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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Jorge Luis Garcia Perez Antúnez

Interviewed December 30, 2024

If unity is respect for others’ opinions, if it is consensus, if it is to say “Present!” each time there is a situation involving one of our brothers, if unity is being there when Orlando Zapata Tamayo was in agony, if it is attending the funeral of one of our assassinated leaders, Oswaldo Paya Sardinas, and if unity is protesting and supporting each other, then the Cuban political opposition is united.

[Orlando Zapata Tamayo (1967 – 2010) was a Cuban dissident and prisoner of conscience. He died while on a hunger strike. Oswaldo Paya Sardinas (1952 – 2012) was a Cuban dissident who founded the Christian Liberation Movement. He was awarded the Andrej Sakharov Prize by the European Parliament for his opposition activity. He died in a mysterious automobile accident, which many have alleged was orchestrated by the Cuban government.]

There are many organizations and many movements, but that is precisely civil society. It is the democratic, pluralist spirit of the opposition. The regime needs the opposition to concentrate on a single coalition, on one group under a single mandate to be able to decapitate it. But it is not so. We have learned much during this totalitarian darkness. We have learned much from what happened with tyrants like Gerardo Machado, [Fulgencio] Batista, and Fidel [Castro]. We know the cost of not diversifying the fight along different fronts.

[Gerardo Machado y Morales (1871 – 1939) was a hero in the Cuban War of Independence and was later elected president of Cuba in 1924. His rule became increasingly authoritarian until he was forced into exile in 1933. Fulgencio Batista (1901 – 1973) served as the president of Cuba from 1940-1944. In 1952, he returned to power via a bloodless coup and ruled the island through a military dictatorship until being overthrown by Fidel Castro in 1959. Fidel Castro (1926 – ) led the Cuban Revolution and seized power in 1959. He established a communist dictatorship in Cuba and led the country until 2008.]

It is true that we must progress more. Not everything is as we’d wish it to be. We sometimes struggle to articulate our message and connect with others, but that does not mean we are not united. We have great difficulty in Cuba with regard to resources. Travel that would take three hours here [in the United States] could take a day or more in Cuba. This can make communications a challenge. There have been many mistakes as we’ve focused too much energy, or given that perception, on the external opposition. We overlooked the main audience in Cuba, the nation, our homeland.

If we could reverse that, and reconcile the exiles’ political agenda with the internal resistance we would ruin the dictatorship. Many outside of Cuba, understandably, will not be pleased because when we imagine 10,000 or more people [protesting] in the streets of Cuba, it is not realistic in our situation.

Remember that in Tunisia, in Egypt and the other Arab Spring countries, the people did not have a Defense of the Revolution Committee government office next to their homes. They had the Internet, something we do not have. But as I see it, the repression that we face, the police state, the constant repression… I think any demonstration, any opposition voice, no matter how small or insignificant it may appear, is gigantic compared to the situation we face.

[The Arab Spring refers to a series of uprisings across the Middle East that began in 2010 starting with Tunisia and spreading to countries such as Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen and others. Committees for the Defense of the Revolution are a network of neighborhood associations across Cuba composed of pro-regime Cubans. Their official purpose is to promote social welfare and report on “counter-revolutionary” activity.]