It
is impossible to discuss Fidel Castro outside of an examination of
the Cuban Revolution. And, while I hear that there are many Cuban
Americans dancing with glee upon news of the death of President
Castro, I know that the emotions within Black America are and will
continue to be quite different.
For
any Black American who knows anything about the history of the
Western Hemisphere, both Cuba and Haiti have a special significance.
Haiti, of course, for successfully ousting the French in 1803 and
forming the second republic in the Americas; a Black republic. Cuba,
in 1959, kicked out the USA, the Mafia, and a corrupt ruling class
that had enforced racist oppression against most of the Cuban
population. In the cases of Haiti and Cuba, their audacity in the
face of a racist imperialism brought forth the wrath of their
opponents. How dare the Cubans stand up to the USA? How could a
country of all of these ‘brown’ and ‘black’
people insist that they should determine their own destinies?
Thus,
Fidel Castro immediately had a special significance for countless
Black Americans. When I was quite young I remember my father telling
me how his brother-in-law, a professor at Johnson C. Smith
University, had sat watching the television as pictures were shown of
Cuban exiles entering the USA after the 1959 Revolution. His comment
to my father was that all that he saw were white-looking Cubans
stepping off the planes or boats. No brown and black Cubans. This
told him something about the nature of the Cuban Revolution and its
leader, Fidel Castro.
Castro
further endeared himself to much of Black America when he visited the
USA and took up residence in the Hotel Theresa in New York’s
Harlem. It was there that he met another icon, Malcolm X. It was
situating himself in the Black community that shook much of the US
establishment and told Black America that something very unusual was
unfolding 90 miles off the coast of Florida.
In
the weeks, months and years to come there will be exhaustive
examinations of the work and life of Fidel Castro and his impact not
only on Cuba but the world. If you have not read Castro’s
“spoken autobiography”, Fidel Castro: My Life: A Spoken Autobiography. I strong recommend it. I will not try to offer anything approaching
an analysis of the man and his times. What I can say, however, is
that there are certainly criticisms to be offered, and differences of
opinion of the dynamics of the Cuban Revolution. That is all fair
game. At the same time, it has been a rare moment when a leader,
particularly of a small country, has been willing to thumb his or her
nose at the capitalist juggernaut and seek a different path. Added
to this has been, particularly in a Western Hemispheric context, the
challenge of taking on racist oppression and approaching it as the
cancer that it is, a disease to be removed.
The
one and only time that I met Fidel Castro was in January 1999 when I
was on a TransAfrica delegation led by the organization’s first
president, Randall Robinson. At the last minute, the night before we
were to leave Cuba, we were informed that we would have an
opportunity to meet with President Castro.
It
was close to midnight when we were informed that we needed to board
the bus and head to his office. When we arrived we walked into a
waiting room in anticipation of the meeting. Suddenly a door opened
and out came an old man in an olive green uniform. Yes, it was
Castro. I think, quite irrationally, I was expecting the young
Castro of the 1960s. But here was someone about the same age as my
father. He circulated around the room and was introduced to our
delegation. We then retired to another room to begin our meeting.
It
is hard to describe what happened next, and probably equally hard for
anyone to believe it. We sat in the room with Castro until about
3:30am. He never lost a beat. He never seemed tired. In fact, as
the minutes and hours went forward, he seemed to gain energy! Castro
spoke with us about the Cuban Revolution, race, and many other
issues. Yes, he spoke a lot, but we were transfixed. And, when we
asked him questions, he would consider the matter and always offer a
thoughtful response, rather than retreating into rhetoric. It was
particularly illuminating when he informed us that the Cuban
Revolution had underestimated the power of racism. As he said at the
time, when the 26th
of July Movement (the revolutionary organization that led the
anti-Batista struggle) took power they thought that it was enough to
render racist discrimination illegal and that should settle the
matter. The entrenched power of racism, even in a society that was
attempting to root it out, was more substantial than they had
anticipated.
Hearing
this from Castro represented a special moment. There has frequently
been a defensiveness among Cuban officials about matters of race in
Cuba, despite the tremendous advances that they have made, advances
probably of greater significance than any other country in the
Western Hemisphere. Yet, manifestations of racism remain and, to our
surprise, Castro was prepared to address them.
Fidel
Castro’s demise comes as no surprise. He had been facing
health challenges for some time. Nevertheless, given the number of
attempts on his life and the other challenges that he had faced,
there has been a bit of magical thinking for many people, believing
that he would, somehow, always be there.
For
many of us in Black America, Castro represented the audacity that we
have desired and sought in the face of imperial and racial arrogance.
While it is unfortunate that some of us have withheld concerns and
criticisms out of respect for Castro and the Cuban Revolution, it is
completely understandable. After all, this was the country that
deployed troops to Angola that helped to smash the South African
apartheid army and their Angolan allies. This was the country that
has deployed doctors in the face of countless emergencies, to
countries that could never afford such assistance. This is the
country that has studied and come to understand hurricanes in a way
unlike most in the hurricane region, so much so that it offered
assistance to the USA in the aftermath of the 2005 Hurricane Katrina,
assistance that the then Bush administration turned down.
Let
his soul rest easy. And, let the Cuban people continue on their way
free of outside interference. Theirs path has been one upon which
they have insisted. Fidel Castro was one important component in
making that happen. And, if that was not enough, he and the Cuban
Revolution shook the world of the 20th
century.
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