Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Fidel Suarez Cruz

Interviewed November 22, 2024

My name is Fidel Suárez Cruz. I was born in the town of Manuel Lazo, in the municipality of Sandino, in the Pinar del Río province. My family is a family of laborers or field workers. I spent my childhood there. I was fatherless at age 3. I was born in 1970 and in 1973 my father died. He was a laborer. He worked in the fields, cultivating food. The quality of life of the farmer is different. It is much lower than those who live in the city.

The regime focuses all its resources on the cities. Mainly Havana, Cienfuegos, Villa Clara, Oriente, Pinar del Río. In other words, the cities with the highest population density. The farmer works to survive. Many of them have no electricity, no TV, no radio. The economic level is rather low. The wages are very low. The same for all salaries, some more some less, but they cannot live on their salary either.

It is a system of slavery. Many opposition members were constantly detained. It is such a small town so you know everyone. I was about 22 or 23 years old and I was struck by these arrests and the “detain, release, detain, release” policy, because if you are detained and released then you are not guilty of anything. Then I was given a copy of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. [The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a document adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948 that enumerates basic human rights.] I began to study it to the best of my ability to understand the Declaration. But the strangest thing was that Cuba, which signed the declaration, did not fulfill any of it.