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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Horacio Julio Piña Borrego

Interviewed May 20, 2024

The family pays. For example, when my then wife graduated with a Bachelors [degree] in Accounting and Finance, I had already joined the opposition in [19]99. In August 2000 she graduated and my town’s bank had a job opening. Her family knew of the opening, but because of our relationship she was not offered that position. She was forced to take a position about 25 kilometers away from where she lived. She was repressed because she could have worked in the same town, without having to travel to places where no [accessible forms of] transportation existed.

My daughter also suffered when I went to prison. I was sent to prison in another province 20 kilometers from my village … The family suffered.

Repression is for the whole family. Whether you´re for or against the system you feel it because they [the regime] constantly call you out on the street as a way to coerce you into discouraging opposition members.

I do not have my own anecdotes but I have those of Dr. Jose Manuel Cruz Santovenia who was with us in the [opposition] movement. Before joining he had a great friend who had a medical degree and became a doctor. That friend took a position in the Ministry of Health, in the Sandino municipality. One night the friend appeared at the home of Dr. Santovenia in the dark so that he would not be seen. The friend said, “Doctor, we cannot continue our friendship. There is no problem between us, but our friendship could hurt me.” Repression even affected friendships. [Dr. Jose Manuel Cruz Santovenia is a Cuban human rights activist who now lives in Miami, Florida.]