The island nation of Cuba is just 94 miles from Florida, but until recently, it might as well have been on the other side of the world. The U.S. cut off all ties with Cuba in the 1960s because of the country’s undemocratic policies. Since then, most Americans have been forbidden to travel to Cuba, and U.S. companies haven’t been allowed to do business there.
For decades, the policy tore apart families, preventing thousands of Cuban-Americans living in the U.S. from seeing their relatives on the island.
But after more than 50 years of conflict, the two nations are starting a new chapter. This summer, U.S. President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro formally re-established diplomatic relations between their countries. They have reopened long-closed embassies in each other’s capitals, exchanged prisoners, and relaxed travel restrictions, making it easier for Americans to visit Cuba. These were big victories in the long process of restoring ties.
“A year ago, it might have seemed impossible that the United States would once again be raising our flag, the Stars and Stripes, over an embassy in Havana,” Obama said. “This is what change looks like.”
Many Cubans celebrated when news of these shifts was first announced. They’re hopeful that the policy changes will improve their lives, which have been filled with hardship—due, in part, to Cuba being cut off from the U.S.
“There were times when I thought I would die before this day came,” Cuban author Leonardo Padura told The New York Times.