We believe in a single Cuban nation: diverse, but not divided. The artificial fractures that decades of political conflict have carved into Cuban society — between those on the island and those in the diaspora, between those who stayed and those who left, between those who dissented and those who conformed — do not define who we are. They are wounds to be healed, not walls to be maintained.
We share the conviction that all Cubans possess equal rights and responsibilities, regardless of where they live or what they believe. Citizenship is not determined by geography or ideology. Every Cuban, whether in Havana or Miami, Madrid or Caracas, carries within them a legitimate stake in the nation’s future and a rightful voice in shaping it.
The division of the Cuban nation has been one of the most enduring and painful consequences of decades of political conflict. Families separated by exile, communities fractured by ideology, and a national identity stretched across continents — these are not abstractions. They are lived realities that shape the daily experience of millions of Cubans and Cuban-Americans around the world.
Our mission is to bridge the gap between the island and its diaspora, fostering a process of reunification where every Cuban is a vital architect of a shared, prosperous future. This means creating spaces for dialogue, building networks of trust, and supporting initiatives that connect Cubans across borders — not to erase their differences, but to find in those differences a source of collective strength.
Reunification is not simply a political goal — it is a human one. It means restoring relationships, honoring shared histories, and rebuilding the social fabric that has been torn by decades of separation and mistrust. It means acknowledging that no side holds a monopoly on suffering, and that moving forward requires generosity from all.
We are committed to a Cuba where the contributions of every Cuban — on the island and abroad — are recognized, valued, and put to work in the service of the common good. A reunified Cuban nation is not only possible; it is necessary. And it begins with the simple but radical act of choosing to see each other as compatriots first.







