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Graciela Ramirez Cruz told
Granma after returning from a visit with Cuban Five member
Gerardo Hernandez in the Victorville, California prison
by Deisy Francis Mexidor
Jan. 12, 2008
Reprinted from
Daily
Granma
"What did I want to do? I
wanted to take him by the hand and run out of there with
him. He’s not the person to be in that horrible place,"
Graciela Ramirez Cruz, coordinator of the International
Committee to Free the Cuban Five, told Granma.
Ramirez was still visibly moved
by the experience of her recent visit to Gerardo Hernandez,
one of the five Cubans imprisoned in the US since September
12, 1998 for trying to prevent terrorist attacks against
their country.
What was the first thing you
said when you saw him?
I was unable to say anything
more than his name and give him the only hug you’re allowed
when you arrive at the prison.
What was his reaction?
My visit hadn’t been possible
to realize at an earlier date and it was something pending.
At the same time I felt a great sadness because I felt that
Adriana [Gerardo’s wife] should have been there in my place.
For eight years she has been cruelly denied permission to
see him. Sadness because men like him shouldn’t be in jail,
not for nine years or one second.
Gerardo hugged me like a sister
he hadn’t seen in a long time but knew she would eventually
come to visit him.
I had him in front of me in his
khaki colored uniform and full of dignity; tall and firm
like a palm tree.
"You finally came!" he said
with that Cuban grace that characterizes him and that they
could never take away from him.
Can you describe the place
where Gerardo is?
US prisons are known for their
coldness, their sophisticated security systems and the grey
color that prevails everywhere. Victorville doesn’t escape
that description.
Near the prison is a small town
surrounded by a security cordon. Empty wooden houses are
fenced in.
I ask why nobody is around.
They explained to me that there were escapes of a toxic
substance and the town had to be evacuated. The substance is
dangerous and there is fear that it would spread if the
houses are destroyed. The empty houses really give a ghostly
air to the surroundings.
To reach the penitentiary you
have to travel on a dusty road in the middle of a kind of
desert, but the prison is surrounded by mountains.
You see several huge towers
with telescopic lookouts at a prudent distance, which
indicates that the entrance is near. Once there one faces a
fortified complex divided into different units, a sort of
compact totally grey cement and steel mass surrounded by
thick wires. There are no windows, which gives an even
greater feeling of enclosure.
Did you give him anything? Did
they let you go in with a pencil and paper?
No. The regulations at the US
penitentiary system are very strict; they don’t let you take
anything to the prisoner. I had to leave my personal handbag
at the gate.
After the routine search where
you even have to take off your shoes, the officers took us
to another area —I speak in plural because accompanying me
were Alicia Jrapko and Bill Hackwell, essential in these
long years of battle for the Cuban Five.
There, we lined up and they
marked us one by one with an identification number on one of
our forearms, which was detected by way of a laser lamp.
And the place where the visits
take place?
The prisoners are not allowed
visits in places with any privacy, much less outside.
Everything takes place in a large enclosed room with
artificial lighting where you lose a sense of time.
The room has small tables and
plastic chairs, also grey. Of course, you are always being
watched by several officers that can reprimand or even
interrupt the visit if you touch the prisoner. Other
regulations impede, for example, conjugal contact or
intimacy with their wives.
What did you talk about?
It’s incredible how much he
knows about what’s happening in Cuba and the world. He
didn’t have one complaint despite knowing how difficult his
situation is. He only said "everything is normal" and asked
to talk about the letters that are held up and about
Adriana.
He also asked me about a boy in
Las Tunas with whom he has established a special
communication. He asked me to thank Maria Orquidea, a woman
from Cienfuegos, for the complete transcription of each
program Una luz en la oscuridad (A light in the darkness)
from Radio Rebelde.
He is anxious to read the book
Desde la Soledad y la Esperanza, recently released by the
Captain San Luis publishing house. He asked me several times
to transmit his gratitude to all the people who are helping
spread the truth and working so that sooner than later
justice allows them to return to their country.
What work does he do at the
prison?
He told me pieces for the arms
industry are given a finish there but that he had asked to
be assigned to another job, one that contribute less to war,
and he was transferred to the prison garbage collection.
What surprised you about
Gerardo?
Everything surprised me:
starting from the attention he puts on each story; how he
switched from Spanish to English to dialogue with us; the
depth of his analysis on the international scene; the effort
he makes so that each letter arrives with something special
to its destination; the constant concern about his people
and the enormous capacity for affection that emanates from
him in the middle of such solitude.
Gerardo also has this special
ability for the right joke at the right moment, which he
used at the end to take the knot out of our throats as we
were leaving.
When we departed, he put his
hands on his chest and said: "Thanks for everything you are
doing for the Five and our people..." "Tell them I am well,
and give them all a big, strong hug for me."
Freethefive.org 12-01-2008 |