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Yoani Sanchez, a University of Havana graduate in philology, emigrated to Switzerland in 2002, to build a new life for herself and her family. Two years later, she decided to return Cuba, but promised herself she would live there as a free person. Generation Y is an expression of this promise. Yoani calls her blog ‘an exercise in cowardice’ that allows her to say what is forbidden in the public square. It reaches readers around the world in over a dozen languages. In 2008, Time Magazine named her one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World; this year it named Generation Y one of the Best Blogs of 2009. Spain honored her with its highest award for digital journalism, the Ortega y Gasset Prize. Yoani lives with her husband, independent journalist Reinaldo Escobar, and their son in a high rise apartment in Havana, overlooking Revolution Square. She blogs about daily life in the Castros' Cuba at: www.desdecuba.com/generationy.

Blog Entries by Yoani Sanchez

Poetry Without End, No Matter What [PHOTOS]

Posted December 17, 2009 | 02:59 PM (EST)


I know them from forever, since I ventured beyond my neighborhood of dirty facades to a Havana that never ceases to surprise me. You could say they resemble almost all my friends: hairy, alternative and smiling. They are similar to those young people who crowded into our living room a...

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Trying to Control Our Thoughts With Bricks and Mortar [VIDEO, PHOTOS]

1 Comments | Posted December 16, 2009 | 05:27 PM (EST)


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The Big Bad Wolf or the Boogieman was called something else in my childhood: The Urban Reform. Raised in a house for which my parents had no papers, when there was a knock on the door it scared us to death because it...

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The Free Blogosphere Takes Off in Cuba

6 Comments | Posted December 15, 2009 | 08:21 PM (EST)


Like the sneeze of a desired flu, the alternative Cuban blogosphere continues to propagate itself. It is no longer like the bleak wasteland that displayed -- if anything -- a few pseudonymous pages in April 2007, when I started Generation Y. I've lost count of how many we are now,...

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The Demons of Intolerance Partied on Human Rights Day

6 Comments | Posted December 13, 2009 | 02:59 AM (EST)


On December 10 a mob assaulted women who had only gladioli in their hands. Fists raised -- urged on by plainclothes police -- they surrounded these mothers, wives and daughters of those imprisoned since the Black Spring of 2003. Several of the attackers learned the script on the run and...

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Even Saying Goodbye to the Dead Is Hard In Cuba

3 Comments | Posted December 12, 2009 | 05:13 PM (EST)


With this guest column I would like to introduce a new blogger from Havana, Laritza Diversent. Laritza is an attorney. She graduated from the University of Havana in 2007, and the same year also took up the profession of independent journalist. Her Blog, The Laws of Laritza, is now...

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The Impossible Obsessions of Underfed Teenagers

5 Comments | Posted December 10, 2009 | 09:05 PM (EST)


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My grandmother told me about it with the same rapture that, decades earlier, her parents had spoken of the old dream of El Dorado. She divulged that its mass was between yellow and orange, dry at first bite but pleasant and soft...

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Three Month's Wages for a Can Opener

Posted December 8, 2009 | 09:23 PM (EST)


The store is located in the left atrium at the corner of Galiano and San Rafael streets, where there used to be a Ten Cent store, long since rotted from age and filth. It's like an alien spaceship that landed in a neighborhood that has seen many of its businesses...

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Maybe Next Year

Posted December 7, 2009 | 06:07 PM (EST)


December has always been a month to spend little time at home. Outside it is not as hot as usual, and the New Latin American Film Festival offers a full program to tempt us to leave the house. It's time to get out the sweaters and not worry too much...

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A People, a Country, in Waiting

2 Comments | Posted December 3, 2009 | 02:06 PM (EST)


A friend swore to me ten years ago that he would not go to the beach again until he could buy -- near the sand -- a beer in national currency. His pasty white legs confirm that he hasn't been to the sea for a decade, while waiting to pay...

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Realities of The Cuban Gulag

5 Comments | Posted December 2, 2009 | 08:15 PM (EST)


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Adolfo Fernandez Sainz lives among stories like this one; he turned 61 on November 30, six of them locked in Canaleta prison since the Black Spring of 2003.

That afternoon the last of his canine teeth would be extracted. He had spent...

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War Games In Cuba

10 Comments | Posted November 29, 2009 | 02:31 PM (EST)


Someone shoved a piece of paper under my door. A sheet cut in half with instructions about how to evacuate in the case of a hurricane or an invasion. One phrase struck me like the refrain of a bad song: "Sew a tag to the clothes of minor children with...

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The Permanent Forced Childhood Of A "Kept" People

28 Comments | Posted November 27, 2009 | 03:39 PM (EST)


It delights us to cure ourselves of that stage of life we call adolescence and, in particular, to become independent. Finding an answer to that question we have asked ourselves so often: "What do you want to be when you grow up?" Able to leave home without explaining ourselves, being...

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A Tropical Shower In a Land of Leaking Roofs

2 Comments | Posted November 25, 2009 | 03:07 PM (EST)


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The sun hasn't come out all day and a downpour constantly forces us to duck into some doorway or stay at home. One might think that in a tropical country life is organized taking the climate into account, and that along with our...

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Tomorrow's Political Leaders Stand Among the Thousands of Cubans Who Read Us

1 Comments | Posted November 22, 2009 | 01:59 PM (EST)


However, we work hard, with a lot of enthusiasm and hope, because we know that the political leaders of tomorrow stand among the thousands of Cubans who read us, and among the millions who will one day be free. Perhaps they may be cleaner and more self-assured, perhaps more laborious,...

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A 1980s Style "Repudiation Rally" Replayed in 2009 Against My Husband [VIDEOS]

6 Comments | Posted November 21, 2009 | 05:10 PM (EST)


The images of what happened yesterday, in G Street, with my husband, Reinaldo Escobar, and other friends are, to me, too reminiscent of repudiation rallies of 1980. Look for yourself and tell me if it doesn't seem the same.

Note: The first video is of the 'spontaneous demonstration' against the...

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President Obama's Answers to My Questions

204 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 10:03 AM (EST)


As I reported yesterday, I submitted seven questions to the American president, Barack Obama. He kindly took the time to respond; following are the answers I received from the White House.

President Obama's Responses to Yoani Sanchez's Questions

Thank you for this opportunity to exchange views with you and...

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Questions for Barack Obama and Raul Castro: Tomorrow, President Obama's Answers

7 Comments | Posted November 18, 2009 | 08:56 PM (EST)


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Popular diplomacy needs no memorandums or declarations of intent, it is carried on directly between people without going through foreign ministries or government palaces. It is accompanied by a hug, a handshake, or a long talk in the living room of a...

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The US Embargo of Cuba is Clumsy and Anachronistic

3 Comments | Posted November 18, 2009 | 03:05 AM (EST)


A few days ago the foreign press revealed that when the Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos traveled to Havana, a message from the American administration came with him. It suggested that our leaders take steps to improve civil liberties in order to move in the direction of ending the...

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The Younger Generation is Coming Like a Whirlwind to Dismantle Everything

6 Comments | Posted November 16, 2009 | 11:11 PM (EST)


At times here, one breathes in the aroma of a funeral. On the television news the images of funeral ceremonies have become common, almost monthly: a bugle note calling for silence, twenty-one gun salutes, soldiers marching, tears and words of farewell. They initiate new mausoleums and restore existing ones. Added...

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The "Energy Revolution" Is Also a Failure in Cuba

4 Comments | Posted November 15, 2009 | 02:48 PM (EST)


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Several years ago, the beginning of the "Energy Revolution" was proclaimed. The official media announced the immediate distribution of pressure cookers that, despite requiring electricity, would reduce the national consumption of petroleum. State industry began to produce the necessary rubber gaskets for...

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