On International Women’s Day, CSW shares the first of several testimonies from women in Cuba who have been targeted on account of their religion or belief. Today, we hear from a Muslim woman in the country, whose name has been redacted for security reasons.
I graduated from university in visual arts in 1990.
Everything was fine until I converted to Islam at the age of 24, in September 2004. At the time I was making a living by drawing pictures at the airport, but after I became a Muslim, I was immediately expelled because of supposed security concerns.
Targeted at home
Some time after [my conversion], in 2007, Pakistani students in Santa Clara and other provinces began to visit our home.1 Sometimes they would spend days with us, during which time our house was [constantly] watched. At times people in plainclothes were stationed right outside our door, or electric company inspectors or workers for the anti-mosquito campaign2 would visit at odd times of the day, times when we know they do not usually inspect for areas of standing water.
Continue reading ““Being different is considered a crime”: The story of a Muslim woman in Cuba”