In the context of the book, "I wanted, with these snapshots from the diaries of patients who had conquered breast cancer, to present them in no order or chronological sequence... to record the fluctuations that a cancer patient goes through between despair and hope... patience and despair... weakness and strength, and in all cases their resolve was not shaken or Their belief is shaken that they will overcome this disease, and that after undertaking the arduous treatment journey, they will reach safety without allowing the disease or treatment to affect them or their spirit and soul. And it was.. I decided to share these successful experiences and the information I collected from the patients, their families, and their friends. With every new patient, her family, and her friends... I hope you can provide some help and support so that her journey with the disease will be lighter and more positive... I ask every patient, husband or friend to read it carefully... and benefit from the experiences it contains... Cancer is weaker than you imagine... Treatment alone is not everything. With patience, faith, and insistence on victory, treatment gives much better results... and a much happier life.
Year after year, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has requested that the fate of all those who are unaccounted for after their arrest in situations of armed conflict or internal violence be urgently clarified, on the occasion of the International Day of the Disappeared, which was held last Sunday. "Regardless of the legitimacy of the reason that leads to an arrest, no one has the right to keep a person's fate or whereabouts secret, nor to deny that they are being detained, since it is a practice contrary to rights humans".
The book incorporates the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance.
Currently, there are hundreds of thousands of people missing as a result of an armed conflict or situations of internal violence. "Often their families do not even know if they are still alive", the suffering caused by this uncertainty can seriously hamper reconciliation and recovery in post-conflict societies and affirms that families have the right to know what happened to their relatives, therefore all the necessary measures must be taken to resolve the problem, including, first of all, measures to prevent disappearances.
No one has the right to keep a person's fate or whereabouts secret.