The Current - Canadian efforts to help the crisis in Cuba

Episode Date: March 27, 2026

Cuba is still recovering from a major blackout this past week as it continues to grapple with severe fuel shortages, rolling blackouts, and dwindling supplies of essentials. The country has long suffe...red from economic woes. But the situation has grown far worse since the U.S. deposed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in January, cut off Venezuelan oil to Cuba, and threatened other countries with tariffs if they send fuel. That’s all on top of President Donald Trump’s threats to Cuba itself. It all stands in stark contrast to the relationship that Canada has long had with the Caribbean nation. A new CBC documentary explores that history and the efforts Canadians are making today to help a country in crisis. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This message comes from Viking, committed to exploring the world in comfort. Journey through the heart of Europe on a Viking long ship, with thoughtful service, destination-focused dining, and cultural enrichment, on board, and on shore. With a variety of voyages and sailing dates to choose from, now is the time to explore Europe's waterways. Learn more at viking.com. BBC podcast. Hello, I'm Matt Galloway, and this is the current podcast. Cuba is still recovering from a major blackout this past week as it continues to grapple
Starting point is 00:00:42 with severe fuel shortages, rolling outages, and dwindling essentials. The country has long suffered from economic woes, but the situation has grown far worse since the U.S. deposed Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in January, cut off Venezuelan oil to Cuba, and threatened other countries with terrorists if they send fuel. That's all on top of President Donald Trump's threats to Cuba itself. He recently warned that Washington could take imminent action against Cuba. It all stands in stark contrast to the relationship that Canada has long had with the Caribbean nation. CBC producer Julia Poggle explores that history and the efforts Canadians are making today to help a country in crisis. Here's Julia's documentary.
Starting point is 00:01:26 We're just going to say the truth. because our crazy trauma is making it every hour harder or harder for our people. It's trying to affect the government, but all they're doing is killing our people. This is Eddie Garcia. He's telling me about life in Cuba. Very desperate, very sad. We are hard workers. Like, they don't mind getting up at 5 in the morning, working for 12 hours.
Starting point is 00:01:49 We are able to support the family. But supporting a family in Cuba is getting harder and harder to do. The country is desperately low on oil, and life in Cuba is grinding to a halt. Even when the doctors and nurses wanted to look out to our people, there is no opportunity. There is no medicine, no medical supply. Public transportation often never arrives. Buses don't have enough fuel. Food is very expensive at the private grocery stores, partly because local manufacturing has slowed
Starting point is 00:02:21 because of the severe lack of oil. The cost of food has been a growing problem for years. Prices keep going up, and now a flood of eggs could cost close to a month's salary for some Cubans. And many of the government-run grocery stores are almost empty. Even if you have the morning, no fuel or the gas or no even electricity to cook the food. So I can tell you that 90% of Cuban families are right now cooking with natural charcoal, which is also great hard to find them. When you find it, you have to pay a really, really expensive.
Starting point is 00:02:56 like we're talking like a moldy salary, you know, just to cook. Eddie is usually a busy tour guide. But with Canadian planes no longer flying to Cuba, there are very few tourists. He's stuck at home, just waiting. When you sit at home and nothing to do and no income, you know, and the days are running, the tiny spousin, you are getting nervous because you've got to support your family. I have to took it, Brian and Adams. Brian is 14 and my little boy is seven.
Starting point is 00:03:30 And there is also now where school is still officially running. Sometimes I took them to the school and they say, no, there is not classes today. And even when they go, they just stay two, three hours because it's so hard to support anything in the country like that that it doesn't have fuel or anything. It's so hard for people. It's so hard. There have been rolling blackouts, something that's been a reality for years, but is way worse now. I'm told some can last over 16 hours. And recently, the entire country's electrical grid went down for days.
Starting point is 00:04:05 As Eddie mentions, it's hard to cook, food spoils in the fridge, and you can't charge your electronics. And many times we made the line up like three, four hours in a gas station to get power. And then by the moment that you are getting in there, then we get a blackout. So it is almost impossible to live like that, you know. It's not in your hands. So that's a situation in people right now. I'm talking to Eddie on speakerphone, sitting in Jennifer Raymer's living room in London, Ontario.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Honestly, we are just a lived-in little house. I'm a missionary. I don't make money. Jennifer is a go-go kind of person. She woke up at 5.30 this morning to get her workout in. She has four kids, three of them out of the house, the last finishing high school. Jennifer and I, we met like 50 years. years ago. Eddie was a bartender at the resort Jennifer and her husband were staying at, and they
Starting point is 00:05:07 kept in touch. She says Eddie is almost part of her family now. And Eddie agrees. We became like family and friends. She's close with his wife and kids too. And by the way, their names are Brian and Adam because he loves Brian Adams. So when we're driving around in the car, we listen to Brian Adams, like all the time. It's so funny. Eddie gives tours from his cab, but he also delivers aid, the Jennifer's charity, together for Cuba. sends to his home country. We've been working all over Cuba. Together for Cuba is a charity Jennifer set up about 10 years ago,
Starting point is 00:05:41 after she delivered a bag of medical supplies to a hospital in Cuba. I felt nervous and excited and didn't really know how they would receive it. She'd been to Cuba before, on vacation. On that trip, she and her husband left their resort in Veridero and explored the nearby town. She saw empty pharmacies, and heard stories of hospitals with no supplies. She knew she wanted to help.
Starting point is 00:06:06 So on her next trip, she brought a bag of supplies to hand out when she got there. And we gave the suitcase out, and it was very emotional. They are just blown away that we're here bringing them aid. And then I just started going back. So one bag led to two bags. And as of last year, we are sending over 600 medical bags per year into the country.
Starting point is 00:06:30 and I knew that this is where I was supposed to be. Jennifer is supported with some of her work by a Christian missionary charity, but she says that group mainly helps with tax receipts, some accounting. She says, together for Cuba is really all, Jennifer. I did it mainly alone. I did have some volunteers that came once in a while, which I'm so grateful to all of you all volunteers, along with the people in Cuba who are distributing that aid. She shows me around her Cuba room, the front room of her house, totally dedicated to storing the aid she gathers.
Starting point is 00:07:12 A map of Cuba on the wall, a painting of a beach and palm tree swaying in the breeze, just visible behind the boxes of aid. This was supposed to go down. This is a water filtration system that will go down to Cuba as well with us. This is your cataract surgery kit. This is all for orthopedic surgery. We get walkers, wheelchairs, canes. She preps these duffel bags to send to Cuba with tourists. It's the cheapest and most efficient way to get aid to Cuba, she says.
Starting point is 00:07:45 Even though getting these bags ready is an enormous time-consuming task for her. So let's get this table set up and I'm going to show you what I do. Jennifer slides her dining room table out of the way, sets up a folding table. table and starts unpacking the supplies from boxes. I actually have to take it all out of the boxes and sort. Okay, so now I've got to grab the scale and Ziploc bags. Yeah, so every day I pulled this all out and just start sorting and packing. And then the bags get full at 50 pounds.
Starting point is 00:08:20 I load them all into my car, into my SUV, bring them over to the storage unit, hold them all up in there, and then bring more boxes. is back with me and start all here again. And I try to clean it up by like five so that my family don't come home and be like, oh my goodness, we don't even have a table to eat at. She's witnessed so much that proves it's all worth it. Saw a six-year-old patient having open abdominal surgery and the doctors were showing me. That is all happening because that's your aid that you brought that. You brought this. Another time. Two-month-old baby, he needed heart surgery and he was. near going to die and he was underweight and they needed tube feeding and it was amazing I had a
Starting point is 00:09:05 hockey bag full of infant tube feeding and liquid and the cardiac doctor came in and was crying on my shoulder and said you saved a life today but Jennifer's stories like those have stopped I flew home January 26 without knowing that this was going to happen at all we were full ready on having the next trip come down. The Trump administration has blocked shipments from Venezuela. All major Canadian airlines have now suspended themselves from service to Cuba. So here I am. We're just waiting and waiting.
Starting point is 00:09:45 And the people in Cuba have grown to know the mission as well. And they're all going, oh my goodness, how are we going to get these supplies? In the first 24 hours of the planes being canceled, I had around 500 messages come through. We have social workers that work with us in Cuba and they're saying, like, we know there's communities that need certain supplies. They need food. They need medication.
Starting point is 00:10:12 We work with doctors in the communities. And they're all waiting and we're hoping because I was coming down with like a hundred bags. And now they're worried. So they switched gears. She dipped into their funds and got her workers in Cuba to buy, food and just drop it off around the country. So my team on the ground is said, let's do this. Are you guys, how much gas do you have?
Starting point is 00:10:37 Get out there, buy more food, buy more food, buy more food. And they go out and we choose all the different communities that are really out. We say Campo in the countryside and bring them food. Many women with children wondering how they're going to feed their kids the next day. I think we've delivered already to more than 300 homes as a whole. as a total since this happened, since the plane stopped flying. Eddie has played a big role in these deliveries. Helping with food, with medicine,
Starting point is 00:11:08 also with the people on the street, all over Cuba. We were helping more than 10 kids that they are of cancer. So that's a huge humanitarian help. What Canada and together for Cuba and especially Jennifer is doing to help and support what people now, when the people really need it. Adiel. How many years?
Starting point is 00:11:28 In this video, Jennifer sent me, Eddie's delivering food to school children. He piles up bags of rice and beans on their laps and asks their names. And you, sir, and Andy? And you, and you, to eat beans tonight, Eddie says. The boy smiles. And you, Natalie. Nassie. I was just there. I've got many friends there, but my two best friends, one of them I share an apartment with. They both just managed to literally get out yesterday. My name is Karen Domensky. I live in Kingston, Ontario for many years. I taught at Queens University in the departments of both history and global development studies.
Starting point is 00:12:31 This message comes from Viking. committed to exploring the world in comfort. Journey through the heart of Europe on a Viking longship, with thoughtful service, destination-focused dining, and cultural enrichment, on board, and on shore. With a variety of voyages and sailing dates to choose from, now is the time to explore Europe's waterways. Learn more at viking.com.
Starting point is 00:12:59 At University of Montreal, researchers are improving lives, all over the world, turning previously incurable blood cancers into treatable ones, searching for signs of life on planets light years away, training AI to detect diseases earlier and more accurately. It's breakthroughs like these that make us one of the top two universities in Canada for research, because it's more than what we do. It's our raison d'être, University of Montreal and of the world. I call up Karen to get a historical perspective on what's happening in Cuba. and placed this aid work that Jennifer's doing in the context of Canada's long relationship with the country. She's been in Cuba a lot over the past 18 years,
Starting point is 00:13:45 where she coordinated and taught an exchange program for students from Canada and Cuba, but on her most recent visit in January. So I entered a country that, at the middle of January, that was in rough shape. The Cuba I left after the oil blockade was announced was, I could literally see in real time how things were changing. So words like catastrophic are not an exaggeration. Let me say potentially catastrophic. They're fed up.
Starting point is 00:14:15 They're frustrated. For me, up until now, the constant reference in terms of deprivation is the 1990s when the Soviet Union collapsed. 70% of the Cuban economy collapsed with it. And they called it ridiculously, in my view, the special. period. People talk about the special period the way my grandmother used to talk about the depression in the 1930s. The special period therefore, certainly for several generations of Cuban, stands as this moment of, whoa, that was hell, we survived that. But this is the point of the comparison now is that this is way, way worse. People tell me, in terms of desperation, in terms of anxiety,
Starting point is 00:14:58 in terms of inability to plan, in terms of uncertainty. Post-1959 revolution, when Fidel Castro took power, was another time of uncertainty for the Cuban people. There was the American CIA-backed failed coup, a potential nuclear arms war, and an American trade embargo, which completely cut off many imports to Cuba. It was also the beginning of what would become an important relationship between Cuba, in Canada. I think a really interesting example of Canada taking a different stand,
Starting point is 00:15:35 Canada exhibiting some independence in terms of foreign policy. Canada and Mexico both famously did maintain diplomatic relations with Cuba unbroken. Canada did not impose an economic blockade. Canada didn't participate in the economic blockade that the U.S. imposed. After the revolution, there was an accident. of the intellectual class. The country needed to build up its own professional capacity. The first foreign non-governmental organization that was invited, requested by the Cuban government to work to help to, in this case, rebuild their engineering capacity was, guess what, a Canadian
Starting point is 00:16:18 NGO, Canadian University Service overseas, Kuso, which literally helped to build the engineering program at Cuban universities from the late 60s through. through the 1970s. Just one example, I think, of the kinds of relationships of trust that existed at the government-to-government level. Another example of Canada's sharing expertise was, Building a better cow that could withstand the tropical climate literally brought from Canada, the semen to Cuba, and they created a new hybrid. There's a statue somewhere, I believe it graces a Research Institute to a Canadian bull that was seen to be one of the kind of the fathers, shall we say, and I'm not making up that language. It was a big deal. There's a back and forth
Starting point is 00:17:10 between the two countries that kind of goes a bit unnoticed or at least overshadowed by the big explosive tensions between the U.S. and Cuba. Canada has long been among Cuba's more important trading partners. We also obeyed the rules. You know, we didn't, Canada didn't sell anything that could be conceived of as a weapon. There were rules about what could be sold in terms of U.S., like all these U.S. hardware that was there, right? There were rules about what Canada could supply to help fix a singer sewing machine. And I remember that one because I remember people talking to me about that being one really irritating example of a common thing that people needed. And once the whatever broke on it, you just couldn't get a, you couldn't get a replacement for. And tourism became a major
Starting point is 00:18:02 way Canada supported the Cuban economy. There was lots of education tourism. There was what people called solidarity tourism, which had this, you know, explicit political tie. But over time, they're developed just what we would think of as, I guess, regular tourism. Before the pandemic, over a million Canadians a year visited Cuba. And with this tourism, many Canadians developed a deep connection to the country and its people. I don't know other places where people pack their suitcases full of vitamins and other kinds of medicines repeatedly.
Starting point is 00:18:39 As part of the friendship. I mean, is that white saviorism? Is that, is it charity? I, you know, there's, I won't say not that. But I think there is a way in which it seems a more, at least people imagine themselves on a more equal playing field. Because it's also about relations, right? It's about people with whom they have had a relationship in the past. There are other organizations that sends aid to Cuba, like Jennifer.
Starting point is 00:19:09 But Karen says all this aid. It's a drop in the bucket. The humanitarian assistance that Canada finally announced, that's a drop in the bucket too, right? My name is Ray Veal, and I'm in Santiago de Cuba. Ray is a Canadian expat. I've been here on and off the last 13 years, but I've traveled many times to Cuba before then. Basically, I'm down here because I was married, now divorced, and I have a daughter. And while Ray's Canadian pension allows him and his daughter a comfortable life in Cuba, he sees firsthand how things.
Starting point is 00:19:49 are getting desperate for others. Their school lunches, they don't have electricity, they can't do the proper cooking in that, and that's a problem for most of the kids. I always pack a big lunch for my daughter, Nicole, and she's been quite nice and share some lunch with a couple of her classmates and that who don't have lunches from home.
Starting point is 00:20:14 In the past few weeks, he tells me the cost of bread has doubled. He's heard, stories of people breaking into homes just to steal rice. And he wishes Canada was doing more to help. Well, they need a lot of international solidarity. I know that there are solidarity groups in Canada. Those organizations are sending far more money than the pulpary $8 million of the
Starting point is 00:20:43 king government promise. What is that? That's absolutely nothing. You know, here we are. You know, Canada and Cuba has had a long, long relationship, a friendly relationship. You know, Canada's abundance of oil and that. Why haven't we sent down to Cuba some oil if you've shipped some oil in that? I know Trump wouldn't like that and that, but say, hey, let's, you know, let's do the hockey expression and put the elbows up and saying, no, we're doing this.
Starting point is 00:21:15 This is humanitarian aid. I reached out to the Federal Department of Global Affairs. And in an email, they said, Canada is in regular contact with UN agencies who are working on plans to scale up humanitarian response in Cuba if and when necessary. The email continued that Canada also responds to the crisis by funding experienced organizations,
Starting point is 00:21:41 like UN agencies and NGOs. The email cites pass support, like the 3 million Canada sent after Hurricane Melissa in 2025. Now, some believe that sending aid is not the right way to go. Karen Dabinsky, the Queen's Professor, knows some Cubans in the diaspora who are critical of people sending money or aid to relatives in Cuba. They believe, as she says,
Starting point is 00:22:08 hungry Cubans will rise up and bring down the government. A government, which has been an economic turmoil long before this current oil blockade and has been accused of harshly repressing its citizens who speak out against its policies. But Karen says, This is not the kind of debates about serious long-term change that needs to happen in that country,
Starting point is 00:22:34 but that doesn't need to happen by Canadian tourists or frankly the Canadian government or any government. Those are conversations that Cubans obviously need to be having. And I don't know how they have those conversations. now. She can't imagine how people could rise up under these conditions. Many are in survival mode. So how could they plan the next steps for their country? I still ask, what does she think is next? People saying to me, you know, if the Yankees come, we're going to fight them on the streets. Other people saying to me, the status quo is so bad. Things are so bad, we need change.
Starting point is 00:23:12 And I don't care where it comes from. I have the echo of, somebody saying to me, even bad change, and they sort of pause and say, you know what I mean by bad change, right? I still persist in believing that national sovereignty is national sovereignty and people should determine their own future. But I don't know if that's going to happen. The only thing she can say with certainty is... The Cubans who I talk to want change, but what form that takes,
Starting point is 00:23:38 that's a really big conversation. It became to the point that's not possible anymore. A conversation that Ed. Eddie can no longer wait to hear the conclusion of. It's not possible to survive in Cuba anymore. There is no fuel. There is not tourists at all. He says he can't survive in Cuba.
Starting point is 00:24:03 That's what I make a sad but huge and important decision for my family. To leave the country, left the country and look for different, you know, options or choices. He decided it was time to leave his country. So he, his wife, Brian and Adam, got tickets to the Dominican Republic, which is where they are now. I just left like five days. It's going to be one week.
Starting point is 00:24:27 I never planned to leave my country because I'm so proud to be Cuban. I love my Cuban people and I love Canadians, so I would never leave my country, but I had no choice. They left behind their parents, the kid's grandparents, and his wife's twin sister.
Starting point is 00:24:42 That's a very sad part, you know, to leave my parents, you know. I'm planning to bring them later on because they are getting old, very sad. They just cry for days. I've got no choice, you know. I had to do it. The two weeks before I left, I wanted to make something really beautiful and something that makes me feel, you know, as a human being very happy. So I spent the three weeks before I left helping our people.
Starting point is 00:25:20 So we were to the worst countryside where the little family's situation is so, are very, very poor people. I can't forget the house that I went in a little community was an old man, very, very skinny, you know, like you can see that he's having a very tough time. And we came with the hands full of foot, you know, that the Canadians made money to support that. and I say, hey, we brought some food for you. We have rice. We have powder milk.
Starting point is 00:25:55 We have some ground beef and that kind of stuff. You know, a lot of food. And he said, no, I cannot take it. And say, why? Because I cannot pay. He said, no, you don't have to pay. This is free. He started crying.
Starting point is 00:26:06 It was some moment that I would never forget, you know? Sorry, but I can't forget anymore. I'm really, I can't tell anymore. I'm not going to stop because Cuba still needs help. As for Eddie and his family, Eddie's starting to drive a taxi in the Dominican Republic, and the kids are starting school. Full days, no interruptions. They called me the Ben and I the day that they got into DR. We're here. Like, it was so exciting to see.
Starting point is 00:26:49 There is a way, and we can bring hope in small ways by bringing. showing them like we're still here for you. We always say Cuba, you're not alone. That documentary was brought to us by Julia Poggle with help from Joan Weber of CBC's audio documentary unit. You've been listening to the current podcast. My name is Matt Galloway. Thanks for listening. I'll talk to you soon. For more CBC podcasts, go to cBC.ca slash podcasts.

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