Freed Cuban dissident artist lands at Miami International Airport

Freed Cuban dissident artist lands at Miami International Airport

For the first time in five years, prominent Cuban dissident artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara breathed free air as he arrived at Miami International Airport on Saturday afternoon after being released from Cuban detention.

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Otero Alcántara, 38, served a five-year sentence after being imprisoned since July 2021, when he said on social media he was going to join the historic anti-government protests of July 11 — the largest demonstrations Cuba had seen in decades.

READ MORE: Cuba will release artist and political prisoner Otero Alcántara to exile in Miami

His longtime friends, who’ve advocated for his release from a maximum security prison in Guanahay, in the province of Artemisa, waited with bated breath at the doors of International Arrivals at the airport for hours.

Cuban activist Salomé García met Otero Alcántara in Havana in 2012 through their work as artists. As she waited for him, she said his friends had been working to ensure his release would be a meaningful moment.

“So that he can also have a space together with the people who have been following him and advocating for his release during these five years,” she said.

García said many of those waiting to welcome him were members of the San Isidro Movement.

“What you’re seeing is a lot of people who suffered repression in Cuba who were forced out, and we’re happy to welcome him,” Garcia said.

Anamelys Ramos, a friend of Otero Alcántara, and fellow member of the San Isidro Movement — a Cuban collective of dissident artists, journalists, and academics formed in 2018 to protest state censorship of artistic expression — said Saturday had been an incredibly stressful day as they awaited his arrival.

“It’s been very stressful because until the very last minute we had no confirmation that Luis Manuel was at the airport. People there were waiting for hours, and we even started to think he wasn’t going to arrive,” Ramos said in Spanish.

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Otero Alcántara left Miami International Airport and headed straight to National Shrine of Our Lady of Charity, a Catholic church in Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood.

With him was a broken statue of the Virgin Mary, which he brought from Cuba as an offering. He shattered it himself at José Martí International Airport in Havana before leaving the island and being released.

“It is a gesture that invites us to gather the fragments, to piece together what has been broken, and to believe that healing is still possible,” a news release from Our Lady of Charity reads in Spanish.

The church is home to a Marian shrine, a sacred place dedicated to the Virgin Mary.

“The nation’s newest Marian shrine, dedicated to Our Lady of Charity, reflects Cuban-American history,” the Archdiocese of Miami website reads. “Its central image is a replica of one honored at Cuba’s national shrine in El Cobre, representing the patroness of Cuba and symbolizing Cuban faith and culture.”

Cubans have honored the “Virgin of Charity” since the 1600s, according to the Archdiocese of Miami website.

Otero Alcántara has a long history of incorporating the religious symbols into his artwork.

In 2012, during Pope Benedict XVI’s visit, Otero Alcántara created a “Virgin of Charity” papier-mâché, but the art piece was banned, according to the Havana Times.

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Take a look at his journey to Miami

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