Recently the Washington Post dedicated three pages of its
travel section to Cuba. Apparently, since April last year, the Treasury
Department’s Office of Asset Control has issued “people-to-people”
licenses to organizations such as the National Trust for Historic
Preservation and tour operators such as Friendly Planet and Insight
Cuba. The current administration has decided last year to reinstate
licenses to touring companies for trips to the communist island
previously boycotted for 50 years.
The
Friendly Planet arranges group travel in “humanitarian activities
throughout the world” and contributes to “people-to-people” projects in
some countries:
- Special tours to Cuba since 2010 for “volunteer-minded
travelers to interact directly with the Cuban people, and to help people
in need by bringing medical supplies and educational materials, which
are in short supply and badly needed in Cuba”
- Kiva Microlending (travelers loan as little as they wish to an entrepreneur of their choice in the country of their choice)
- Clean water in Cambodia (over 200 wells in villages built by Friendly Planet and funded by some travelers as well)
- Bicycles and supplies in Vietnamese schools donated by travelers
Visitors
have to file a “full-time schedule of educational exchange activities
that will result in meaningful interaction between the travelers and
individuals in Cuba.” This does not sound to me like a free visit of
another country but a state-controlled indoctrination tour.
Mentioning everyday Cuban life difficulties as stereotypes, the
author acknowledges the multitude of Eisenhower era American cars on the
Malecon, Havana’s 4-mile long boulevard by the sea. Garish murals,
pro-revolution propaganda billboards, anti-United States propaganda, and
Che Guevara are everywhere. All her stereotypes were confirmed.
“Che Guevara’s face was as ubiquitous as McDonald’s golden arches are
here. His mustachioed mien and disheveled locks appeared on roadside
signs and posters, a reassuring fist pump of perseverance.” Really?
Perseverance in the imprisonment, torture, and killing of people, while
oppressing the entire Cuban population for 50 years? Reassuring the rest
of Cubans to better behave in lock step with the communist regime or
else?
Ladies in White
The famous Ladies in White (Damas de Blanco) are not mentioned. A
peaceful opposition movement in Cuba, they protest the imprisonment of
their husbands, brothers, fathers, and other political dissident
relatives, by attending Mass each Sunday wearing white dresses and
silently walking through the streets afterwards.
All controversial topics were answered with “according to the
government,” or “things work this way in theory.” A Cuban teacher earns
450 pesos a month ($17). I wonder what the teachers in Wisconsin would
think if paid $17 per month. They protested the loss of collective
bargaining for salaries upwards of $100,000 per year. Communism is
coming this way, with Marxist remunerations “from each according to his
ability, to each according to his needs,” needs decided by the
government not the free market system.
In the Plaza de Armas square, “vendors sold books and souvenirs
celebrating Che, ‘the face of Cuba,’ and the revolution.” It is as
nauseating as the American high school and college students wearing Che
Guevara t-shirts and bandanas.
The appearance of an old woman begging prompted the official of the
City of Havana to explain, “Mainly, they don’t want to work. There is
plenty of work to be done, construction, and agriculture. It is hard to
find homeless. Maybe one or two people in the evenings, a drunk person.”
(Isabel Leon Candelario)
“The government – socialist in its politics, communist in its ideals –
guarantees housing and jobs, plus provides free health care and
education. Despite ration cards, the Cubans’ biggest expenditure is
food.” (Andrea Sachs)
Since this is a travel diary, Andrea does not explain the dismal
state of the economy, the tiny dilapidated and shabby state-provided
apartments, the communist indoctrination in schools, and the
sub-standard and downright dangerous medical care or the lack of basic
medical supplies, drugs, and sterile hospitals. Neither is the education
of their doctors on par with western doctors in spite of Michael
Moore’s propaganda movie, “Sicko,” which presents a state of the art
picture of Cuban medicine. The reality is quite different.
Most Cubans cannot support themselves on the government’s wages so
they resort to black market dealings, accepting gratuities from
tourists, tutoring, translation work, or performing in the streets.
Visiting an elementary school on a “chewed-up street with flaking
facades and chipped doorways,” the visitor was enchanted by a bust of
the national hero Jose Marti and by a recitation of a Marti poem by
fifth graders “by heart and from the heart.”
Jose Marti was a writer and political activist called the “Apostle of
Cuban Independence.” He was a symbol of Cuba’s independence from Spain
and of Cuban revolutionaries and those reluctant to start a revolution.
Marti fought against the threat of U.S. “expansionism” into Cuba. His
poem, “Versos Sencillos” (Simple Verses) was adapted to the song,
“Guantanamera,” which has become the patriotic song of Cuba.
The fifth graders’ poetry recitation brings to mind the poems we had
to memorize by heart glorifying the communist revolution in Romania. I
can honestly say, it never came from the heart for most of us. It was
something we had to do in order to survive another day.
The author continues, “The first graders were ‘glued to their seats.’
I can attest from experience that we were not allowed to move from a
straight, at attention position, in our seats, with hands clasped
behinds our backs unless the teacher gave us assignments to write or we
had to raise our hands in order to ask questions. Wiggling, giggling, or
note passing were not allowed. Behavior was graded harshly on monthly
report cards.
The touted Cuban economic reform is dust in the eyes of the Cubans
The touted Cuban economic reform is dust in the eyes of the Cubans. A
few restaurants opened to cater to tourists and their foreign
currencies. Cuba, as any current or former communist state, charges a
high 10 percent tax on exchanging dollars to peso but none for Euros or
Canadian dollars.
Toilet paper is in short supply and tourists are encouraged to bring
their own. I remember we had rough toilet paper when we could find it
and some of it had visible splinters.
Tourist donations were encouraged to schools and medical centers in
the form of pens, notebooks, toiletries, and other necessities
Tourist donations were encouraged to schools and medical centers in
the form of pens, notebooks, toiletries, and other necessities. If
communism is so exceptional and superior to capitalism, as Castro and
his lefty supporters present it, why do they need donations and help
from the “evil enslaving capitalists” of the free world?
Part of the dictated tour was the Museum of the Revolution, with its
collection of “decrepit newspaper clippings, bullet pocked tanks, and
Granma, the fishing boat that brought Castro from Mexico to Cuba in
1956.” The next stop was “a sharp pinch of reality” to an apartment
complex on the outskirts of town, what “HUD would call a project.”
“The government had relocated a family recently to a two-bedroom
apartment in the projects after their colonial domicile in Havana
collapsed like a dollhouse made of dry crackers.”
Many beautiful colonial homes in Havana had collapsed from lack of
maintenance under the Castro regime. They were confiscated from the
previous owners and allocated to families who lived together, sharing
bathrooms and kitchens. They did not have money for upkeep and the
government did not provide much maintenance if any.
The tropical paradise, the island with so much potential, brought to
its knees by an oppressive “revolutionary” communist government, has a
long way to go before any anemic government enacted economic reforms can
bring it back to its former glory.
-------------------------------------------------
*
Dr. Ileana Johnson Paugh ( Romanian Conservative)
is a freelance writer (Canada Free Press, Romanian Conservative),
author, radio commentator, and speaker. Her book, “Echoes of Communism,
is available at Amazon in paperback and Kindle. Short essays describe
health care, education, poverty, religion, social engineering, and
confiscation of property. Visit her website, ileanajohnson.com.
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