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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Fidel Suarez Cruz

Interviewed May 20, 2024

For those who do not know about the Black Spring, from March 18 through 21, 2003, more than 70 Cuban opposition members were arrested. Seventy-five opposition members, 74 men and 1 woman, were punished. The woman is Martha Beatriz Roque Cabello. The opposition members came from different backgrounds – journalists, librarians. I was a librarian in Cuba. The “street dissidents,” [those taking part in] demonstrations in the street. I also partook in various forms of opposition acts.

It was not a surprise. [In those days,] I was being arrested every Wednesday at dawn. This was a time with public street demonstrations across the country demanding the release of all political prisoners, without sending them into exile. So, a majority of the opposition was detained. It was on Wednesday, March 18, 2003. The Black Spring was hidden. People learned about the Black Spring over a period of months, even years.

The first to learn of it were the prison populations. That is where we [dissidents] started to come together, in all these prisons. These ordinary [non-political] prisoners were the ones who provided the information to their families, then later because of the Ladies in White [Damas de Blanco], various documents, Radio and TV Martí, La Voz de La Fundación [radio] – stations that send their signal to certain provinces in Cuba – until it became widely – if not universally – known.