This article
originally appeared in the Jamaica
Observer.
On my way to Panama recently, I had the theoretical
options of going by way of Miami or through Cuba. Obeying my
instincts and listening to my intelligence, I decided more than
a year ago that my life could do without my tempting fate and
the PATRIOT Act. I would no longer apply for a visa to visit the
US. "Coward man keep soun' bone” as the Jamaican aphorism
says.
Since the Cubans prefer Canadian dollars to US currency,
I decided to change some US dollars at the airport cambio. The
lady in charge asked me for my passport, I supposed to ascertain
that I was who I said I was. But there was more. She scanned my
passport into a machine and then phoned someone. I presumed that
my name had come up on some list connected with my passport. I
asked her if she scanned every passport to change $100. She didn't
answer, nor did she answer when I asked her whether the joint
was run by the CIA.
When I was leaving Panama to return to Jamaica my
passport again occasioned surprise at the COPA airline check in.
The matter was, however, resolved without my ever knowing what
was at issue.
I may be paranoid, but as Henry Kissinger once quoted,
"even paranoiacs have enemies".
I say this because I would be a fool not to know
that I am, in some circles, considered if not an enemy of the
United States, at least unqualified to be embedded with the Marines.
I have known this for years, in fact, for nearly
forty years. American paranoia is not a product of the Bush administration.
It has almost always been there.
I mention all this because of the relative ease
with which it is possible to defame people, particularly in Third
World politics, with the enthusiastic participation of the United
States press. While they demonize Aristide, Castro and Chavez,
for instance, they say very little about terrorists like Posada
Carriles and his protector and co-conspirator Santiago Alvarez
(not the filmmaker). The Master Narrative, as Tom Blivens calls
it, omits the context.
There was precious little coverage in the US last
week of the arrest of the wealthy developer, Santiago Alvarez,
in Miami. Apart from the Miami Herald and a few small town newspapers,
nobody else seemed interested, although the Herald reported. "The
case against Posada's close associates has the potential to create
a political firestorm for the White House, with hardline exile
activists vowing to protest and defend Alvarez against what they
see as an attack by Castro".
This is because Alvarez is a prominent supporter
of Jeb Bush and is also accused of illegally ferrying the airplane
bomber, Posada, into the United States and giving him shelter,
once there.
According to the Herald, the Cuban community in
Miami is incensed, saying that President Bush is catering to Castro
by arresting a man whom they regard as a freedom fighter, but
who is a terrorist by any other definition.
The Cuban government has on tape, a conversation
between Santiago Alvarez and one of his agents who had been sent
to conduct sabotage in Cuba. The agent asked Santiago whether
he should bomb the world famous Tropicana nightclub and Santiago
replied, "It's OK with me".
Mr. Alvarez also has been accused by Cuba of organizing
a 2001 ''mission'' in which three Miami-Dade men were captured
trying to land in Cuba with assault rifles.
He is also suspected of being Posada's backer in
the expedition to Panama in 2001, in which Posada intended to
bomb an auditorium with hundreds of people who had come to listen
to Fidel Castro.
''We are seeing signals that indicate that the administration
of President Bush is forgetting the promises they made to the
exile community in order to cater to Castro,'' said Cuban American
National Foundation President Francisco ''Pepe'' Hernandez, according
to the Miami herald.
Next day the Herald , valiantly straddling the fence,
boldly declared that while storing assassination weaponry was
against the law, "good intentions do not excuse criminal
actions”.
"We, too, would like to see Cubans on the island
freed from a tyrant. But good intentions do not excuse criminal
actions," said Miami's most influential paper.
As it happened, on Thursday, in Jose Marti airport,
I decided to reread Fidel Castro's speech in defense of the Moncada
uprising in 1953. The last defiant line of the speech: "Condemn
me; it does not matter. History will absolve me”.
I first read the speech in 1960, on my first visit
to Cuba. The air was electric. The ammunition ship, La Coubre
had just been blown up by saboteurs in Havana harbor, killing
hundreds, the crew, dockworkers and innocent people in their houses
or at work.
The revolution was hard at work, building prefabricated
houses to replace the bohios (thatched huts) in which the farm
workers and peasants lived, building new housing all over the
island, providing free medical care for pregnant women of any
class, and above all, wiping out illiteracy. On the day I arrived,
President Eisenhower approved the end of the Cuban sugar quota.
War had been declared.
I was impressed then, and am now, with the revolutionary
determination to bring equality of treatment to all. Illiteracy
and AIDS are almost non-existent in Cuba, there is a doctor for
every 100 Cubans, the infant mortality rate is the lowest in the
world and three quarters of the population are in some form of
educational pursuit.
As Castro promised in his speech in 1953, every
schoolteacher at every level in Cuba gets a sabbatical year in
which to pursue any academic interest.
"History Will Absolve Me" is, first of
all, an attempt to lay the legal basis for the revolution, to
rescue the Cuban people from Fulgencio Batista, a usurper, a tyrant,
a man who tortured and murdered his opponents and sold Cuba's
self-respect to the highest bidder, which usually, was the Mafia
or other American interests.
Castro contended that contrary to the charges against
him, he was being tried for doing his duty to overthrow oppression.
He then denounced the regime's response to the July 26 uprising,
in which officers of the Cuban army tortured and murdered some
of the men they had captured. Castro was especially bitter because
he had defended the army on an earlier occasion, accusing the
state of using soldiers as slaves on private estates.
He reported on the fate of his closest comrade,
Abel Santamaria, who had been captured alive. I have never been
able to forget his description:
Earlier in the speech, Fidel Castro outlined his
plans for Cuba in relation to the existing situation, where more
than half the land was in the hands of foreigners while 200,000
peasant farmers did not have "a single vara of land to plant
food crops for their starving children". Except for a few
food, lumber and textile factories, Cuba was still a producer
of raw materials. There were 200,000 bohios (dirt floored thatched
huts) and hovels in Cuba, 400,000 families lived in slums that
lacked even the most basic sanitary conveniences. 2.2 million
paid extortionate rents and 2.8 million people (more than half
the population) in rural and suburban Cuba lacked electricity.
He spoke about a society moved to compassion by
the kidnapping of a single child but criminally indifferent to
the "mass murder" of the many thousands of children
who died every year because of poverty, of fathers working only
four months of the year, of a million people unemployed. In a
country with five and a half million people, more people were
jobless than in France or Italy, with populations nearly ten times
as large.
Castro proposed revolutionary laws, first to give
sovereignty back to the people, a government vested with the power
to enforce the people's will and true justice, another to give
non-transferrable ownership of land to tenants and subtenants,
to introduce profit sharing in business and in the sugar industry,
to recover stolen national property which would then be used to
subsidize workers pensions and for hospitals and other charitable
work and finally a policy of revolutionary solidarity with the
oppressed peoples of the continent.
Looking back at the speech today, more than fifty
years later, I am struck by two things: the idealism of the aims
and the fact that most of those aims have, in fact, been achieved.
There have been mistakes made, many of them serious, but overall,
if one compares Cuba to its nearest neighbors, Haiti, the Dominican
Republic, Puerto Rico and Jamaica, it is clear that Cubans enjoy
a far better quality of life than citizens of the others. And
in World Bank terms it is poorer than all except Haiti.
For one thing, crime is almost non-existent and
violent crime is statistically insignificant. People still steal
and profiteer but civil society seems alive and well in Cuba.
The care given to the weakest and most vulnerable
is extraordinary and Cuban health care is recognized as among
the very best in the world. The same is true of education, and
just as Cubans now have a doctor in every neighborhood (1 doctor
to every 100 Cubans) they are getting university-level centers
set up in every borough. And education is almost completely free.
The proportion of people completing the primary
education cycle was lowest in the province of Guantanamo in 2004.
It was 94%
The highest unemployment rate in the country is
in the province of Havana, where it is 2.3%. Daily food intake
is over 3 kilo calories and less than 2% of the population is
at risk of malnutrition.
In almost every single index of human development,
Cuba is far ahead of the rest of Latin America and in many cases,
Cuba outperforms many developed countries, including the United
States. Cuba carried out its first heart transplant nearly thirty
years ago. The level of technology is world class.
But, I am always asked, what about democracy? What
about freedom of Speech? Human Rights?
Perhaps, since I am not a Cuban, it would be pretentious
even to attempt to answer these questions.
I wish, however, to remind people that the United
States has been engaged in what it regards as a war against Cuba
for the last 46 years. The overt terrorist war is clearly not
over, with people like Santiago Alvarez stockpiling assassin's
weapons.
When one is under attack, as the United States considers
itself to be, there are restrictions on some freedoms, as in the
case of the PATRIOT act. But I do not believe that there are prisoners
of the Cuban state who are tortured, mistreated and otherwise
abused and denied fundamental human rights as are the prisoners
of the American state at Guantanamo Bay, ironically, on Cuba soil
where the US is illegally squatting. And Cuba continues to be
the victim of a wide range of illegal actions designed to bring
down the government.
We do have some answers, however, including 'refugees'
from Cuba who have chosen to return to their home country. Of
course, you don't hear about them.
But we have all heard about Elian Gonzalez and
his father, a security guard in Cuba.
If you remember, Juan Miguel Gonzalez was offered
a free mansion, millions of dollars and a life of ease if he would
only renounce Cuba and relocate to the United States.
All that Cuba could have promised was more of what
he was accustomed to; a life as a security guard in a country
secure in its integrity and in its people.
I suspect that most Cubans would have made the same
choice. I don't know too many Jamaicans who would have. And
that is precisely why Castro, Chavez and Aristide are being demonized,
traduced and libeled.
Humanity is subversive and leaders who listen to
people are extremely dangerous to the established order.
John Maxwell of the University of the West Indies
(UWI) is the veteran Jamaican journalist who in 1999 single-handedly
thwarted the Jamaican government's efforts to build houses at
Hope, the nation's oldest and best known botanical gardens. His
campaigning earned him first prize in the 2000 Sandals Resort's
annual Environmental Journalism Competition, the region's richest
journalism prize. He is also the author of How to Make Our Own
News: A Primer for Environmentalists and Journalists (Jamaica,
2000). Mr. Maxwell can be reached at [email protected].
Copyright©2005 John Maxwell