Photo: Ileana Johnson 2015 |
If you
wanted to hunt, it would not be possible because you did not have a license or
a hunting rifle. Such weapons had been confiscated from the entire prison
population long ago. But the warden and his men are well-armed and prepared to
round up the bears or whatever God’s creatures his higher-ups were in the mood to
slaughter for sport with their high power rifles.
This prison
has beautiful rivers but you don’t own boats and canoes, only those who control
the prison can afford expensive boats and licenses to go fishing or to spend
leisurely afternoons on the water and on special lakes reserved only for those
in power. Some of the rivers are the pride and joy of the elites, but most are
heavily polluted by industrial activity because the watchers don’t care about
environmental conservation.
This prison
has cinder block towers for the residents forced off the land and crowded onto
nine-story blocks made of reinforced concrete. The captives within can go about
on foot, by train, by bike, and by rickety buses.
They are
told how much they can eat and how many calories they can consume daily. It is degrading
to be forced to stand in line to get daily rations of food but they are used to
it if they want to survive. If they are lucky, they can find better choices twice
a year, on Easter and at Christmas.
There are
churches that perform baptisms, marriages, and burials. Church bells can be
heard joyously ringing on religious holidays but sadly when someone passes.
Death is inevitable for those in power and the prisoners alike, they are all
equal eventually.
Nobody lives
better than their neighbors but they look with envy at the wealth of their
captors. The block informers make sure there is a detailed dossier on the
comings and goings of every prisoner. Once in a while, a few are rewarded for
their loyalty with a trip to a wellness spa with mineral waters and stinking Sulphur
baths with magical healing properties. The majority is not loyal; captive subjects
just gave up any resistance in the face of utter defeat, mental and physical.
They are very tired, overwhelmed, and in survival mode.
The
mountains are rich in minerals and gold, but nobody can go explore even though
everyone owns the mountains. If they start digging or even ask to dig, they get
arrested for trespassing and theft.
If you want
to travel, you have to have enough money saved from your hard labor and ask permission
from the state police which is in charge of giving out passes. The police always
says no unless the prisoner is an exceptional athlete or musical genius in
which case they are told yes but a security police guard follows them around the
clock to make sure that they do not escape this beautiful prison built specifically
to keep everyone in.
Food is
scarce in this well-maintained and state of the art prison; everyone is thin,
but not necessarily healthy as nutrition lacks a lot to be desired. People are
not given vitamins or supplements unless they are really sick when often time
it is too late.
The
theoretically trained doctors experiment on the prison population with no
consequence for their mistakes. How can one sue the watchers? There is nobody
to watch the watchers, they do what they want.
The
hospitals are oozing decay and negligence; equipment is rusty, sheets are
stained and torn, medicine is missing, and if a prisoner is 70 years old,
he/she is left to die because they are old anyway, they’d lived long enough;
and the prisoners have no one to complain to or to protect them, crowded as
they are in the large wards with chicken wire beds and rusty metal stands which
were once painted white. Dubious stains cover the dirty walls, the floors, and
even the mattresses.
Patients can
pray to God in beautiful churches or in their cells but it seems that priests
have forgotten them and are favoring the elites. The church has become an
instrument of manipulation, preaching the agenda of the highest contributor.
God is definitely lost in the incense wafting from a priest’s silver censer.
It looks
dystopian inside but to the world, the outdoors is breathtakingly beautiful and
the streets are clean. The prison warden has armies of gypsy bees sweeping the
streets and, if as much as a cigarette butt is thrown on the ground, the
offender is taught a painful and expensive lesson.
This prison
has clean schools where directed curriculum is strict and approved by the chief
warden, followed religiously by thousands of busy teacher bees supervised by
principals with a waspy demeanor. Prisoners pay for all these equal benefits
with their lack of freedom, pretending to work every day while the prison
system pretends to pay them in their paternalistic generosity.
Many
prisoners tried to escape this jail by cutting the barbed wire at the border,
making a run for it and getting shot, or swimming across the large southern
river and drowning. Few managed to flee and escape this prison. Many paid the
ultimate price while attempting to find freedom.
The
democracy spelled out in the socialist republic’s constitution was often hurled
at these prisoners as a threat that democracy had gone to their heads and they
better behave or else.
This dystopian
prison country was the police state called socialism. One day the prisoners had
had enough exploitation and mounted a revolution with the help of the army,
arrested the socialist dictator who was trying to escape by helicopter, and
executed him and his wife after a brief trial.
That free
men and women from other societies want this kind of prison in their countries
today, it is baffling to those who escaped the police state called socialism.