“My Little Girl Says, Mama, Come”, Says Deported Cuban  

In an interview with EFE, the Heidy Sanchez recounts details of her deportation. / EFE

By 14ymedio

HAVANA TIMES – The story of Heidy Sanchez—the Cuban mother recently deported from Florida to Havana without her 17-month-old daughter—has sparked a wave of criticism and outrage in legal circles and among immigrant rights advocates. Now, in an interview with EFE, the 44-year-old Cuban woman recounts the details of her deportation.

Sánchez says she was taken handcuffed to a cell, where she told an officer, “What need do you have to handcuff me? You’re already taking my life, you’re already killing me, you’re separating me from what I love most in the world.” The girl, a U.S. citizen—like her father—was left in his care while her mother was transferred to various detention centers and finally sent back to Cuba, without being allowed to take the child with her or to say goodbye to her.

Her lawyer, Claudia Cañizares, denounced that the procedure was riddled with irregularities: “Sanchez has no criminal record and was treated as if she were a dangerous criminal.” According to her allegations, the mother was never given the legal option of being deported along with her daughter, as stipulated in immigration protocols for family situations.

The case has also prompted a response from the Department of Homeland Security. Its spokesperson, Tricia McLaughlin, denied any wrongdoing and maintained that it was Sanchez herself who requested to return to Cuba “without her daughter,” leaving her in the care “of a relative.” McLaughlin added: “We take seriously the responsibility to protect children and will continue to work with authorities to ensure that minors are safe and protected.”

But the official version is far from what Sanchez remembers. She arrived in the US in 2019, crossing through Laredo, Texas, and was admitted under supervision, with the obligation to report periodically to ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) offices. Initially, she was required to do so once a year, but with the change of administration, the appointments became monthly.

“I was complying with everything. But in April, I decided to move up the appointment because I felt something wasn’t right.” When she arrived at the ICE office, they told her: “No matter what you do, the decision has already been made. You’re leaving.” Sanchez recounts that the ICE agent in Tampa simply told her to call her husband to pick up the girl. “I had no choice. They didn’t tell me anything, just that the decision had already been made,” she said.

Amidst the confusion and fear, she barely managed to make a brief call to the child’s father. “Did they give you the girl?” was the first question he asked when he answered, concerned about the fate of the little girl, who also suffers from epileptic seizures.

She then spent 48 hours being transferred from one detention center to another, without access to her daughter or adequate legal counsel, until she boarded the plane that returned her to Cuba. “They let me change clothes only to put on the gray uniform from the center. I’m not a criminal, but that’s how they treated me.”

During those dark days, Sanchez found a moment of solace with two other mothers—one Cuban and one Honduran—who were also facing deportation. “We hugged each other like sisters. Neither of us understood why they were separating us from our children. All we did was seek a better life for them,” she recalled, her voice breaking.

From Cuba, the woman tries to communicate daily with her family in Tampa, although poor connectivity and power outages complicate the phone calls. “Every time I manage to talk, my little girl stares at me through the screen and says, ‘Mama, come.’ That devastates me.”

Sanchez’s case has rekindled the debate over immigration policies in the United States, especially those affecting mixed families, with migrant parents and citizen children. “It’s not a matter of politics. I know they’re doing their job. But what about feelings? My daughter needs me, and I need her too. That’s what they don’t want to see or understand,” she said.

Attorney Claudia Cañizares, along with Sanchez’s family, has launched a campaign to gather signatures, attract public attention, and explore all possible legal avenues to achieve family reunification. “This case demonstrates that rhetoric about security can no longer serve as a justification for inhumane practices. It’s not an isolated case, but it is a tragedy,” the attorney concluded.

Translated by Translating Cuba.

Read more from Cuba here on Havana Times.

3 thoughts on ““My Little Girl Says, Mama, Come”, Says Deported Cuban  

  • Mr.Patterson —

    I’ve always respected your comments on Havana Times; this comment however is completely wrong.

    The Cuban community in Florida is fiercely “Cuban”, albeit in a “New American” Cuban way. I believe the Cubans in Florida believe Trump/Rubio would (wrongly) force the Castros out of power. The majority of American people, both Democratic and Republican, have little idea what is happening… and what has been happening… in Cuba for the past 70 years.

    I was grew up across the street from a Cuban family that had fled the country when Fidel Castro came to power. One of them had been imprisoned by Castro for two years. When he was released…but thought he would be jailed again…he followed his wife out of the country. The family fled to central America, then Florida, and then finally Iowa. When I was old enough, and Cuba was opened to US citizens, my wife and I visited Havana in 2017 for a week. Since then, I’ve come to this website nearly every week to keep up with the goings-on around the country.

    I am white, my wife is Korean. I empathize with Cubans, not because I feel sorry for them but because they are human. I don’t see the color of their skin nor do I look down upon them. Again, they are humans. And all humans deserve a certain level of respect. I think that’s an opinion that many of Americans share. As a group, many Americans ARE racist…yet many of us don’t realize the little racist things we do, or from which we benefit. But one-on-one, many whites…and many blacks…and many Asians… and many Latinos…care for each person human individually.

    Richard

  • Yes, sad story, I could not cope with being away from my children.
    Cuban community, let this be a lesson, integrate into America, educate yourself beyond your past experiences of political parties.
    The left is filled with rich elites, woke, new ideologies who like to have control and stick their noses in your business.
    I understand people voted away from socialism, but this Republican Party is nothing like ever before. He was in office once before, everyone experienced his wrath once before.
    I hope you are reunited with your family.

  • Sad story. I hope those Cubans who voted for Trump (most Cubans citizens, in fact) can see how they are as much to blame for this deportation as those toothless MAGA rednecks who still support Trump. There is a infirmity
    called “proximity to Whiteness” that afflicts a lot of Cubans. They get to the US and DECIDE that it is better for them to try to pass as whites than it is to be considered a “person of color”. Can’t say that I blame them. I never had that choice but I can tell you firsthand, it is no picnic being a African American in the worst racist country on the planet. But what Cubans should realize (someone tell Marco Rubio this if he decides to run for President again) is that white folks in the US will never accept Cubans into the club. Never. So, deportation stories like this will continue. #FAFO!

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