In 2016, I labored with Forensic Structure and Amnesty World to guide the acoustic a part of the investigation into Sednaya, the Assad regime’s maximum infamous jail. Because the rebellion towards the regime started in 2011 till the early hours of Sunday, the jail have been inaccessible to newshounds and unbiased observers. The reminiscences of the few individuals who were launched have been the one assets to be had to be told about after which record the mass-murder, torture and violation that happened there.In Sednaya, prisoners’ capability to look anything else used to be extremely limited. From the time detainees have been taken from their houses or pulled out of protests and thrown into cells, they have been blindfolded. Within the cells they have been saved in darkness, made to hide their eyes and face the wall within the presence of the guards. Over the years, they evolved an acute sensitivity to sound. My job, as an artist and audio investigator, used to be to increase “earwitness” interviews with six survivors of Sednaya, the use of their sonic reminiscences to lend a hand divulge the crimes that happened within.In addition to darkness, silence used to be brutally enforced. To talk, cough or audibly transfer used to be to possibility demise. Even if the prisoners have been being crushed they may no longer make a valid and 1000’s of those that may just no longer prevent themselves from crying out have been killed. With the survivors I interviewed, I set about the use of tones, white noise and re-enacted whispers to measure the silence and the deadly drive it exerted.One description of that silence has stayed with me ever since. Jamal, a witness I interviewed informed me: “Some of the loudest sounds, excluding the horrendous torture noise, used to be the killing of lice”, the amplitude of which, he mentioned, used to be identical to “crushing a sesame seed between your thumb and forefinger.” You probably have a sesame seed on your kitchen, I implore you to take it now, overwhelm it and believe simply what sort of violent drive it could take to care for that degree of quiet in a development containing 1000’s of other folks.‘To witness in Sednaya used to be an act of survival’ … Lawrence Abu Hamdan. {Photograph}: Stuart Wilson/Getty Pictures for Turner ContemporaryThe handiest factor to puncture the silence used to be the beatings that may vibrate the partitions and reverberate all through the empty water pipes within the cells. “It doesn’t sound as though any individual is hitting a frame”, Jamal defined, “however like any individual is demolishing a wall.” “The entire construction vibrates,” Salam informed me, as he described the best way the regime weaponised the omnidirectional bleed of sound in order that a beating for one used to be skilled through all. After which silence.Again in 2016, whispers, echoes and sesame seeds have been all we needed to inform the tale of this demise camp. Within the few days since it’s been liberated, we’ve got already observed documentation of what the ones survivors described to me; in a single video a person stays within the submissive squat place prisoners have been compelled to occupy within the presence of the guards and he does no longer respond to his liberators once they ask his identify. Now that Sednaya is liberated, the paintings of extra tangible investigative practices, reminiscent of forensic anthropology, will start with a purpose to perceive the dimensions of this crime towards humanity.Our investigation taught us that the structure of the jail used to be inextricable from the violence that came about within. Within the minds of survivors, the enjoy of the development may just no longer be remoted from starvation, torture, the consistent risk of demise and sensory deprivation. And but already utterly other pictures of Sednaya are touchdown on our social media feeds. We see other folks transferring thru it unhindered, with lighting fixtures on, speaking loudly, with open eyes, whilst the never-ending sounds of torture are changed through the incredulous cries of prisoners this present day in their liberation.As horrendous as their enjoy used to be, lots of the survivors we interviewed didn’t need Sednaya to be torn down. They foresaw a unfastened Syria, by which this weapon within the guise of a development must be preserved and the reminiscences it comprises safeguarded.‘Most of the survivors we interviewed didn’t need Sednaya to be torn down’ … a girl seems round a room at Sednaya jail on 9 December. {Photograph}: Hussein Malla/APSamer, some other witness, remembered the joyous sound of bread slapping at the ground out of doors the mobile doorways, a noise that intended that he would have simply sufficient meals to reside some other day. He sought after to listen to this sound once more and mentioned that if he may just, he would file it, make it his ringtone and play it at his marriage ceremony. This reaction to a valid that encapsulated such a lot of the horror he lived thru taught me simply how valuable the reminiscence of violence and oppression may also be.Sednaya will have to now be used to serve the 1000’s of lives which have been imprinted through it. There is a chance to make use of it to heal through making it a web page of the preservation of reminiscence of the 1000’s of people that survived this demise camp and for many who didn’t.To witness in Sednaya used to be an act of survival. Listening to and figuring out the place the guards have been always may just permit you to reside. Listening out for the sonic main points used to be necessary, be it the resonant metal “tong” of the guards descending the steel central spiral staircase, or deciphering which mobile door they opened through the precise sound of that individual lock, or through listening to what number of new prisoners have been being introduced into the jail and committing to reminiscence any names overheard of other folks being taken for execution.These kind of main points helped them to live on, but in addition helped us to inform the tale of Sednaya for long run generations. On this method, those survivors-cum-earwitnesses taught me find out how to pay attention and use sound in defence of human rights. Their acute sensitivity to sound taught me how this medium could be a weapon of torture and collective punishment – but in addition how efficient listening may also be as an act of resistance.