I had the opportunity to visit Cuba (legally) back in 1998 to take a Spanish-language intensive course at the University of Havana, but was not there long enough to notice the apartheid type policies that were in place because I was protected by my US passport and dollars. At that time, US currency coveted by Cuban businesses for circulation. We foreigners from everywhere were having the time of our lives, totally oblivious of so many naturalized Cuban citizens risking their lives to escape and seek asylum in places, like the US, Spain, Mexico, and Perú.
My Afro-Cuban neighbor here in Oakland, CA, connected me with his family in Havana, but never explained to me why he himself faced the perils of the waters to escape Cuba on top of an inner tube of a tire. None of his friends whom I also befriended ever complained or reprimanded me for visiting Cuba, like so many other Cuban refugees who left Cuba long before them.
--W Bill Smith
By Roberto Zurbano, editor and publisher of La Casa de las
Américas (House of the Americas) publishing house. This essay was translated by Kristina Cordero
from the Spanish.
CHANGE is the latest news to come out of Cuba,
though for Afro-Cubans like myself, this is more dream than reality.
Over the last decade, scores of ridiculous prohibitions for Cubans
living on the island have been eliminated, among them sleeping at a
hotel, buying a cellphone, selling a house or car and traveling abroad.
These gestures have been celebrated as signs of openness and reform,
though they are really nothing more than efforts to make life more
normal. And the reality is that in Cuba, your experience of these
changes depends on your skin color.
The private sector in Cuba now enjoys a certain degree of economic
liberation, but blacks are not well positioned to take advantage of it.
We inherited more than three centuries of slavery during the Spanish
colonial era. Racial exclusion continued after Cuba became independent
in 1902, and a half century of revolution since 1959 has been unable to
overcome it.
In the early 1990s, after the cold war ended, Fidel Castro embarked on
economic reforms that his brother and successor, Raúl, continues to
pursue. Cuba had lost its greatest benefactor, the Soviet Union, and
plunged into a deep recession that came to be known as the “Special
Period.” There were frequent blackouts. Public transportation hardly
functioned. Food was scarce. To stem unrest, the government ordered the
economy split into two sectors: one for private businesses and
foreign-oriented enterprises, which were essentially permitted to trade
in United States dollars, and the other, the continuation of the old
socialist order, built on government jobs that pay an average of $20 a
month.
It’s true that Cubans still have a strong safety net: most do not pay
rent, and education and health care are free. But the economic
divergence created two contrasting realities that persist today. The
first is that of white Cubans, who have leveraged their resources to
enter the new market-driven economy and reap the benefits of a
supposedly more open socialism. The other reality is that of the black
plurality, which witnessed the demise of the socialist utopia from the
island’s least comfortable quarters.
Most remittances from abroad — mainly the Miami area, the nerve center
of the mostly white exile community — go to white Cubans. They tend to
live in more upscale houses, which can easily be converted into
restaurants or bed-and-breakfasts — the most common kind of private
business in Cuba. Black Cubans have less property and money, and also
have to contend with pervasive racism. Not long ago it was common for
hotel managers, for example, to hire only white staff members, so as not
to offend the supposed sensibilities of their European clientele.
That type of blatant racism has become less socially acceptable, but
blacks are still woefully underrepresented in tourism — probably the
economy’s most lucrative sector — and are far less likely than whites to
own their own businesses. Raúl Castro
has recognized the persistence of racism and has been successful in
some areas (there are more black teachers and representatives in the
National Assembly), but much remains to be done to address the
structural inequality and racial prejudice that continue to exclude
Afro-Cubans from the benefits of liberalization.
Racism in Cuba has been concealed and reinforced in part because it
isn’t talked about. The government hasn’t allowed racial prejudice to be
debated or confronted politically or culturally, often pretending
instead as though it didn’t exist. Before 1990, black Cubans suffered a
paralysis of economic mobility while, paradoxically, the government
decreed the end of racism in speeches and publications. To question the
extent of racial progress was tantamount to a counterrevolutionary act.
This made it almost impossible to point out the obvious: racism is alive
and well.
If the 1960s, the first decade after the revolution, signified
opportunity for all, the decades that followed demonstrated that not
everyone was able to have access to and benefit from those
opportunities. It’s true that the 1980s produced a generation of black
professionals, like doctors and teachers, but these gains were
diminished in the 1990s as blacks were excluded from lucrative sectors
like hospitality. Now in the 21st century, it has become all too
apparent that the black population is underrepresented at universities
and in spheres of economic and political power, and overrepresented in
the underground economy, in the criminal sphere and in marginal
neighborhoods.
Raúl Castro has announced
that he will step down from the presidency in 2018. It is my hope that
by then, the antiracist movement in Cuba will have grown, both legally
and logistically, so that it might bring about solutions that have for
so long been promised, and awaited, by black Cubans.
An important first step would be to finally get an accurate official
count of Afro-Cubans. The black population in Cuba is far larger than
the spurious numbers of the most recent censuses. The number of blacks
on the street undermines, in the most obvious way, the numerical fraud
that puts us at less than one-fifth of the population. Many people
forget that in Cuba, a drop of white blood can — if only on paper — make
a mestizo, or white person, out of someone who in social reality falls
into neither of those categories. Here, the nuances governing skin color
are a tragicomedy that hides longstanding racial conflicts.
The end of the Castros’ rule will mean an end to an era in Cuban
politics. It is unrealistic to hope for a black president, given the
insufficient racial consciousness on the island. But by the time Raúl
Castro leaves office, Cuba will be a very different place. We can only
hope that women, blacks and young people will be able to help guide the
nation toward greater equality of opportunity and the achievement of
full citizenship for Cubans of all colors.
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