Joan Abril – Saint Cyprien
Beyond the Pyrenees, an army of policemen were guarding the border which the refugees were crossing at a snail’s pace. All the fugitives were treated like prisoners and led by soldiers under the orders of harsh officers armed with sticks. The walkers formed a pitiful, endless procession. At dusk, the cortege went through the streets of Palau-del-Vidre, where the villagers were waiting with benevolent respect. I’m sure they saw us as thousands of souls who had been on the losing side, swept away by the storms of war. The next day, we arrived at the concentration camp of Saint Cyprien. It was surrounded by barbed wire, and a group of policemen controlled its only entrance. The Senegalese were armed with machine guns that they pointed directly at the masses. This is what troubles me most when evoking the camp ; it was a place of pain, misery and despair.