In the
third session of the lecture series, Pilar Mendoza presented her research under
the title “Colombian Exile as a Symbolic, Political, and Transitional
Space.” Drawing from work at the Colombian National Centre for Historical
Memory, Mendoza examined exile as a complex experience shaped by Colombia’s
decades-long armed conflict, collective trauma, and systemic racism – especially
against Indigenous and Afro-Colombian populations.
She
highlighted how the categories of exile, migration, and asylum blur together,
often deliberately manipulated by state policies to obscure international legal
responsibilities toward displaced persons. Although Colombia signed a peace
agreement in 2016 intended to end its internal armed conflict, the continued
movement out of the country reflects the failed implementation of the accord –
including unfulfilled guarantees of safety, justice, and social reintegration –
as well as the persistence of violence and structural inequality. For Mendoza,
exile is not merely a physical departure but a political and affective space:
one shaped by resistance, memory, and the ongoing reconstruction of identity.
The
presentation emphasized the crucial role of civil society, especially exiled
communities, in peacebuilding and historical memory. Mendoza traced how
community-based memory practices – often emerging on the margins – become
central to broader national conversations on truth, justice, and reconciliation.
She highlighted Colombia’s restorative justice model, which emphasizes symbolic
reparation and includes strong participation by Indigenous and Afro-Colombian
commissioners and magistrates.
Exile is
framed as a threshold experience – marked by rupture, dislocation, and
transformation – where individuals experience temporal dislocation and
identity transformation. Concepts like “insilio” (internal exile), desarraigo
(uprootedness), and circular time perceptions underscore the emotional and
ontological complexity of exile. Mendoza called for a decolonial approach
to peace and memory, recognizing the agency of marginalized communities and
their diverse worldviews, practices, and epistemologies.