It is an image instantly etched into the fabric of American history: President Barack Obama, flanked by an assortment of American aids and Cuban communist henchmen under the gray skies of Havana and the black shadow of Ernesto “Che” Guevara, one of the Revolution’s bloodiest murderers. It is the dystopian image that the Cuban-American exile community has been protesting since President Obama landed in Havana on Sunday, taking the streets of Miami to demand respect for their suffering. President Obama’s visit to Cuba, the first of its kind since the Calvin Coolidge administration, has already seen him shake hands with dictator Raúl Castro and lay a wreath to Founding Father José Martí, who President Obama misquoted during his December 2014 speech announcing he was comfortable shaking hands with a head of state like Castro. 24 hours prior, Cuban-Americans in Miami assembled to mourn the image that would surely come. El Nuevo Herald reports that hundreds of members of the Cuban exile community and allies assembled in Miami before a monument dedicated to those who gave their lives at Bay of Pigs trying to liberate the island during the Kennedy administration. “It is an insult to the rights of the Cuban people… we think that