Prof. Grzegorz Ziółkowski will deliver a paper Solidarity-in-action: Chilean protest performance of funa beyond borders at the annual conference of the international Theatre and Performance Research Association (TaPRA), entitled Milestones and Markers, to be held in Warwick, United Kingdom, from 27 to 29 August 2025. The paper will share some of the findings from Prof. Ziółkowski’s current research project entitled The Performative Realm of ‘Colonia Dignidad’, a German Enclave in Chile, in Historical and Political Contexts, supported by the National Science Centre (NCN; 2021/43/B/HS2/00360).
Abstract: In the face of many contemporary challenges, ranging from the destabilization of moral values in politics, through deregulated technological development, to ecological threats, it seems appropriate to bring to the fore the idea of solidarity, which can manifest itself in many different forms, including performative ones. Before this idea became the driving force behind the trade union movement in Poland in the early 1980s, it was embodied in Chile in response to state violence during Pinochet’s civil-military dictatorship (1973–90). After the transition to democracy, progressive Chileans developed a grassroots performative practice called funa to counter the lack of justice in the process of reckoning with the murderous regime. Funa is an action of the collective public shaming of the perpetrators of politicized violence in those criminal cases where the justice system has failed. The verb ‘funar’ means to ‘disclose’ or ‘expose’ in Chileno (Chilean-Spanish) and originates from mapudungún (the language of the Indigenous Mapuche), where it designates something that rots. The paper analyses those funas which went beyond the borders of Latin America and were carried out in Germany between 2006 and 2023 as a call for justice and a celebration of solidarity. These actions embraced not only the traditional paraphernalia of protest performances, but also many cultural forms, including the traditional Chilean cueca (pair dance), danced alone to condemn the Pinochet dictatorship’s enforced disappearance strategy. All actions being analysed were aimed against the impunity of the two fugitive top echelons of the Colonia Dignidad (Colony of Dignity), a pseudo-religious German criminal community which operated in Chile from the early 1960s and played an important role in the regime’s apparatus of repression. The example of those Chileans and Germans who joined forces in these subversive and transgressive acts reaffirms that confronting serious challenges requires teamwork, mutual support and the cultivation of solidarity; it requires solidarity-in-action.