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the brink between life and death. I’m sure that her love for our children and the fear of leaving them alone, the support of her parents, family members, and friends, and the magnificent work of the doctors and the nurse that took care of her were factors that helped her survive her precarious condition. However, the most important factor was, unquestionably, her unwavering faith in God!

      Vivian was convinced that, behind all this personal tragedy, there was a mission that God had in store for her. This faith filled her with strength, helped her withstand the colossal pain of the treatments and, essentially, transformed her life to pursue one cause: to create a world that is more just, compassionate, and inclusive for the thousands of children from low-income families that are severely burned in our country every year.

      After witnessing what Vivian has accomplished through APROQUEN, God’s mission for her couldn’t be clearer: to make her the Guardian Angel of pediatric burn victims in Nicaragua.

      No doubt Vivian’s story will become an inspiration for many others to channel their efforts into creating a more tolerant, just, and benevolent world.

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      Our story is precisely that of . . . continuous rebirth.

      Mother Teresa of Calcutta

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      Vivian at the age of two. Havana, Cuba, 1956.

      I came into this world on March 5, 1954. I was born in the former “Quinta La Covadonga” Hospital in Havana, the same place where my brother was born. I was a joyful and vigorous baby. However, I had a problem in my pylorus: I would expel milk every time I was fed. Had it not been for the timely opinion of a doctor, who determined that the cause of my symptoms was nervous spasm, I would have needed surgery. Nonetheless, a few drops of medicine before the bottle cured me completely.

      Even so, the truth is that, during my first months of life, I cried a lot and would not let my mom sleep. The passing days and the baptismal water that the priest sprinkled on my head at the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus eventually soothed my crying. I was baptized Vivian, because when my mom was single, people in the street would ask her if she was Vivien Leigh, the actress playing the main character in the movie Gone with the Wind, which was very popular at the time. She was asked the same question so often that she decided, if she ever had a daughter, that would be her name. My mother’s dream came true and she named me Vivian.

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      Lydia García de Fernández, Vivian’s mother. Havana, Cuba, ca. 1935.

      I started kindergarten when I was three. My mom said I was a fast learner. That is where I took my first ballet classes. It was my first introduction to dancing, a passion that would accompany me all my life and that saved me in the most trying times of my existence.

      I grew up with my brother, Alejandro, in our Santa Ana home in the “Nuevo Vedado” neighborhood of Havana. Alejandro was two years older than me. Surrounded by the simplicity and wellbeing that our parents and grandparents cultivated, in addition to the warmth and affection they showered upon us, I had a life full of happiness.

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      Turiana de la Torre, Vivian’s paternal grandmother. Havana, Cuba, 1954.

      Those wonderful years of my childhood were free of fear. I only remember how enthusiastic I was about riding my bicycle. My mind recalls the magical scene at the moment when I found it hidden in my grandparents’ closet, spoiling the surprise that my parents had prepared for me for Three Kings’ Day.

      My grandfather, Manuel, with his infinite kindness and boundless joy, became the most important person of my childhood. He was my closest ally and my greatest accomplice. As I sat on his lap, he would not only teach me how to turn the car’s steering wheel, but also how to place the domino pieces during animated evenings with his friends. It was my grandfather who taught me how to ride the bicycle and how to savor fruits, and I still treasure the hours spent with him as the most endearing moments of that golden time. That is why it pained me so much to leave my grandparents when we had to abandon Cuba in exile. I left part of my soul behind.

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      Vivian and her mother. Havana, Cuba, 1955.

      I turned five as Cuba was under a cloud of unrest and political turmoil. Fulgencio Batista’s government was strongly criticized as corrupt, which led guerrilla forces to overthrow him. At 3:00 a.m. on January 1, 1959, Batista fled Cuba in a plane bound for Santo Domingo in the wake of the triumph of the Cuban Revolution led by Fidel Castro. At first, Batista remained in exile in the Dominican Republic, then on the island of Madeira (Portugal), and again in Marbella, Spain, until a heart attack took his life in 1973.

      Unaware of what was going on, I could feel the anguish of my parents and grandparents. Their distress was not in vain. The news of the victors proclaiming their triumph and vowing vengeance against their defeated enemies was alarming. To some, the word “socialism” became synonymous with chaos, terror, and death, while to others, it meant freedom and justice. The illegal confiscation of the private assets of all citizens was the act of duplicity that, as Cubans put it, “capped the bottle” and brought an end to hope. Life and freedom, as we knew it, had been “confiscated.” The exodus and the division of Cuban families had begun. It was an absolute nightmare. Suddenly, everything was lost all at once. The dreams that my grandparents had fulfilled disappeared from dusk to dawn. Everyone wondered, Why? What did we do to deserve this? Who did we harm?

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      Vivian’s first birthday celebration with her brother, Alejandro, and her parents. Havana, Cuba, 1955.

      In those days, my greatest act of independence was being able to ride my bicycle through the streets near my home, or when I escaped to the Chinese cemetery, which was somewhat more secluded. But I clearly remember that afternoon when I was riding around the block and suddenly, a big white car pulling out from one of the mansions brought me to a halt. To my surprise, the passengers were Che Guevara and Camilo Cienfuegos. I watched them with fear, and right at that moment, they gave me an intimidating look. They both had a haughty attitude. I recognized them immediately since they were already famous. As a matter of fact, I was very attracted to Camilo Cienfuegos. The terror of such an encounter kicked in and made me speed off on my bicycle.

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      Vivian at her birthday party with family and friends. Havana, Cuba, 1959.

      By that time, the Cuban Revolution had already started. Sometime after that episode, Camilo Cienfuegos suddenly “disappeared.”

      My dad along with many other Cubans were reluctant to believe what they saw with their own eyes. With a group of friends and a full understanding of the value of freedom, he went on a quest to protest the abuses, joining the Revolutionary Movement of November 30, created in 1960. This was the only movement my father was involved in throughout his entire life. His participation was limited to acts of political protest. He said that he had always been a great individualist with an absolute fear of collectivities.

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