Not too far from this dark basement, where we were being held, the
trial of the four members of the Working Group of Internal Dissidence was
taking place.
Tania wanted to be present at the trial because she is a first cousin
of Vladimiro Roca, one of the accused. Odalys wanted to cover the trial as
a journalist, and Dulce Maria, a retired librarian and dissident, wanted
to be there because she felt that she had the right to show a gesture of
solidarity with the accused.
I also wanted to follow the trial as a journalist, as a Cuban citizen
and as a friend of the four intellectuals being tried. Yet I was jailed
with eight common prisoners accused of violence, assault, armed robbery
and pimping.
Of course, many ideas crossed my mind, and I experienced many feelings
during those 30 hours in jail. As days go by, however, it is the shame and
sadness I feel for Cuba that stays on my mind.
I ask myself, what are these professional and decent women doing in a
police-station cell? What is going on in Cuba that honorable daughters of
this country, belonging to three different generations and from different
political origins and upbringings, may be arrested on the streets and
placed in a cell with women accused of prostitution and armed robbery?
I felt more pain for the imprisonment of those three friends than for
my own jailing. This is because I perceived their punishment as a symbol
anticipating a sacrificial pyre.
Tania and Odalys -- like Marvin Hernandez, who had been imprisoned for
48 hours and began a hunger strike in Cienfuegos -- have demonstrated
professionalism, integrity and discipline while going through this
exercise of independent journalism in Cuba.
A few hours after being relatively free to go home, I was to have a
unique ``meeting'' with Marta Beatriz Roque Cabello [one of the dissidents
being tried]. There she was in my living room, the brilliant economist who
loves poetry and good music, wearing her prisoner's uniform -- on my TV
screen. A state broadcaster was insulting her, calling her a stateless
person and a ``marionette of imperialism.''
Since Marta's ``visit'' was so peculiar, I almost commented aloud to
her about a note that she sent me from the Manto Negro [Black Cloak]
prison at the end of 1998. ``Here we are,'' she had written, ``without any
apparent solution but with a lot of faith in God, because there is nothing
impossible for Him.''
Marta asked me to put together for her ``some material on neoliberal
business globalization and the financial crisis in Asia. I want to state
my opinions on the subject.'' A strange request from a woman in prison,
it's true. Marta's presence in the kind of Cuba that we have can be
disquieting and odd.
Her note concluded: ``Say `hello' to Blanca and tell her I recall her
great coffee. I hope God allows me to drink some of it soon, sitting in
your living room.''
There I had been with Tania, Odalys and Dulce Maria in the jail, and
Marta later ``came'' to my home, and I couldn't even offer her coffee.
`The sadness I feel for Cuba stays on my mind'
Havana -- From my cell I could see Tania
Quintero, Cuba Press correspondent, her face shadowed by the cell's iron
lines. From her cell, she could hear the hoarse voice of Odalys Cubelo,
another Cuba Press correspondent. And one could feel the presence of Dulce
Maria de Quesada, dissident, quiet and silent, sitting on the edge of the
gray cement bed.
Copyright © 1999 The Miami
Herald