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Monday, September 2, 2013

THE CUBAN QUESTION: LITTLE HAVANA RENDEZ VOUS



THE CUBAN QUESTION

A FAREWELL TIME



Versailles, the Cuban oppositon rendezvous...
FIDEL CASTRO

Yoani Sanchez, the blogger..
.change is about
to come



.


RAUL CASTRO




Whatever your side, the main fact to remember is that the Cuban Question seems to be a matter of time.
Time to come, time to go.

Without doubt, the  Cold War memories are still burning with its  main clash on the Bay of Pigs by April 1961. Politicians and ordinary Cubans continue to argue about this remote conflict; many are still ready for action, but from both of sides of the Wind Passage, warriors are aging. Over the years, some of them had give up, but when they come to tell their own stories, anger and ire  are on the rise.  The Castro’s saga had left a country divided for many years to come.

The Venezuelan experience with Chavez defining himself as a Castro heir didn’t ease the things. Instead Castro, Chavez and Iran belong to the so-called evil axis, another way to label this troika as terrorists. It has been a concern for the US when fanatics and Muslims extremists venture in his back yard.  But, Chavez and Castro endeavor remain the way it used to be: a Cold War legacy that  few had  maybe foreseen.

Now, what we have to pay attention to, evolve around what Cuba would look like, once the Castro’s experience is over. Whether we want it or not, time is the last frontier in everything on earth. Even Raul Castro, who is now in charge, seems to understand that time has come to do politics differently. Once he mentioned Versailles, the Cuban rendezvous for high and middle class Cubans eager to wipe out the Castroists from their tumultuous island... in the mean time, Washington doesn’t close his ears to the need of change next door.

50 years later, in Havana, the famous ladies dressed in white went to the streets as matrons  to protest against their loved ones in jail. This sign of time is very eloquent about the change so many Cubans strive for. In Little Havana, Miami,  their counterparts wearing necklaces and earrings  continue to curse Castro and his henchmen that have stolen their youth. Now while turning the 70s, they have mixed feelings about what they expect from a Castro-free Cuba.
Their life in exile parallels that of Russian aristocratic life whose members made a living as taxi drivers, singers and restaurant waiters in the Paris  of the 20s, after the Bolshevik revolution, with the only difference that Cubans in Miami restarted a new life the outcome of which is more  than you can  expect after they left Cuba.

Among the unavoidable gap generation, Cubans in Miami are impatient  to show off with their successful life and their shaping of the Little Havana, springing  full of life at lunch time. Cubans from the Castro’s nomenklatura have to choose their word to express a kind of auto satisfaction about the triumphs of the Revolution. In Miami, instead, Cuban success is booming at every corner. What makes Cuban dissidents, bloggers such as Yoani Sanchez …and ordinary people dream so much when Key West lights are blinking at night.

Cuban tomorrows already are under way.


frantz bataille,

Down Town Miami,
September 5, 2013





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