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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Pablo Pacheco Ávila

Interviewed November 22, 2024

Remembering what we endured is hard. I think no one chooses to remember, even though it is inevitable to remember it every night. The soul’s wounds never heal.

I was in prison seven years and four months.

My first two years were terrible. They took me 400 kilometers away from my family to Agüica in an isolation area.

Twenty years of punishment with lousy medical care, no religious support, three books in my cell, and 18 months without sun. It was very hard in the Agüica prison.

In that section of Agüica we were alone. There were common criminals or political prisoners in the other cells but we were in solitary. We did not see each other.

[I was sent] 400 kilometers from my province. I am from Ciego de Avila and was sent to Matanzas.

It was the regime’s additional punishment against our families. They knew the transportation conditions in Cuba are terrible. Going from one province to another with food. A diabolical plan they created for us. Fortunately, God is with us. Those from Matanzas were taken to Ciego de Avila. The families from Matanzas would unite with those in Ciego. Far from solving [the regime’s] problem, I think that it created a problem for them because human solidarity prevailed. I think that helped a lot.

I believe that those who paid the highest price in this were my wife and my son. I think my son still faces repercussions. I do not know if he will ever forgive me that I was taken from him when he was only four. My son was all over me because they would not allow him to enter kindergarten because he was the son of a dissident.