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DON'T FORGET US HERE by Mansoor Adayfi Kirkus Star

DON'T FORGET US HERE

Lost and Found at Guantánamo

by Mansoor Adayfi with Antonio Aiello

Pub Date: Aug. 17th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-306-92386-9
Publisher: Hachette

A farmer’s son from rural Yemen recounts his harrowing 14-year imprisonment at Guantánamo Bay.

Adayfi’s first-person narrative, co-written by Aiello, focuses on the internal ordeal of a young man (18 at the beginning of his imprisonment) who was sold by Afghan warlords to the Americans as a jihadi after 9/11. Sent on a “special job” to Afghanistan by a sheik at the Dar al-Hadith Islamic institute in Sana’a, where Adayfi studied in the spring of 2001, he was seized, shackled, blindfolded, tortured, and flown to Guantánamo Bay, where the U.S. government had recently created the notorious Camp X-Ray for alleged terrorists. Much of this straightforward, grief-stricken chronicle is an alternately solemn and gruesome account of the horrendous daily treatment of the prisoners, which included genital searches, interrogations, beatings, sensory deprivation, and desecration of their Qurans. That last indignity sometimes led to resistance in the form of hunger strikes, and Adayfi continually emphasizes the lack of respect, especially for the prisoners’ faith. Branded one of the worst troublemakers, the author was assumed to be a middle-aged Egyptian al-Qaida operative named Adel. Consequently, he suffered a decade of solitary confinement. Like many others, he was never assigned a lawyer or properly accused, and he was subject to endless, repetitive interrogation: “Another team replaces the FBI, and then another replaces them. DIA, MI, CIA, NYPD—you don’t know what any of the names mean or who they are, but you ask over and over, ‘Where am I and why am I here?’ They respond with all the same questions.” With Barack Obama’s promise to close the facility, hope emerged and conditions improved (briefly). Adayfi learned English and finally received legal representation, and he was cleared by a review board for relocation to Serbia. “If I didn’t accept their offer…I could spend the rest of my life in Guantánamo,” writes the author near the end of this powerful book.

An important record of prisoner mistreatment as a national reckoning over Guantánamo continues to loom.