No one gave voice to the dignity of the American people quite like Camilo Torres Tenorio. With a gift for oratory that set hearts ablaze and a logic that brought empires to their knees, he was dubbed “The Word of the Revolution.” With his famous Memorial of Grievances, Torres did not merely write a legal document; he drafted the birth certificate of our identity, demanding that the Creole be equal to the Spaniard before the law and history. A tireless defender of provincial autonomy, he chose the integrity of his ideas over the safety of his life. His tragic end in 1816—when his mind was punished with death and his memory cruelly paraded—failed to silence him. On the contrary, it turned his voice into an eternal echo that still reminds us that we are children of justice, not of blind obedience.