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La columna semanal de
Carlos Alberto Montaner

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“Se estima que su columna sindicada es leída por seis millones de personas. Sus opiniones hacen que tiemblen políticos en España y América Latina ... Mantendrá su posición como uno de los más respetados periodistas de la región”.
‘The Powerful 100’, Poder, marzo de 2003.

“His syndicated column is read by an estimated 6 million readers. His opinions make politician in Spain and Latin America tremble … He will maintain his position as one of the region’s most respected journalist”.
‘The Powerful 100’, Poder, March 2003.


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The unyielding ones

Carlos Alberto Montaner

George W. Bush has just bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Dr. Oscar Elías Biscet, a prisoner of conscience who was sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonment. It was a gesture of solidarity for which almost all Cubans are grateful. One of the most prized awards in the United States, it was created by Kennedy in 1963 and has been presented to personages like Nelson Mandela and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Of course, Mandela and King are two of Biscet's three sources of inspiration. The other is Mohandas Gandhi.

Like them, Biscet is a pacifist who rejects violence and defends human rights. One of the reasons why he was imprisoned is that he denounced the large number of abortions done on the island. More abortions are performed in Cuba than deliveries. Biscet is a doctor, a Christian, a young man (he was born in 1961) and a mulatto. He is something of a kind apostle. He is the true New Man, born of the revolution: a person horrified by the communist dictatorship. His wife, Elsa Morejón, a heroine in her own right, is his right hand. The machine has been unable to bend them.

I don't know if Biscet will ever receive the medal. Political prisons in Cuba are ghastly. Perhaps he'll die before freedom arrives. Former political prisoner Héctor Palacios Ruiz has just arrived in Spain and the stories he told the press are terrible. Héctor, 65, is a former communist, jovial and rotund. He rubbed elbows with Che and believed implicitly in Castro's good intentions. Until 1980, he served the apparatus in sinister and important missions and tasks. He broke away from the party when he saw State Security-led mobs beat people who expressed on the streets their desire to leave the country. He was disgusted.

Little by little, he joined the democratic opposition. In the 1990s, he founded an independent think tank to study the incredible Cuban reality. The authorities arrested him 20 times. Once, they put him in front of a firing squad and “executed” him with blank cartridges to test his moral resistance. Finally, in April 2003, along with 75 other absolutely innocent dissidents, he was sentenced to prison. Their crimes? They asked for plural elections, lent forbidden books and communicated with the foreign media. Like Biscet, Palacios was given a 25-year sentence. Not long ago, because he was in very poor health, in danger of imminent death, the Spanish government asked Havana to release him in its care, hoping to save him. 

What did they do to him in prison? Héctor Palacios is 6 feet 3 inches tall, a corpulent man. For two years, he was kept in a metal-and-concrete box, 5 feet 4 inches high, 5 feet 10 inches long, and 4 feet wide. The cell, a kind of catafalque shaped like an igloo, built by the Russians in the 1960s, sits in the yard of a prison known as Kilo 5.5 in Pinar del Río province. It has no windows and the Cuban sun turns it into an oven. Héctor lived semi-recumbent and in semi-darkness. He lost 88 pounds. He breathed through the door slit. His company were the rats and the cockroaches that emerged from the hole into which he defecated. Eventually, he became indifferent to these vermin. In effect, he became indifferent to life and several times he thought he had died.

Once a day, for a few minutes, his jailers ran a water hose inside, so he could drink and flush the unsanitary toilet hole. Héctor was able to mentally resist, because he is a psychologist and was prepared for that calvary. Physically, however, his organism shattered; the immobility, thirst and bad food destroyed his circulatory system. When he left that hell, he suffered from cardiac insufficiency and his weakened leg veins could barely pump blood. All the valves in his return circulation were damaged. When I saw him, I asked: “Do you think you'll pull through?” Without boasting, he answered something else: “What's important is that they couldn't crush me.” I didn't know what to say.

November 4, 2007

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