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Thursday, September 25, 2014

Cuba’s Rise and Fall in Half an Hour

Cuba's Rise and Fall in Half an Hour
Cuban-Institute Film, Albeit Basic, Conveys Exile Plight to Wider Audience
FERGUS HODGSON SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 AT 1:36 PM

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Few if any nonprofits have supported my intellectual development to
degree of the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies (ICCAS).
Nestled on the University of Miami campus, their media footprint,
publications, and on-site events demonstrate exemplary productivity.

Late in 2013, I completed their Certificate in Cuban Studies, under the
direction of José Azel, and got to interact with the most prominent
Cuban dissidents of our era. That included Huber Matos (recently
deceased), a general-turned-defector from the 1959 revolution, and Yoani
Sánchez, a blogger and author who has now started a digital-media outlet
on the island, 14ymedio.

The tragedy is that so few people draw on this invaluable resource. Even
with the intellectual firepower on offer, their certificate program
could barely attract a dozen students. Perhaps it is just a symptom of
the aging exile community and less interest among their descendants, but
if you're under 50 and attend one of the Casa Bacardi events, you will
be the "young man" in the room.

While the ICCAS focus remains on substance over style — their websites
could sure do with a redesign — they are making efforts to reach out to
new audiences and offer educational tours. One recent addition is a
short English-language documentary, Cuba: From Columbus to Castro.

Written by Pedro Riog and Jaime Suchlicki, author of a book with the
same title, this one will not win any prizes for production value. It is
primarily image stills, many of them of low resolution, alongside
straight narration from retired professor Frank Rodríguez.

As its brevity suggests (25 minutes), it is meant for the newcomer — a
concise yet authoritative overview of the Cuban story. Given so much
ground to cover and a rapid pace, one can be forgiven for rewinding to
properly digest many of its assertions.

The documentary's value lies in conveying the breadth of the Cuban
story, in particular the level of refinement and economic progress
achieved on the island prior to the purported quest for a socialist
paradise. It explains why, even after all these decades, so many still
reminisce and grieve the bygone nation.

In its final few minutes, as it addresses the most recent years,
Rodríguez explains why 1.5 million Cuban nationals (approximately 15
percent of the population) live outside their mother country. Contrary
to common perception, the rulers of the Cuban regime have not
relinquished to liberalization, not even in the manner of the Chinese.

In fact, as affirmed, militarization and repression on the island are
getting worse, not better. People still risk their lives trying to flee
to Florida, many falling victim to the sea. And the regime's desire for
international clout remains, now on the purse of the Venezuelans, since
the breakup of the Soviet Union.

"Cubans are still living in poverty," Rodríguez says. "There's still no
freedom nor human rights; and Cuba remains a military dictatorship."

If you are new to the topic and willing to take a dose of bleak reality,
you could hardly do better than From Columbus to Castro. If anything, it
will help viewers understand the exile community and motivate them to
support the struggle to reclaim their homeland from the tyrants at the helm.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RALb6_RU4s

Source: Cuba's Rise and Fall in Half an Hour -
http://panampost.com/fergus-hodgson/2014/09/24/cubas-rise-and-fall-in-half-an-hour/

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