Luisa, 50
Takoma Park, MD
Director of Multicultural Youth Center
Born in Cienfuegos
”Since
leaving Cuba when I was six, I can count on two hands the number of days
I have seen my two aunts who stayed behind, yet, through my mother I feel
a strong bond with them. Mother and her sisters have been the most important
influences on how I live my life.
My mother is 85 and lives in North Carolina. Two
years ago, her oldest sister died. Her other sister, Yara, still lives
in Cienfuegos, alert but fragile at 92. Recently the nephews who looked
after Yara died unexpectedly, leaving her in the care of a great niece.
Mother worries. She wants to check on her sister to see that she’s
being cared for and to touch her once more, but she is physically unable
to make the trip.
I want to go to Cuba for them; to visit my aunt as mother would
if she could, to carry messages of support and love. But under the new
restrictions only my mother has the right to travel.
One trip cannot answer all questions or alleviate the pain of
years of separation. But one trip gives consolation. It allows one to
see the true reality rather than living with the imagined one. And most
of all, it reinforces the familial relationships that form us from generation
to generation.
Mother finds comfort through prayer and
continues -- as she has for 45 years -- to write her sister a letter each
week. Yet, I know there is lost sleep, nights when she wonders; ‘Did
Yara have dinner tonight? Did they give her medicine? Is she cold?’”
Take Action! Participate
in a very important LAWG Education Fund and Washington Office on Latin
America (WOLA) project. We are looking for Cuba policy activists nationwide
who may be interested in hosting a moving photo exhibit of Cuban Americans
affected by the travel ban. Nestor Hernández, Jr. (who tragically
passed away the day after the exhibit opened on Capitol Hill), a Cuban-American
professional photographer living in the DC area, and Juan-Sí González,
a Cuban-American artist living in Yellow Springs, Ohio, have photographed
20 Cuban-American families who have been unable to travel to Cuba under
the new regulations governing family travel. Social scientists, Drs. Jeanne
Lemkau and David Strug, who are studying the effects of U.S. policy on
Cuban-American families, have interviewed the photo subjects and condensed
their stories into short personal testimonials.
The travel ban allows Cuban Americans to travel to Cuba just once
every three years to visit only immediate family (no uncles/aunts, nieces/nephews,
cousins). There are no exceptions for family emergencies. This means that
many, like Luisa, are unable to care for their relatives, or regularly
visit the family members to whom they are closest. The purpose of the
photo exhibit is to bring the reality of this separation of Cuban-American
families to the attention of Congress and of the U.S. public.
The photos were unveiled on Capitol Hill on May 11th, just prior to Mother's
Day, where members of Congress, and Cuban-American family members spoke
on the travel ban’s cruel effects. On May 16th, the exhibit opened
at the Arlington Arts Center (AAC) in Arlington, VA. The photos are now
on national tour throughout the United States. Click
here to see our schedule for a venue near you.
Take Action! We continue to search for local groups to host the
exhibit in their home area. We request a $500 donation (to help us cover
shipping fees) to bring the photo exhibit to your city; and your organization
will be responsible for securing a venue (and covering any deposits or
costs for the location), doing publicity to the public and the media,
and hosting a reception for viewers and press. For further information,
please contact Jayden Sparenborg at (202) 546-7010, or click
here to email him.
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