Exiled Cuban pastor barred from returning home as daughter battles cancer

cuba
 (Photo: Unsplash/Dustan Woodhouse)

A Cuban pastor living in exile in the United States has accused the Cuban government of cruelly denying him the right to reunite with his critically ill daughter, as she prepares for yet another round of surgery in her fight against advanced breast cancer.

Pastor Alain Toledano Valiente, a prominent leader of Cuba’s unregistered Apostolic Movement, made an emotional appeal on social media this week after receiving news of his daughter’s deteriorating condition.

In a video shared on Facebook, Toledano implored Cuban authorities to allow him back into the country, condemning what he described as the political exploitation of his family’s suffering.

“Her life is at risk once more,” he said, referring to his daughter Susana Toledano Benitez. “I demand my right … to enter my country and to be with my family.”

Toledano has been effectively blacklisted from entering Cuba since being forced into exile in 2022, following years of targeted harassment by Cuban State Security.

He and his immediate family - his wife and two underage daughters - were given urgent humanitarian entry to the US a month later after authorities gave him a stark ultimatum on 25 June 2022 - leave within 30 days or face indefinite imprisonment.

Since fleeing the country, Toledano has been repeatedly barred from boarding flights to Cuba, even during family emergencies.

He says he was prevented from attending a close relative’s funeral and has been informed that the Ministry of the Interior’s State Security Department has put out a standing no-entry order against him.

While his younger children were able to accompany him to the US, his two adult daughters, including Susana, were ineligible for the same status and have remained on the island.

Just weeks after their forced separation, Susana was diagnosed with cancer - a condition that has since worsened amid Cuba’s nationwide medical shortages.

She is now facing further surgery in a race against time.

Anna Lee Stangl, Director of Advocacy for the human rights organisation CSW, has condemned the Cuban government’s actions, saying that the authorities are continuing to retaliate against Toledano for leading an unregistered religious community — a role that has placed him in the government’s crosshairs for more than two decades.

She stated: “The Cuban government is apparently not satisfied with having forced Alain Toledano Valiente and his wife and two younger daughters into exile.

“The authorities continue to inflict punishment on him and his family for the crime of having led a religious group that the government refused to register, forcibly separating them even during moments of crisis.”

She also called on President Miguel Díaz-Canel and Minister of the Interior Lázaro Álvarez Casas to immediately lift the travel ban and allow Toledano to return to Cuba to support his daughter during her treatment.

The Apostolic Movement, a network of charismatic Protestant churches, has long faced surveillance, harassments, and threats from Cuban authorities, who have refused to grant the group legal status.

Toledano’s case illustrates how the government continues to use legal and bureaucratic barriers to restrict not just religious freedom, but the right to family unity even in times of medical crisis.

As Susana awaits her next operation, her father remains thousands of miles away, locked out of the country he still calls home.

“You must stop playing politics,” he said in his video message. “You must stop playing with the lives of Cubans and the rights of Cubans.”

News
Cuts to government grants are having 'huge impact' on church buildings and local communities
Cuts to government grants are having 'huge impact' on church buildings and local communities

Many churches are in the corridor of uncertainty thanks to grant limits

Church of Scotland opposition to assisted suicide 'under review'
Church of Scotland opposition to assisted suicide 'under review'

Will the Church of Scotland change its traditional view following the Scottish Parliament's vote?

Christians pray as Westminster debates assisted suicide
Christians pray as Westminster debates assisted suicide

Christians are praying that more MPs will be persuaded to reject Kim Leadbeater's assisted suicide bill when it is debated again the House of Commons on Friday. 

Assisted suicide: Scotland’s shame
Assisted suicide: Scotland’s shame

Increasingly Western societies, as they turn away from their Christian roots, become cultures of death.