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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Alejandrina García de la Riva

Interviewed November 22, 2024

My husband’s first prison sentence was in 1999. So, he was imprisoned before 2003. Everything he experienced in prison made my life and my family’s [life] very difficult. And I decided to speak out about it somehow. I searched for a way and I got help. And I started to be a reporter. Or rather I was a correspondent for NotiCuba, an independent group [news agency] in Cuba. That helped me a lot.

I thought “I did not study. I´m not a college graduate. I do not know if I can do it.” But it seemed so easy. I think it´s a calling. It is about the desire to do it and to learn the vocabulary. I did not know many words and it took time for me to learn. I did it because I thought I had to speak out about [what happened to my husband].

I did it until about 2000, 2001. I spent more time taking care of the household. My husband was involved with the opposition and I had to support him more by joining him. Looking to make sure there was no security agent watching, so he could leave the house. And that resulted in me doing less journalism until 2003 when he was imprisoned again.

I did street journalism. I sought interviews from people on the street. How was their day? How is their day that day? What were their problems? If they were willing to tell me, whether they had bread to eat? That was what I did in the community and with the opposition. I spent a lot of time on Elian [Gonzalez] when he was returned to Cuba. I went to the city of Cardenas and there also tried to do something with the Elian Gonzalez story.

[Elian Gonzalez was at the center of a diplomatic crisis between the United States and Cuba in 2000. Gonzalez´s mother drowned while escaping from Cuba to the United States with her son and boyfriend on a raft. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service placed Gonzalez with relatives in Miami who wanted to keep him in the United States against his father´s wishes. A federal court ruled that only Gonzalez´s father could petition for asylum on the boy´s behalf. After the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case, federal agents seized Gonzalez from his relatives and returned him to Cuba.]

I never identified myself as a journalist [to those I interviewed], unless I was recording them.

There is much fear in Cuba. People are afraid that their image or their words will be made public, because they could be punished for it, for telling the truth.

That is also why I had so little work, because many people were afraid and would not allow me to record them.

[NotiCuba] was headed at that time by Angel Pablo Polanco, a freelance journalist. He was responsible for the reports based on our work. [Angel Pablo Polanco is an independent Cuban journalist who has been arrested on multiple occasions because the government feared he would report on opposition protests.]

Our reports were used by Radio and TV Martí, La Poderosa Radio, Radio Mambí. It was mainly for radio.