In his book "Against all Hope", Cuban dissenter Armando Valladares wrote the following about a "Protestant preacher":
Everyone gave Gerardo the simple nickname of "The Brother of the Faith". A Protestant preacher, he had devoted his life to spreading the Word of God. His own self was his most beautiful preaching work. When he came to the La Cabaña prison, thousands of prisoners were crowded in those spaceless areas.... fear and death would be with us throughout the nights... because those were nights when prisoners were shot. We never knew whether we would ever see the fellow prisoner who said goodbye on his way to the courtrooms.... and in those moments of tremendous anguish, The Brother of the Faith would say that the prisoner in question had the privilege of having been called by God to his side. Many were the men he helped to face death with courage and serenity..."
On his release, many people came to Valladares's mind. Among them,
"...and, in the middle of that apocalyptic vision, of my terrible experiences, amidst the grayish smoke of gunpowder and the orgy of beatings and blood, prisoners shot dead, a starved, skeleton of a man, white hair, his blue eyes on fire and his heart full of love, raised his hands towards the invisible Heavens and asked for mercy for his executioners...
"Forgive them, O Lord, for they know not what they are doing...!", while a burst of machine-gun fire destroyed the chest of the Brother of the Faith..."
In memory of the Brother of the Faith, whoever he was.