The first church built on state-owned land in Havana—and dedicated to St. John Paul II—is almost a reality

AS RICARDO MÍNGUEZ SPEAKS, his eyes start to fill with tears as he recalls the hardships and suffering he and his community have been through. They have been waiting for over 25 years for this, and many of those who embarked on this venture “have left the country or are already no longer with us,” says this elderly Cuban gentleman. Ricardo is speaking about the Catholic community in the suburb of Antonio Guiteras, a community of about a hundred individuals that was first formed in 1993 in the backyard of a private home in this suburb on the outskirts of Havana.

The new church to be dedicated to Pope St. John Paul II

The neighborhood of Antonio Guiteras is one of the local “people’s councils” (consejos populares) in the municipal area of East Havana, roughly 5 miles from the old centre of the capital. It is here that Ricardo’s dream is becoming concrete reality—in the shape of a church where the Catholic community can meet and pray. This will be the first ever Catholic church in Havana—and only the second in the entire country—to have been built on land granted by the state since the revolution of 1969. It is dedicated to Pope St. John Paul II, whose visit to Cuba in 1998 marked a “before and after” moment in the situation of the Catholic Church in this Caribbean nation, and in the relations between the Vatican and the Cuban regime. “May Cuba be open to the world and may the world be open to Cuba,” was the historic phrase used by the Polish Pope.

“We faced many difficulties to start with. For more than a quarter of a century we could scarcely speak openly about the Catholic life, but we were coming together and growing. And we were constantly praying for the possibility of having a piece of land on which to build a church. There were many difficulties, of every kind, but in the end President Raul Castro finally gave his signature, granting this piece of land here,” Ricardo Mínguez recounts.

The most recent hurdle has been the COVID-19 pandemic, which has once again brought the work to a near halt. The lockdown also meant that the community was unable to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of St. John Paul II on 18 May 18. All public Masses have been cancelled since the end of March. But if there is one thing the Cuban people are known for, it is not giving up in the face of adversity.

Ricardo is the “sacristan” of the present temporary church—a roof and walls of metal sheeting —which is already being used by the faithful on the same site where the new church is being built. As he hangs up a picture of the Divine Mercy, a devotion to which the community and the new church is also dedicated, he remarks: “Here we already have all the services that will take place in the church—weddings, communion, baptisms—and we gather every Sunday to pray together. I come here beforehand to get things ready, I set up the altar, the pictures, the chairs …”

“We will be very happy there, after so much sacrifice. We have suffered a great deal—cold, heat, discomfort. The work has been delayed by various cyclones and a hurricane, to say nothing of the tremendous difficulty in trying to get hold of the building materials. But now we can see our dream already almost fulfilled,” Ricardo told visitors from Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), one of the sponsors of the project.

The new church’s design is discreet, almost a symbol of the Cuban Church of the 21st century. Simple in structure, and barely 3600 square foot in floor area, it looks like a small architectural David, in comparison with the Goliaths of the two towering apartment blocks next door.

The sacristan recalls every detail of everyone who has helped to equip the present makeshift church: “The cardinal gave us 20 white chairs, a deacon gave us six second-hand benches, while other people have provided the altar cloth. I go searching round about; people give me old chairs, which I screw together and repair, and so at least we have enough chairs for everyone and nobody has to stand. On the big feast days there are more of us, but for our regular Sunday Masses we are usually around 70 or 80.”

Ricardo Minguez (l)

Equally arduous and painstaking has been the funding of the new church, although Ricardo does not know that. Included in the building is the material from the altar that was set up for Pope Benedict XVI during his visit to Havana in 2012. Added to this was aid from various different Catholic organizations, among them ACN, which has been supporting the project ever since 2014 and which has just pledged a further commitment of $29,000 to complete the construction.

It was the late Cuban Cardinal Jaime Ortega—who died in 2019—who himself laid the first foundation stone on March 18,2015. Ricardo recalls that “when he came, there was nothing, but just as the Pope goes wherever he is needed, even to simple places, so too the cardinal came here when there was nothing but a simple backyard.” During the ceremony, Cardinal Ortega emphasized the symbolic significance of this particular site, “where a Church of living stones, you yourselves, persevered in the faith and have venerated from the very beginning the Christ of Mercy, the great devotion of the holy Pope to whom this parish is dedicated.”

Ricardo Mínguez has experienced many things during his life. With emotion he speaks of how he was invited to attend Mass during the historic visit of Saint John Paul II. “Yes, I have lived through many things, and I am still living through them! For this is a great dream, which will soon become a reality. Some people thought we were crazy because it was all costing us so much. But the country has to move forward, to do new things, and look after the things that we do have. We need this church, and we will have it,” Ricardo concludes.

—Maria Lozano