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DEISY
FRANCIS MEXIDOR
Ramon Labañino was born on June 9, 1943. "Today he’s a big,
strong man that can lift me with his arms," said his father
Holmes Labañino speaking of the son he once held in his arms
and opened his eyes "weighing eight pounds, if I’m not
mistaken."
Forty-five years have gone by.
"He never gave me headaches. He was a very calm child,
respectful. He didn’t know how to play marbles or spin a
top. He was very studious. In general he was very healthy.
Only once when he was six-months-old he caught pneumonia and
we almost lost him; later he became asthmatic. However, that
all ended by the time he was seven.
"His mother adored him, and he adored her. Little Ramon was
the favorite child. When he grew up he always said ‘my
mother, my mother’ and she loved it. He was able to see her
before she died. One day we agreed to meet in the cemetery.
He sat at the foot of his mom’s tomb and we began to talk. I
gave him all the advice a father could give a child, we
stayed a while in silence and I remember asking him: ‘Hey
son, how long are you going to continue traveling; you’ve
got daughters, a wife, you need to be present more.’ Until
that time, the only thing I knew was that according to him
he had been in Spain," said Ramon’s father.
Ramon’s answer kept his father from insisting: "‘Dad, do you
want me to tell you something? I don’t know how long I’ll be
traveling. It could be until I die.’ And he gave three light
hits on his mother’s tomb and we left walking." He left on
that supposed trip to Barcelona in July of 1998…
Almost a decade has gone by since Ramon Labañino was sent to
prison just as his compatriots Rene Gonzalez, Gerardo
Hernandez, Fernando Gonzalez and Antonio Guerrero. During
this time he has faced long times of solitary confinement,
the rigors of prison and separation from his family. "But we
never complain and never will; we’ve lived and survived. I’d
even say we are doing well," he wrote in 2005.
Now an appeals court has decided to reconsider his sentence
of life imprisonment plus 18 years. They will do so in a
hearing in Miami, the same place where he was unjustly
convicted. Judge Joan Lenard is tasked with calling the
hearing. She’s the same judge that at the 2001 trial showed
her commitment to the most reactionary rightwing sector of
the Cuban exiles in Florida.
Meanwhile, Ramon hasn’t received a visit from his daughters
and wife for two years. He was recently transferred to
another prison. His wife Elizabeth and his daughters, who
have grown up without their father, wait from day to day,
for permission from US authorities to go visit him.
Ramon
will spend another birthday in the reduced space of a jail
cell. Meanwhile, his father Holmes, looks towards the door
of his home. He recalls his "country girl who was more than
a woman and mother," and he thinks of the times that little
Ramon lagged behind them when they were walking, "but he
always caught up," said Holmes. "Today the wait is much
longer."
Granma
09-06-2008 |