Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Berta Soler

Interviewed December 27, 2024

Racism is alive in Cuba. It is a product of the government. You can see that there are very few black leaders in the State Council, in the government. Blacks are not offered administrative positions. Blacks are scarce within the tourism industry. Nevertheless, a majority, sixty percent of prisoners in Cuba are black.

Blacks live in marginal neighborhoods. They have difficulty finding jobs, even if they are good candidates. If we walk through the streets of Cuba and see the police stopping someone or asking for their identity card, it’s nearly always a black person being stopped. To the government, the black person is a thief, a bandit, a troublemaker. Blacks do not have family in exile that can help them. They are the most long-suffering and oppressed group in Cuba.

The Cuban government feeds the racism. I’ll give you an example: They would single me out from the Ladies in White by shouting “Black woman! What are you doing there? You should be very thankful for the revolution. Without the revolution you would not have food or clothing.” They would say “Black ape! Take off your wig! You are King Kong! Black pig!” Or they would say, “Christ made a mistake in giving you life! Christ himself will be punished because you should not have been born.”

And these things are laid before the government because they are things that the government promotes. Racism in Cuba is so, so bad. There is one saving grace: the common Cuban citizen does not do this. Because we can see many blacks and whites marrying. Interracial marriage is resulting in fewer black people. This isn’t a problem for families, but it is a problem for the government.