Portraits of survivors and and former political prisoners and relatives of the victims of the 1965 massacres in Indonesia, which allegedly killed more than one million people, tell their stories of suffering and of learning to live with stigma 50 years after the events.The visual research was commissioned by the Centre for Cultural Centered Approach to Research and Evaluation (CARE), at the Department of Communication and New Media of the National University of Singapore. The interviews were conducted along with ethnographer Dr. Dyah Pitaloka, under the direction of Prof. Mohan Dutta.