When her daughter died from cancer in Cuba, she brought her granddaughter to Miami
Briefly

"In every little heart she sees a message from her mother," says Sao, who, while her daughter, Yenisley Perdomo, was ill, had to travel to the island to take care of her.
Yenisley Perdomo spent five years fighting cancer in the 'medical impotence,' as she used to call Cuba's health system, which has promoted itself as a medical power.
The activist believed the Cuban government punished her for being outspoken in her criticism of the Cuban health system by denying or delaying treatment or giving her inadequate treatment.
"I just wanted to vent about the mistreatment that we patients on this beautiful island, held hostage by this medical impotence, receive," she complained.
Read at Miami Herald
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