Biscet in the Wall Street Journal

Update May 29, 2008: Welcome Michelle Malkin readers! I hope you all take the time to read this article on Dr. Oscar Elias Biscet, a prisoner of conscience serving time in one of the castro regime’s gulags. Cuba has the most political prisoners per capita in the world, and numerous Human Right Groups and Orgainzations have put together a petition calling for the release of all of Cuba’s political prisoners. Please take a minute or two of your day and sign the petition and show your support for men like Dr. Oscar Elias Biscet, who languish in squalid jail cells simply because of their convictions and their fight for human rights. Thank you.

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Mary Anastasia O’Grady has an excellent editorial in today’s Wall Street Journal on Dr. Oscar Elias Biscet:

A Cuban Hero
Cuban physician Oscar Elías Biscet and seven others will be awarded the presidential medal of freedom by George W. Bush in a White House ceremony today. But Dr. Biscet will not be there to accept his honor in person. Today, like most days for the better part of the past eight years, he is locked away in a dungeon on Fidel Castro’s island paradise.
Tales of totalitarian gulags may strike some readers as ancient history, something that happened during Europe’s 20th-century experiments in fascism, communism and Nazism. Yet in Cuba, the gulag and its suffering have not ended. Dr. Biscet’s medal serves to remind us of this fact. By raising the profile of his struggle for a free Cuba, the award also highlights what Castro’s regime fears most. It is not the guns and tanks of some imperial invader, but rather the faith, courage and nonconformity of the country’s own people.

Read the whole excellent thing right here, and watch the accompanying video. (If this link does not work, Ive posted the entire editorial below the fold.)
This, in particular, brought me to tears:

Dr. Biscet says that the regime has offered to let him go if he agrees to leave Cuba. He will not. In an April letter to his wife Elsa, he explained why: “My suffering is much, much less since I began to seek after my dream of being free, but not only for me personally. If I thought only of myself, you know that I would have been free a long time ago, and I would have been rid of these unsettling anxieties. But I want to see my friend’s son, my adversary’s son, or any citizen laughing happily from the satisfaction in their lives and enjoying a wealth of freedom because it is the only way human talent reaches its maximum splendor. . . .”

H/T Joe L.
More from Governor Mitt Romney at Redstate.


The rest of O’Grady’s piece”

Dr. Biscet, 46, is a renowned pacifist and devout Christian. He has said that he is inspired by the examples of Martin Luther King, Gandhi and the Dalai Lama. We know this and much more about his life thanks to the Coalition of Cuban-American Women, which says it documents all the facts it publishes about political prisoners through live testimonies from Cuba.
While practicing medicine in Cuban hospitals for more than a decade, Dr. Biscet became increasingly concerned about the government’s abortion practices. In 1998, at a Havana hospital, he took the risk of engaging in a clandestine study on the administration of a drug called rivanol to abort advanced pregnancies. The drug was being widely used, particularly on girls as young as 12, who, having been forced to leave their parents and work in rural areas as part of their schooling, found themselves “in trouble.”
The study concluded that rivanol resulted in viable fetuses being born alive. What often happened next horrified Dr. Biscet, who later wrote that, “the umbilical cord was cut and they were allowed to bleed to death or they were wrapped in paper and asphyxiated.”
As a result of his vocal opposition to these abortion practices he lost his job, his family lost their home and Castro’s goons were sent to beat him up. But the bullying didn’t work. By now he was actively engaged in resistance against the regime and, as he has written, his conscience would not allow him to back down. Those familiar with Dr. Biscet’s work say that he was instrumental in building — at the grassroots level — on the impact of Pope John Paul II’s visit to Cuba in January 1998. The regime took notice. Dr. Biscet became one of the few dissidents that Castro has ever attacked by name in a speech to the nation. As a proponent of Cuban democracy told me, “It proves that Biscet really got under Castro’s skin.”
From July 1998 until November 1999, Dr. Biscet was jailed 26 times. During those detentions, he was held for days in windowless cells or thrown in with populations of violent criminals and the mentally ill. In February 2000, he was tried and sentenced to three years in prison for holding a press conference to announce a peaceful march during the 1999 Ibero-American Summit in Havana. The backdrop at the press conference was two Cuban flags hung upside down to protest the state’s violations of human rights. He was convicted for “dishonoring national symbols, public disorder and inciting delinquent behavior” and sent to a maximum security prison 450 miles east of Havana, making family visits difficult.
Cuba’s political prison system is structured not only to punish dissent, but also to force the “rehabilitation” of the prisoner. Captives who give in, admit the error of their political ways and beg forgiveness sometimes can get out of jail. But Dr. Biscet is no such prisoner. While serving his three-year sentence, he increased his resistance, carrying out fasts and pushing for the release of political prisoners. The regime responded by putting him again in a squalid, solitary confinement cell or among dangerous inmates. He was denied visitors and medical treatment, and his Bible was confiscated.
In late October 2002, Dr. Biscet was released from prison only to be arrested 36 days later as he was preparing to meet with fellow Cuban human-rights advocates. In April 2003, he was convicted, as were 75 others who had been rounded up in the now-infamous March 2003 crackdown on dissent. He received a 25-year sentence for “serving as a mercenary to a foreign state.” The Coalition of Cuban-American Women reports that, from November 2003-January 2004, he was held in “an underground dungeon with a common criminal and lost 40 pounds.”
His time in solitary has been no less inhumane. Dr. Biscet has described his 3-foot-by-6-foot cell as having no windows or running water. It has a hole in the floor for a toilet and is infested with vermin. One of his confinement periods there lasted 42 days. Dr. Biscet says that “the Cuban government has tortured me during eight years, trying to drive me insane.” Perhaps most painfully for the prisoner, his wife has been fired from her job as a nurse and is harassed by the state.
Dr. Biscet says that the regime has offered to let him go if he agrees to leave Cuba. He will not. In an April letter to his wife Elsa, he explained why: “My suffering is much, much less since I began to seek after my dream of being free, but not only for me personally. If I thought only of myself, you know that I would have been free a long time ago, and I would have been rid of these unsettling anxieties. But I want to see my friend’s son, my adversary’s son, or any citizen laughing happily from the satisfaction in their lives and enjoying a wealth of freedom because it is the only way human talent reaches its maximum splendor. . . .”
Reading those words, it is difficult to think of anyone more deserving of a medal honoring those who serve the cause of freedom.
• Write to O’Grady@wsj.com

9 thoughts on “Biscet in the Wall Street Journal”

  1. I am so happy this award has brought so much needed attention to Dr. Biscet, his circumstances and Cuba’s reality. I hope more and more papers and news outlets pick up this stoy.

  2. GWB has 13 months to redeem his badly damaged presidency. What better place than the final resolution of the Cuban question?

  3. Es un orgullo, and at the same time greatly humbling. This honor, which does not quite say enough about the man receiving it, brings to mind a scene from “To Kill a Mockingbird” with Gregory Peck.
    After the verdict, Atticus is slowly walking out of the courtroom. The town’s black citizens all stand in silent respect. Reverend Sykes tells Scout “Stand up Jean Louise, your father’s passing.” Even in defeat there is dignity, strenght and the unbending will buttressed by the knowledge that what you do is the right thing to do.
    May God bless Dr. Biscet.

  4. If the major black political voices of this country are something other than hypocrites and/or rabid partisans, they should certainly publicly acknowledge and support Dr. Biscet and the struggle he represents. If.

  5. Asombra,
    They’re verly likely not going to say a word, as most of them probably have videos of them and sweet young Cuban things, tucked away in a Cuban video vault somewhere as security, in exchange for their support.

  6. God bless Dr. Biscet! I happened to hear part of piece on NPR this morning on the subject. It ended by pointing out the the Cuban govt has made no public announcement regarding this matter. Not bad for NPR.

  7. Wait, just what did NPR expect from the official Cuban media? That it would say one word that could conceivably make its masters look bad? Are these people that clueless?

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