a poet you have to
descend to the hell once.
And they have plenty of hell.
Plenty of hell.
One of them once said:
"In prison you never sleep.
You can never sleep in jail.
You can never close your eyelids".
Then, I did like this now,
a moment of silence and tell them:
That is poetry, that.
The prison universe is there,
in hand.
All this you say,
that you never sleep.
This exudes fear. All the unwritten.
All this is poetry.
So we started appropriating
that hell.
And we plunged ourselves into,
the seventh circle.
In that seventh circle of hell,
our own and so beloved circle,
they learned that walls could
be invisible, windows could
yell and that we could hide
inside the shadows.
The first year the workshop
had finished, we organized
a little closing party
as they are done
when a job is done
with so much love.
You want to celebrate
and have a party.
We called family, friends,
the university authorities.
The only thing they had to do
was reading a poem,
receiving their diploma, applause and
that was our simple party.
The only thing I want to leave you with
is the moment those men,
at times huge when they stand by me.
Or very young boys,
but with an enormous pride,
they held their paper and trembled
like kids and sweated
and read their poems with their
voice completely broken.
That moment made me think a lot
that surely most of them
were applauded for the first time
for something they had done.
In prison there are things
that can't be done.
In prison you can't dream,
in prison you can't cry.
There are words that are virtually
forbidden like the word time,
the word future, the word wish.
But we dared to dream
and to dream a lot
because we decided that they
were going to write a book.
Not only did they write a book
but they also bound it.
That was by the end of 2010.
We doubled the bet
and wrote another book.
And bound another book.
That was a short time ago,
by the end of last year.
What I see week after week
is how they are turning into
different people, how they are
being transformed.
How words empower them with
a dignity they hadn't heard of,
they couldn't even imagine.
They had no idea of such dignity
and that could come from them.
At the workshop, in that beloved hell
we have, we all give.
We open our hands and hearts and give
what we have, what we can. All of us.
All of us equally.
In that way you feel that
at least, in little proportion
you are repairing that huge
social fracture that makes that
for many of them prison is
their only destination.
I remember a verse of a
tremendous poet, a great poet,
of the Unit 48 of our
workshop, Nicolás Dorado:
"I have to get an infinite thread
to sew up this huge wound".
Poetry does that. It sews up
The wounds of exclusion.
It opens doors.
Poetry works as a mirror.
It creates a mirror, which is the poem.
They recognize themselves, they look at
themselves in the poem and write
from who they are and they are
from what they write.
In order to write, they need
to appropriate the moment
of writing which is a moment
of extraordinary freedom.
They have to get into their heads,
search for that bit of freedom
that can never be taken away
when they write
and that is also useful to
realize that freedom is possible
even inside the jail,
and that the only bars we have
in our wonderful space
is the word bars and that all of us,
in our inferno
burn with happiness
when we light
the wick of the word.
(Applause)
I told you a lot about prison,
a lot about my experience
every week and how I enjoy it
and transform myself with them.
But you don´t know how much I'd like
that you could feel, live,
experience, even
for a few seconds,
what I enjoy every week
and makes me who I am.
(Applause)
"The heart chews tears of time
blind by that light
hides the speed of existence
were the images row
it fights, it hangs on.
The heart cracks under the sad gazes
rides through storms that spread fire
lifts chests lowered by shame,
knows that it's not just reading and
going on,
it also wishes to see the infinite blue.
The heart sits down to think about things,
fights for avoiding commonplaces,
Tries to love without hurting,
Breathes the sun giving courage to itself,
surrenders, travels to the reason.
The heart fights among swamps,
goes along the edge of the underworld,
falls weakly and doesn't yield to
the easy way
while irregular steps of intoxication
wake,
wake the stillness".
I'm Martín Bustamante,
I am a prisoner
in Unit 48 of San Martín,
today is my day of temporary release.
Poetry and literature
changed my life.
Thank you very much!
(Applause)
CD: Thank you!
(Applause)