Cuban diaspora documentary surpasses 50,000 YouTube views

The documentary 'Children of the Diaspora', directed by Cuban-Spanish filmmaker Lunes Oña, has amassed over 50,000 views on YouTube in under two weeks. It features testimonies from 21 young Cubans raised in nine countries, delving into the tensions of dual cultural identities. The film has ignited worldwide discussions on the Cuban experience.

The documentary 'Children of the Diaspora' has achieved a notable milestone by exceeding 50,000 views on YouTube shortly after its digital premiere. Directed by Lunes Oña, a trans Cuban-Spanish filmmaker based in Miami, the film gathers stories from 21 young Cubans who grew up in countries ranging from Scotland and Ecuador to Angola. These accounts probe how Cuban identity endures and adapts across borders, navigating the pull between ancestral roots and adopted homes.

"The concept came from my own life," Oña explains, having been born in Madrid, raised partly in Panama, and now settled in Miami. "Experiencing different cultures while living in a home that always remained Cuban motivated me to explore similar stories. This film is an emotional map of a fragmented identity, and seeing it reach more than 50,000 people around the world confirms that it is a shared story."

Leading viewership comes from the United States with over 29,000 views, followed by Spain (more than 5,500) and Cuba (over 3,200), despite connectivity issues and blackouts on the island. Mexico has around 1,900 views and Canada 1,200. The film's reach spans Brazil, Venezuela, Italy, Germany, Chile, and further to Angola, the Netherlands, Australia, and Norway, underscoring the worldwide scope of the Cuban diaspora.

Prior to its online success, the documentary screened at esteemed venues including Miami's Tower Theater and the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora, Emory University's Oxford College in Georgia, the Cuban Cultural Center in New York, and Madrid's Casa de América. Oña, founder of Always Lunes—a key South Florida cultural platform—often addresses themes of identity, memory, and belonging in his work. The film is freely available on YouTube with English subtitles.

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