Even when I
didn’t understand what it was to be Cuban, it was clear to me
that we struggled because of the blockade. Since I was a child I
heard many times at home and at school: “the United States is
bad,” it was the simplest way for the little ones to
understand.
I grew up
hearing that everything around me was the fault of the blockade.
Perhaps, for that reason, when we began to thoroughly investigate the
impact of the blockade for the film series “The War on Cuba,”
and how we wanted to treat it, for me it was already a worn-out
issue.
The Cuban
people have lived for almost sixty years with restrictions imposed by
the United States government. Many times we do not even notice how
much this policy affects us, because in a certain way we get used to
so many decades of economic war along with the problems of our
country, because no, it is not all the fault of the blockade. But it
exists and its impact is real.
When a new leader arrives in the
White House, Cubans hold our breath. We live in fear that the next
one could be worse. And so it wasn’t until the arrival of
Barack Obama, when we finally saw the light. Many blame only the
Cuban government for our economic shortcomings, but when bilateral
relations improved, our economy also regained its charm.
But we had
little time to appreciate this change. Donald Trump arrived, and he
ruined everything that both countries had advanced in normalizing
their relations.
In the last
three years, Cubans have gone through some of the worst crises in our
history, affecting all sectors. For example, in September of last
year, the United States prevented the country from receiving fuel,
and Cuba had to readjust its operation with only 30 percent of the
oil it needed. Put like that, they are only figures, but when you
live here it is frustrating to see your people wait for hours for
public transportation, start cooking with charcoal, and see private
businesses, which were just beginning to flourish, go bankrupt.
The War on Cuba is a documentary miniseries made by Belly of the Beast, a media
outlet made up of various Cuban and foreign professionals. We are a
team that aims to show the impact of US policy on the people of the
island and the various ways that Cubans find to resolve the situation
and survive.
We show
entrepreneurs, private business leaders, farmers - people who,
without even having defined political positions, pay the price of the
measures imposed “against the Castro government” “to
save Cubans from communism” and other reasons that have been
justified during sixty years of the blockade.
We want to
show this issue in the most impartial way possible, a reality that
cannot be ignored and that the mainstream media rarely shows in
depth. We chose everyday stories, which are repeated in every town on
the Island.
In the past
few months I have come to recognize the impact on many people who
cannot have medicines and health equipment due to the economic siege.
These are perhaps the most widespread stories, but I also recognized
how many of my daily needs depend on the measures that the United
States imposes on Cuba.
The embargo,
as the US calls it, is perhaps a political strategy for them, but for
more than 11 million people it is a daily problem.
This commentary was originally published by LA Progressive
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