CENESEX and TransCuba delegation at this morning's May Day march in Havana. Cuban queers and international friends at the front of the march to the Plaza of the Revolution. 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️✊🏾✊🏻✊🏿
Photos: Cenesex, Revista Mujeres

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CENESEX and TransCuba delegation at this morning's May Day march in Havana. Cuban queers and international friends at the front of the march to the Plaza of the Revolution. 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️✊🏾✊🏻✊🏿
Photos: Cenesex, Revista Mujeres
Cuba, May 13, 2023 – A participant in Havana’s annual Conga Against Homophobia and Transphobia holds a sign, “Socialismo sí, homofobia no!/S
Cuba will host the 10th International Colloquium on Trans-identities, Gender and Culture in Havana from May 12 to 14, as right-wing governments across the world intensify attacks on LGBTQ+ people and erase hard-won protections.
The colloquium is part of the XIX Cuban Days against Homophobia and Transphobia. Cuba has advanced LGBTQ+ rights through its 2019 constitution and 2022 Family Code — gains built over decades of organized struggle — while the U.S. government has spent the same period stripping protections at every level, from federal policy to military service to school curriculums.
The contrast is not incidental. It reflects a deeper divide between a socialist state that treats rights as a social project and an imperialist state that treats them as a political liability.
NEW BOOK - Love is the Law: Cuba’s Queer Rights Revolution
Available in paperback and PDF
BUY NOW | FREE PDF
You would never know it from the capitalist media, but in addition to ensuring housing and health care for all, Cuba’s revolution is making huge strides in gender and sexual liberation.
In 2022, Cuba held a referendum for a new Families Code, a major overhaul to the country’s constitution in regard to sexuality, gender, and family life.
This is one of the world’s most progressive codes on families, and it passed with 66.85% in favor. This code greatly expands the rights of women, queer and trans people, and ultimately all Cubans.
U.S. transgender communist activist, Melinda Butterfield said: ‘When it was reported – if it was reported at all in the capitalist media … it was just, ‘oh, Cuba has finally gotten around to adopting same-sex marriage.’ But the Families Code is so much bigger than that, and so much more comprehensive, and not only for the queer community, but for all families and all kinds of communities in Cuba.’
The code was developed and adopted via a mass-democratic process that happened across the country, with debate everywhere from neighborhood assemblies to labor union halls. This book documents how Cuba’s socialist revolution made this possible, with plenty of discussion about what LGBTQ+ communities outside Cuba can learn from Cuba’s example, at a time when capitalist governments like that of the U.S. are trying to erase queer and trans people and push back all gains made by working-class and oppressed people.
This book includes:
Presentation by Cenesex director Mariela Castro Espín
Discussion with a transmasculine Cuban activist
Reports from LGBTQ+ delegation who went to Cuba to learn about new Families Code
Report from delegation to Guantánamo Peace Seminar
The full text of Leslie Feinberg’s Rainbow Solidarity in Defense of Cuba and more.
April 7, 1930: Birthday of Comrade Vilma Espín, Cuban revolutionary, anti-imperialist guerrilla fighter, founder of the Federation of Cuban Women - Federación de Mujeres Cubanas. She made a crucial contribution as an early champion of queer rights in socialist Cuba.
Last year I learned from her daughter, Mariela Castro Espín, that Vilma initiated what would eventually become Cenesex under the auspices of the women’s federation. She was responsible for importing and publishing scientific and political materials from the German Democratic Republic on LGBTQ rights, contributing to Cuba becoming a leading example of queer and trans rights today.
Vilma also rescued the records of the Women's International Democratic Federation - Federación Democrática Internacional de Mujeres during the counterrevolution in Eastern Europe in 1990, and made sure Cuba undertook keeping the global women’s organization alive. Today Women In Struggle - Mujeres En Lucha is a proud member of the WIDF.
-redguard
From Cuba to Louisiana: Two paths after slavery’s end
By Gregory E. Williams
This author visited Havana as part of the U.S. Friends Against Homophobia and Transphobia delegation in May 2023. Being from southern Louisiana, this author was struck by how much the old city looked like the New Orleans French Quarter. The architecture is similar – Spanish colonial. But there was one tremendous difference. The beautiful old houses were being used as homes. Colonial mansions were transformed into the headquarters of democratic mass organizations like the Federation of Cuban Women and the National Center for Sex Education (CENESEX). There were no homeless people. New Orleans’ French Quarter used to be residential, but today is an adult Disneyland. Very few people can afford to live there, and tourist shops and short-term rentals take up the historic buildings. Contrasting Cuba and the U.S. South – and U.S. society generally – shows what happens for the common people when the exploiting classes are expropriated vs. what happens when they are not.
Baltimore Book Launch
LOVE IS THE LAW: Cuba's Queer Rights Revolution
Saturday, June 7 - 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.
Urban Reads Bookstore, 3008 Greenmount Ave., Baltimore
In 2022, Cuba held a referendum for a new Families Code, a major overhaul to the country’s constitution in regard to sexuality, gender, and family life. This code greatly expands the rights of women, queer and trans people, and ultimately all Cubans.
This book documents how Cuba’s socialist revolution made this possible, with discussion about what LGBTQ+ communities can learn from Cuba’s example, at a time when capitalist governments like the U.S. are trying to erase queer and trans people and push back all gains made by working-class and oppressed people.
Join us to hear from Struggle-La Lucha editors Melinda Butterfield and Gregory Williams and to celebrate the launch of this important story.
Endorsed by Peoples Power Assembly Women in Struggle - Mujeres en Lucha Maryland-Cuba Solidarity Coalition Friends of Latin America
Activismo LGBTI en tiempos de neofascismo.
Tonight, on the eve of Havana's Conga (Pride march), the Cuban National Roundtable topic is "LGBTQI activism in a time of neofascism."
Leaders of Cenesex, trans and queer organizations speak out.
Cuba: From the Code to Respect
By John Alex Fernández Leyva
From Ahora, newspaper of Cuba's Holguín province
Mariana, a 15-year-old transsexual teenager, dreamed of finishing high school and studying medicine. However, the management of her school refused to wear the female uniform, arguing that "it did not correspond to her documents" and because "her sex at birth dictated it".
This experience is especially relevant today, when the implementation of the new Family Code, a modern, inclusive and protective law seeks to guarantee dignity, equality and respect for diversity, defending fundamental rights so that stories like Mariana's are not repeated.
The National Center for Sex Education (Cenesex) since the approval of the Family Code by the Cuban people in 2022 has played a very important role in the dissemination and knowledge of the regulations by the population. Dr. Mariela Castro Espín, director of the institution, was part of the drafting committee and legal specialists participated with the contribution of ideas in the consultations.
Yuleiski Moré Arma, legal advisor of CENESEX commented: "We coordinate the legal guidance service that is intended for people who are victims of violations of their rights due to sexual orientation or gender identity, we also accompany women in situations of violence, as well as families of children and adolescents, who suffer child sexual abuse and other forms of mistreatment."
As a study and postgraduate institution of the University of Medical Sciences of Havana, the center has the mission of training human resources in relation to the issues of comprehensive sexuality education.
"A lot has been achieved but we are not satisfied, we know that we still have to continue working based on the education of the Cuban population in respect for the rights of others and inclusion, so that it does not remain only in the letter of the Code," said Moré Armas.
In Holguín, legal orientation services are provided for key population groups every Thursday from nine in the morning to twelve at noon from the Alex Urquiola Provincial Library. The space aims to eliminate discriminatory practices, balance social inequalities due to gender discordance, discrimination based on positive serological status or sexual preference, as well as abolish violence, especially in gender-based issues and situations that affect quality of life.
It also addresses the physical and emotional health situation of vulnerable populations in the national response to STIs, HIV and hepatitis, the project also directs attention to transgender people, men who have sex with individuals who practice transactional sex and their partners, in addition to those living with HIV.
Equal marriages in Holguín
Advances in the legislative system have allowed resolutions such as the one related to assisted human reproduction techniques. In addition, according to the Civil Status Registry department of the Provincial Directorate of Justice of Holguín, a total of 124 equal marriages are counted in the territory from 2023 to April of this year, from the implementation of the new Family Code.
Tania Pérez Torres, head of the Ombudsman's Office department Tania Pérez Torres, head of the Ombudsman's Office in the legal body, said: "The Ombudsman's Office, as a structure of the Ministry of Justice, has the mission of protecting, guaranteeing and restoring the exercise of the rights of children and adolescents, people with disabilities, the elderly, individuals declared judicially absent, citizens who are victims of discrimination and violence in any of its manifestations, among others.
"The City of Parks has an office located on Aguilera Street, on the corner of Cardet that provides advice and accompaniment to any person who is a victim of discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity due to stereotypes marked in society. When any person incurs in these acts, it is a legal matter, gender is a social construction that is configured in a socio-legal way."
Maribexy Calcerrada Gutiérrez, psychologist and professor at the University of Holguín, explained: "The sensitivity of protecting these citizens against rejection is a common purpose that leads to obviating differences, which due to various conditions, could not be so functional.
"For example, a person who identifies with a gender norm other than their genital sex has likely experienced contradictions, rejections, and those same experiences intervene in their personal well-being and the health of their interactions because, among other factors, a history of rejection can disrupt the healthy course of personality development."
To break down prejudices and move towards a fairer society, it is key to stimulate research that collects the experiences and life experiences of people with sexual diversity, only in this way can the real challenges they face be understood and dismantle stereotypes from a human, social and legal perspective.
"It is an issue on which we must take a humanitarian position, on the one hand, the value of the person above any conduct, on the other hand there is a lack of causal analysis, the defense of the dignity of these people as a common objective has contributed to globalizing the meaning of these behaviors as an expression of rights in equivalence with any other."
"What differs is the analysis of histories that are at the basis of many divergent orientations from the norm, which have not always been so functional. Without absolutizing, he identified homo people at the intersection with other sexual diversities, in which there was an absence of parents due to abandonment, deterioration of affectivity in the family origin, sexual violence. It is not necessarily in the causal basis of all subjects with these behaviors, but such histories exist in many cases. In order to position this issue only as a problem of law, a more psychological analysis has been omitted," Calcerrada Gutiérrez said.
The new Family Code in Cuba explicitly recognizes and protects the rights of LGBTIQ+ people, expanding the concept of family and prohibiting discrimination based on gender identity, but its true impact will only be achieved if society knows and values these stories, understanding that behind each right there are lives marked by struggle. the hope and desire to be happy like anyone else.
Teresa de Jesús Fernández González, national coordinator of the Lesbian and Bisexual Women's Network commented: "We develop training workshops so that the types of violence that exist and sometimes are reproduced unconsciously because they are naturalized, we are interested in lesbian women not reproducing negative patterns in their relationships."
"The group is characterized by creating educational and informative materials related to comprehensive sexuality education. We do awareness and activism work from the point of view of the needs to make society more inclusive.
"When the groups detect that there are lesbian women who have suffered work, school or social harassment, they report it and take the lawyers so that they can guide them with the legal service in the different provinces where they should go.
"For lesbian women, the Ministry of Public Health approved a resolution granting the right to access assisted human reproduction techniques. The fact that many have married legally protects them and the code is fundamental to have legal support, we have always said that it is not enough for a code to be approved and for there to be laws, we must continue working on education." Yuleiski Moré in relation to the legal assistance service assured: "We are willing for an institution or person to summon us to talk about these matters, specialists help the population to understand the things that may be a reason for doubt. To access the legal guidance service is not exclusive to the city of Havana, anyone in the country can call, in addition to Santiago de Cuba and Sancti Espíritus a parallel service is provided."
"The most recurrent violations of rights occur to trans people who still encounter a little resistance, mainly in educational institutions and some workplaces where on certain occasions it is not allowed to go according to the identity with which they perceive themselves, this attacks the effective exercise of rights, but generally, without being absolute, have been resolved."
"In other cases we rely on the Ombudsman's Office, which has a very close link with the activity we carry out. We have discovered that the problem of the violation of rights is not only due to discrimination, but also due to the lack of knowledge of the rights that individuals may have, as an institution we do not impose on anyone what the methods and styles of work are like, what we do is persuade, teach the rights that all people have."
Trans identities are very new for some parts, mainly for the east and center of the country, due to a strong attachment to customs. You can refer to this person with the name as socially he identifies, it is also allowed to dress according to the gender identity with which he perceives himself, regardless of whether in the registrations for formalities they have his legal name.
Family Code referendum results
"Anyone who feels that at any time their right may be violated because of sexual orientation, gender identity or being in a situation of violence can contact them through 7830 2932 or 7838 2528, for legal advice. Also electronically through email soj.cenesex.cu we will receive complaints and requests, analyze them as a team and indicate the methodology according to what the law establishes," says the legal advisor of Cenesex.
Article 42 of the Constitution of the Republic of Cuba prohibits all forms of discrimination and guarantees equality before the law, without distinction of any kind based on gender identity, sexual orientation or any other condition that violates human dignity.
In addition, Article 47 recognizes the right to the free development of personality, as well as to image and voice, essential pillars for each person to be able to express himself or herself freely and respectfully. Only in this way, by ensuring these rights in everyday life, will we be able to build a society where stories like Mariana's are a thing of the past and diversity is celebrated.
Translated by Walter Lippmann
English: https://groups.io/g/cubanews/topic/114045590 Spanish: https://www.ahora.cu/en/punto-de-mira/24103-del-codigo-al-respeto