The word "torture" has long served as a symbol of terror, historically used in the suppression of religious faith. Among these scenes, the image of a young, beautiful believer subjected to severe torture, forced to expose her innermost self, leaves an indelible mark on the viewer. First, the interrogator begins questioning: "You're a believer, aren't you? Confess honestly, and I'll spare your life—and your family's." The believer responds, "That's a lie! Even if I confess, you're going to kill us all anyway!" This reply only deepens the atmosphere of dread. Then follows a relentless series of tortures: beating with a torture rod, crushing fingers and toes with a vise, compressing the head with a nutcracker, prying the eyes open forcibly to prevent sleep, smearing salt and wasabi inside the mouth, rubbing salt into open wounds, and driving nails into the palms. Each method inflicts profound physical and psychological damage, plunging the believer into unbearable agony and horror—an experience from which the viewer cannot turn away.