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Yoani Sanchez

Yoani Sanchez

Posted: September 13, 2010 02:09 PM

Gay In Cuba

What's Your Reaction:

2010-09-13-mariposa.jpgMy friend Miguel left, tired of waiting for a sex change operation, and knowing full well that he was never going to get a better job. He left the red wig to a friend who worked in the same hospital and sold, illegally, the room he had in Luyano The day he asked permission to leave he put on a suit and tie, which made him roar when he looked at himself in the mirror. At the immigration office he tried to keep his hands off the fold of his trousers, so that the last gasp of homophobia wouldn't spoil his departure.

He escaped before they closed the river of Cubans which, for a brief time, flowed to Ecuador. His was one of some 700 marriages contracted between citizens of both countries, many of them with the sole objective of obtaining residency in that South American nation. Miguel paid the equivalent of $6,000 and in return got a wedding in Havana with a woman from Quito he'd known for barely a couple of hours. He faked pictures of the honeymoon, paid an official at the Ministry of Public Health so he would give him his "release"and even handed over a little cash so that his white card -- the exit permit -- wouldn't be too delayed. He pretended to be what he was not which was easy for him, because those of us born on this Island are good at putting on a mask.

Now he expects difficult times because the Ecuadorian police have started to investigate the 37,000 Cubans who entered that country in recent years. He doesn't seem scared, however. He is gay, one of those they loaded into police trucks under a rain of blows, and for years he was also monitored for his critical views. After experiencing both edges of the blade of censorship, nothing frightens him. When called to testify -- if he is called -- he will go wearing the red dress he always wanted to wear here. Nobody is going to stop him from gesturing while they interrogate him, because already Miguel has escaped that Miguel he once was, to become -- happily -- Olivia.

Yoani's blog, Generation Y, can be read here in English translation.
Translating Cuba is a new compilation blog with Yoani and other Cuban bloggers in English.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
03:00 PM on 09/17/2010
After the revolution, Castro imprisoned a lot of known homosexuals who had supported him, some of them with their lives from within the ranks of his army. They were imprisoned on a variety of charges, including being accused of holding beliefs that contradicted Castro's or his Russian and Chinese allies.

With that record, you expect him to make nice with gays and transgendered who he's never even met? He imprisoned close advisers and friends, I'm sure strangers were ostracized without ever thinking about it.
07:47 PM on 09/14/2010
The methodical oppression of homosexuals that exist under certain Marxist regimes in the world today is vicious. The systematic persecution of gays under Castro’s regime has by now become endemic.
05:34 PM on 09/13/2010
Olivia's story sounds fascinating and heartbreaking. I'd love to read more but I have to point out that she is transgendered, not gay. I point that out because the homo/transphobes out there do not realize the distinction and it only fuels their hatred.

I am curious how Cuban culture views gays and trans people. Is there a distinction?
04:10 PM on 09/13/2010
Samuel Farber said, “The present Cuban government… has done more to promote homophobia than any regime in the country’s history.”

After 51 years LGTB members remains under attack in Castrolandia. Article 303 of the Cuban Penal Code threatens “publicly manifested” homosexuality with a year’s imprisonment.

Homosexual Cubans can be imprisoned for something as innocuous as holding hands.
The Cuba Communist Party, the only one legalized political party in Dr. Castro island paradise doesn’t allow homosexuals in its ranks.