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by
Alicia Jrapko
Gerardo Hernandez, one of the Cuban five, has
spent another birthday in prison, but this year
something different happened. This time a radio
wave of solidarity penetrated the prison bars,
the barbed wires, and the metallic doors of
Victorville Penitentiary to reach the ears and
heart of Gerardo.
"Cantos sin Fronteras" is a 2 hour musical
program that broadcasts every Saturday from 6 to
8 pm from KPFK radio station in Los Angeles. The
popular program reaches out to a wide
progressive audience all through out Southern
California and encompasses the 100 miles of
desert and mountains up to Victorville.
For more than two years now, Tanya Torres, the
host of the program, has been talking about the
case of the Cuban Five between nueva trova songs
and music of the world to bring attention to the
injustice of their imprisonment.
On June 2, Tanya planned to dedicate one of her
two hours to Gerardo on the occasion of his
birthday. She asked some friends who work in the
movement to free the Cuban five in the U.S. to
help her to get people to send in birthday
greetings and notes of solidarity to fill out
the show.
On short notice the messages started piling in
right away. The electronic mail box of Cantos
sin Fronteras was inundated with messages from
all over the world, including Cuba, Venezuela,
Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Germany, Belgium,
Spain and Italy. From Puerto Rico, the known
independentista Rafael Cancel Miranda sent
Gerardo a moving message and a poem. Messages
also came from Northern and Southern California,
including one from ex Congressman Esteban
Torres.
The host had to expand the tribute to the full
time of the show and also had to edit the
messages to make them shorter. Even doing that,
there was not enough time to read them all.
After two hours 66 of the messages had been read
of the hundreds that she received. During the
entire show the phone did not stop ringing from
people making emotional appeals to send messages
to Gerardo.
The highlight of the program was the
intervention of Adriana, Gerardo's wife, who was
interviewed live from their home in Havana.
Adriana with her sweet and unmistakable voice
wished Gerardo a Happy Birthday from far away,
and sent him her unconditional love. For almost
9 years now, Adriana has not been able to visit
Gerardo because the US government has denied her
that right. But this last Saturday Gerardo and
Adriana were together.
The Five were also present at Cantos Sin
Fronteras with songs that made Gerardo go back
to the time right after their arrest in 1998
when he was with his 4 brothers in a prison in
Miami. "El Necio" was played dedicated by Rene,
"El Dulce Abismo" was the request that was
played from Ramon, and Fernando dedicated a
salsa song that Gerardo used to sing over and
over again in his cell.
"This program just knocked me dead" was how
Gerardo described how he felt. It was a rare
happy day despite the difficult conditions that
he and his four brothers face. He shared the day
with his beloved Adriana, with his brothers, and
with hundreds of people from all over the world
who reminded him that he was not alone.
Several prisoners in Victorville also heard the
radio program. One of them asked Gerardo, "Did
your eyes water when you heard the program?
Because mine did."
The music without doubt has no borders, it
belongs to everyone, but this past Saturday
Cantos Sin Fronteras demonstrated that there are
also no borders in the struggle for freedom and
justice.
(http://www.freethefive.org) June 5, 2007
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