LONG READS Issue 1100 · February 18, 2026

Shackled, but Not Silenced  

They tried to silence him, but José Daniel Ferrer never lost his voice

Shackled, but Not Silenced  
Photos: AP images, personal archives


Photos: AP images, personal archives

José Daniel Ferrer, leader of Cuba’s most vocal pro-democracy opposition faction, spent years behind bars on cooked-up charges so that the regime could remove him from the street and silence him for good.
Today, from his new home in Miami, he speaks about the torture, the horrible prison conditions, and the regime’s darkest secrets. An exclusive interview from a safer haven

Sunset fell over Palmarito de Cauto, a fading town in eastern Cuba’s Santiago province.

The long, dusty street slipped into darkness — except for a single light glowing in the last house on the corner.

Inside, José Daniel Ferrer sat at a makeshift desk stacked with pamphlets, handwritten complaints, and lists of those arrested. Through the window, he could see the familiar symbols of power: a fading portrait of Fidel Castro mounted along the main road, the Cuban flag stirring lazily in the Caribbean breeze beside it.

Yet something about the silence that night felt off.

Continue reading with Mishpacha.

Create a free account to keep reading.

Everything you need to stay close to Mishpacha.