Daughter of Cuba

18 November 2010

Cuba Si
The magazine of CSC
Irma Gonzalez, daughter of Miami 5 anti-terrorist fighter, Rene Gonzalez, found time during her recent tour to speak to CubaSí editor Natasha Hickman about growing up in Miami, the campaign to free her father and her reception in Britain.
Spring 2012
Sport at the heart of revolution
Summer 2011
A socialist path to sustainability
A manufactured dissident
Breaking the Silence: Beyond the Frame- Contemporary Cuban Art
Restructuring the Revolution
Spring 2011
In Santiago it is always the 26th
50 years of solidarity
Revealing Che’s revolutionary roots
The Doctors’ Revolution
Winter 2011
Habana Hoy: The New Sound of Cuban Music
Gerardo remains positive
Playa Girón
Latin lessons: What can we learn from the world’s most ambitious literacy campaign?
Autumn 2010
Sustaining the revolution
Cuba and the number of “political prisoners”
Daughter of Cuba
La revolucion energetica: Cuba's energy revolution
Summer 2010
Noam Chomsky on Cuba-US relations - exclusive
Friends of Cuba Solidarity Campaign
Waste not, want not
Miami 5 updates
Spring 2010
Cubans in Haiti
Remedios y sus Parrandas
Concert for Haiti
The real war on terror
Auntumn 2009
Interview with families of the Five
Autumn 2009
Juan Almeida Bosque – hero of the revolution
Presidio Modelo, School of Revolutionaries
Summer 2009
From here to there - Interview with Omar Puente
Talking to Aleida Guevara
Pride in Cuba
Ken Gill ‘son of Cuba’
Cuba50 - 40,000 people join the celebrations
Spring 2009
Confronting rhetoric with reality
Talking about a Revolution
Pushing for a change in UK policy
A chance encounter with Operación Milagro
Winter 2008-9
Hasta La Victoria Siempre - Interview with Cuban poet who witnessed Revolution
The revolution that defies the laws of gravity
Feminising the Revolution
Autumn 2008
Families torn apart - Miami 5 interview
After the storm - Hurricane report
TUC Congress reports
Terror in Miami - Cuba's exile community
Summer 2008
Havana rights
AGM Report - CSC celebrates year’s successes
Miami Five – Ten years on
Changes in Cuba?
Spring 2008
Celebrating 50 years of progress
Fidel stands down
Libraries at the heart of the community
Lessons for a greener world
Cuba50 – Celebrating Cuban Culture
Winter 2007/08
“In every barrio, Revolution!” - CDR Museum opens
Fighting for the Five - Leonard Weinglass interview
The World of Work in a Changing Cuba
Campaign on Barclays and extraterritoriality continues…
Autumn 2007
21st century medicine
The living legacy of Che
Interviewing Fidel
Summer 2007
Farewell to Vilma:
From Pakistan to Rotherham:
Whose rules rule?
Spring 2007
Feeding the revolution
Stop the Hilton Hotels ban
Teaching citizenship the Cuban way
Winter 06/07
Exclusive: London's Mayor visits Cuba (inglés y espanol)
Rendezvous with lies
World Circuit Records celebrates 20 years
Autumn 2006
Life without Fidel
The landing of the Granma
America's favourite immigrants
Summer 2006
From Cuba with love: Cuban doctors in Pakistan
Teatro Miramar: a dream to be realised
Bush’s ‘secret’ plan for Cuba
Spring 2006
Exporting healthcare: Cuba and the real meaning of internationalism
Let there be Light
“Hombres not Nombres”
Winter 2005-6
Confessions of an “independent” trade unionist
We are stronger than ever
Europe partakes in a recipe for disaster cooked up in Washington
Autumn 2005
Brendan Barber pledges TUC support for Cuba
Five reasons why the people rule
Education from womb to tomb
Summer 2005
Bill and Joe’s Cuban cycle adventure
Poet of Guantanamo
Participation is key to Cuba’s democracy
Spring 2005
Is Venezuela next after Iraq?
Trip of a lifetime
Justice delayed, justice denied
Winter 2004/5
Cuba's Response to AIDS
Books: Bulwark against neo-liberalism
Guide to the `Report from the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba´
Autumn 2004
Book review: Cuba’s story
Autumn 2004
Heart strings
Speaking truth to power: Cuba at the UN
Summer 2004
Salud International to back Cuban internationalist doctors
Cuba saved my daughter
A revolution in culture
Spring 2004
Miami Five: Hopeful of justice
Biotech for all
US occupation of Guantanamo Bay is illegal, says top lawyer
Winter 2003/4
The truth about Reporters Sans Frontières
Solar-powered education
Charting women’s progress since 1959
Autumn 2003
Does the FCO website betray a political bias against Cuba?
Join the CSC bike ride to Cuba
How the US stole Guantanamo Bay
Summer 2003
Hands Off Cuba Campaign Launched
Monument to freedom
EU lines up with US
UK lawyer visits Havana
Ibrahim Ferrer: a lesson in greatness
My secret mission to meet Fidel
The Miami Five -an injustice too far
Spring 2003
Beyond the beach and sun:
CSC’s Father Geoff Bottoms visits one of the Five
Cuban student tours UK
Autumn 2002
British credit cards hit by US sanctions
Housing for the People
Moncada Day Cycle Challenge
Summer 2002
Evil Spirit
From May Day In Havana To The Cradle Of The Revolution
A dream for all times
How foreigners fuel US anti-Cuba policy
Spring 2002
African Roots
How the US planned to start a war with Cuba
Toys for Cuba
Welsh Education Minister meets Fidel
Daughter of CubaIrma GonzalezUntil six, Irma Gonzalez led the life of an ordinary Cuban child. She lived with her parents and spent weekends with grandparents in Havana.

Suddenly, in December 1990, everything changed: “I woke up one morning and my dad wasn’t there. I was used to him being away for one or two nights, but this time he just didn’t come back.”

Growing up, Irma never questioned the explanation from her mother, Olga Salanueva, that he was ‘studying abroad’. Letters and phone calls every few months were enough to keep the inquisitive six year-old satisfied.

Despite, Olga’s best efforts to keep up her daughter’s spirits Irma sensed something was wrong: “I saw my mum growing sad. She was trying to stay happy for me, but she was not well or happy in herself.”

Six years passed, until December 1996 when Olga told her now 12 year old daughter they were leaving to join Rene in Miami.

“Me and dad had been very close when I was younger, and seeing him again was like the years had never passed. He was exactly the same smart, talkative and loving father who had left.”

What Irma didn’t know was that Rene had spent their six years apart infiltrating Miami terrorist groups carrying out attacks against the Cuban people. Nor was she aware that he had hijacked a plane to leave Cuba in 1990 in order to convince them he was genuinely against the Cuban revolution.

“There would be meetings at our house with men I didn’t like. They would get together to talk lies and plot against Cuba. Their words caused me a great deal of confusion as they went against everything I knew to be true.”

“After each meeting my parents told me not to worry, not to take it too seriously, to hold on to my own memories and the truth I knew for myself about my country.”

“At 12 I realised there was something beyond what I knew about my father. He was not full of lies and hatred like the men he mixed with, but I didn’t know what he was doing, and I sensed it best not to ask.”

At school, Irma also faced conflict. “I got really mad when kids repeated lies about Cuba they’d seen on TV, especially those kids who had just arrived from the island and knew they weren’t true but repeated them to fit in.”

“Although I was angry I didn’t say what I was really thinking. My father was part of the group telling lies, but deep down I knew he didn’t believe it and if I spoke out at school I might cause him trouble, so I chose to keep quiet.”

Less than two years after moving to Miami, Irma’s father was suddenly and violently snatched from her again. This time by FBI agents who stormed their home and arrested him early morning, 12 September 1998. While Rene was being held in the hole, Irma and her mother were being hounded by the press for being communists. A hammer and sickle was graffitied across their door and school friends instructed by their parents not to speak to her. Since Rene refused to inform on his four comrades, Olga was deported, and so in 2000 Irma found herself living back in Cuba.

“After the trial, the case became public at home and almost immediately I started campaigning for their freedom and doing things like this UK tour. I am the oldest of all the children of the five (there are seven in total aged 12 to 26) so was speaking on their behalf from sixteen.”

Irma has spoken in many countries but was particularly touched by a visit to Angola, where Rene fought against apartheid forces for three years. She has met world leaders including South Africa’s Jacob Zuma and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez.

She balances campaigning with a career as a clinical psychologist which she also teaches at Havana University. “The campaign is like hope for us. It is important to keep doing something for someone you love, not just sit at home waiting for something to happen. I feel that I’m useful standing up for my father and my four uncles. It’s something I believe in, not just the Five, but what they represent too.”

Although Irma has never met Antonio, Gerardo, Ramon or Fernando she feels that they are part of her family and refers to them affectionately as her uncles. “We speak by phone and they are always present in our lives, sending cards and letters on birthdays and special occasions.”

Rene, who is serving the shortest sentence is due for release in October 2011, although it is likely he will have to serve three years probation in the US. “This would be really hard because he would still not be able to see my mum.” (Olga Salanueva has been refused a visa by the US authorities ten times and been told never to apply again).

“When he is released it will still be very sad. No justice will have been done. He will have served the full sentence and it will not feel like real freedom to be home if his four brothers are still in jail.”

“The situation is hard. One more year goes by, then another. When I started university I was sure my father would be back when I graduated but he wasn’t. The children of the five are growing up, and the children that Fernando and Gerardo might have had will never be born. But we are still here, still strong, still fighting. And when we see so may people like you, getting together to help, it really does give us hope and make us smile.”

Irma has attended the last two vigil’s outside the US embassy, last year with her mother Olga Salanueva and Adraina Perez: “It is great to so many people who turn up to support us and speak on our behalf with so much spirit and courage. And the five know about the support in the UK and it helps to keep them strong. I really hope that next time I am in the UK the five will be with me, thanking you in person for everything you have done.”
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