In its squares on May 1st, Cuba will not be alone either

As International Workers’ Day approaches on May 1, hundreds of international solidarity activists are preparing to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Cuban working people in mass demonstrations across the island nation’s public squares. This year’s mobilization carries extra historic weight, marking the centennial of the birth of Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro Ruz, and comes as the Caribbean nation continues to navigate persistent external pressures designed to undermine its sovereignty.

Cuba, the largest of the Antilles archipelago, has built a decades-long legacy of resistance amid external challenges. For this year’s May Day, international supporters have traveled from every corner of the globe to witness that resilience firsthand, joining working-class Cubans in reaffirming the island’s right to exist as a free, independent, peaceful and self-determining nation.

A core contingent of 70 international visitors, organized as the second May Day Solidarity Convoy, has already spent days touring eastern Cuban communities in Santiago de Cuba and Guantánamo provinces, walking through rural hills and coastal villages to connect with local residents. The group includes activists from Italy, Venezuela, Mexico, the United States, France, Switzerland, and Cuban expatriates who have returned to show their support. Michelle Curto, from the Italian Agency for Cultural and Economic Exchange with Cuba, described the trip as an immersion in “the wellspring that is the Cuban Revolution,” adding that Cuba is “the island where we must grow and become ourselves.”

International visitors have quickly become vocal advocates for the Cuban people after witnessing their daily determination to overcome hardship. Alejandra Chavira, a participant from Mexico, called Cubans “the most supportive people on the planet.” Italian activist Roberto Forte echoed that sentiment, noting that Cuba stands as proof “a world different from one of imposition and bombs is possible.”

In the capital city of Havana, another group of international supporters — members of the 19th International Brigade of Voluntary Work and Solidarity with Cuba and the Che Guevara Contingent — got an up-close look at Cuban public innovation during a visit this week to the prestigious Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB).

Josefina Guillo, a representative of the Cuba-France Association, emphasized that standing with Cuban workers on the eve of May Day and Fidel Castro’s centennial carries deep symbolic meaning for her organization. “We admire the strength of the Cuban people, their capacity for resilience despite the difficulties,” she said. Ian Müller, a student delegate from the Socialist Party of Germany, echoed that commitment, noting, “The strongest weapon the Cuban people have is international solidarity and friendship with other peoples.”

When Cuban working masses fill the nation’s squares on May 1, these international supporters will march alongside them. Organizers note that the principles Cuba defends — sovereignty, self-determination, and dignity for working people — are universal causes shared by communities across the globe. That commitment echoes the enduring words of Cuban national hero José Martí, which remain ingrained in the identity of the Cuban people: “Homeland is humanity.”