Prisoner Without A Name, Cell Without A Number by Timerman
  • 1. In 'Prisoner Without A Name, Cell Without A Number', journalist and author Jacobo Timerman recounts his harrowing experience of being arrested and imprisoned in Argentina during the height of the military dictatorship in the late 1970s. The book serves as a powerful memoir that not only exposes the brutal realities of political repression but also delves into the profound psychological effects of torture and isolation. Through his gripping narrative, Timerman details the systematic dehumanization faced by political prisoners, illustrating how their identities are stripped away, leaving them as mere numbers within the oppressive prison system. He reflects on the shattered lives of countless victims and emphasizes the importance of memory and testimony in the fight against forgetting and injustice. The work is not only a personal account of survival but also a compelling call for awareness, justice, and the protection of human rights, making it a seminal piece of literature that resonates with the struggles for freedom and dignity across the globe.

    What is the primary setting of Timerman's memoir?
A) Brazil
B) Uruguay
C) Argentina
D) Chile
  • 2. What was Timerman's profession before his imprisonment?
A) Lawyer
B) Government official
C) University professor
D) Newspaper editor
  • 3. What was the name of Timerman's newspaper?
A) Página 12
B) La Nación
C) La Opinión
D) El Clarín
  • 4. Why was Timerman specifically targeted by the regime?
A) For reporting on human rights abuses
B) For communist activities
C) For tax evasion
D) For drug trafficking
  • 5. What was Timerman's ethnic/religious background?
A) Catholic
B) Jewish
C) Protestant
D) Muslim
  • 6. How was Timerman eventually released from prison?
A) Prison escape
B) International pressure and exile
C) Presidential pardon
D) Military court acquittal
  • 7. What method of torture does Timerman describe experiencing?
A) Electric shock
B) Beatings only
C) Sleep deprivation
D) Waterboarding
  • 8. What was the typical fate of 'disappeared' prisoners in Argentina?
A) Rehabilitation programs
B) Execution and secret burial
C) Exile to other countries
D) Long-term imprisonment
  • 9. How does Timerman maintain his sanity in captivity?
A) Writing on walls
B) Mental exercises and memories
C) Religious prayers
D) Conversations with guards
  • 10. What was the regime's official justification for disappearances?
A) Economic reform
B) Judicial process
C) Immigration control
D) Fighting subversion
  • 11. How does Timerman view the relationship between torture and power?
A) As random violence
B) As essential to authoritarian control
C) As effective interrogation
D) As unnecessary brutality
  • 12. What country did Timerman go to after his release?
A) Mexico
B) United States
C) Israel
D) Spain
  • 13. During which military regime was Timerman imprisoned?
A) The Falklands War
B) Pinochet's regime
C) The Dirty War
D) The Cuban Revolution
  • 14. What was the government's official position on the 'disappeared'?
A) Admitted holding them as prisoners
B) Said they were criminals
C) Claimed they had emigrated
D) Denied knowledge of their whereabouts
  • 15. What is the significance of the book's title?
A) It reflects the dehumanization of prisoners
B) It's a poetic metaphor
C) It describes the prison architecture
D) It refers to lost documents
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