50 YEARS LATER
Cubans here and there still hope for better future
BY MARIFELI PEREZ-STABLE
MarifeliPerez-Stable.com
Fifty years ago Cubans rejoiced in the downfall of Fulgencio Batista. 
Today joy isn't the overriding emotion. Other feelings -- such as 
apathy, anger, despair and rancor -- dwell in our hearts. Loss and 
sadness -- over the lives lost, the families sundered, a people's broken 
faith -- are overwhelming. Only official Cuba revels and marvels over 
the decades since that long ago Jan. 1.
Why Cuba had a revolution in 1959 is an enduring question. Though not 
inevitably, Cuban history made the revolution possible. National 
sovereignty, social justice and democracy had been long-standing 
aspirations. Between 1902 and 1959, the Cuban republic met them 
unevenly, an unsurprising fact since progress is never pristine.
The Platt Amendment (1901-1934), which allowed U.S. intervention to 
maintain order, saddled the early republic. After the Spanish-American 
War, the United States occupied Cuba and then imposed the amendment as a 
condition for leaving. In a fitting display of pragmatism, the 
constitutional assembly accepted it.
On May 20, 1902, Cubans embraced independence joyfully. Tomás Estrada 
Palma, Cuba's first president, had lived in exile in the United States 
for three decades. He returned to a three-week passage from Gibara in 
eastern Cuba to Havana. With flowers in hand and resounding shouts of 
¡Viva!, people thronged to meet him everywhere. Not until 1959 would 
Cubans be so moved again.
Gulf between urban, rural areas
In the 1950s, Cuba ranked high in Latin America on indicators such as 
literacy, urbanization, university graduates, life expectancy and infant 
mortality. We were more modern, albeit not uniformly so. Progress, in 
fact, rendered more conspicuous the growing inequality: most pronounced 
between Havana and the rest of Cuba but a gulf also divided urban and 
rural areas.
Employment and the sugar industry lay at the heart of the Cuban economy. 
Unemployment averaged 16 percent a year, while less than 70 percent held 
full-time jobs. Sugar no longer sustained growth, but economic 
diversification proceeded slowly and mostly around Havana. Sugar still 
accounted for a third of all industry, more than half of all agriculture 
and a quarter of the labor force.
Job creation and higher economic growth, thus, hinged on 
diversification. A single indicator -- sugar tonnage per capita -- 
captured Cuba's predicament. From a mid-1920s one ton per capita, sugar 
production had declined to .86 per capita by the 1950s. A National Bank 
report said it best: ``If we do not structure our economy to secure a 
just and adequate standard of living for our people, unfortunate days 
await us.''
Even so, the economy didn't do the old Cuba in. Politics did. In 1933, 
Cubans rose against dictatorship and the United States. For years, the 
island was convulsed by social upheavals and political repression. In 
1940, the political class came together to enact a new constitution that 
enshrined civil liberties and social justice. Batista, who'd emerged 
amid the convulsion, was fairly elected Cuba's president.
 From 1940 to 1952, Cuba was a leading democracy in a Latin America 
littered with dictatorships. Cubans enjoyed more freedoms than ever, 
before or after. All was not well, however. Politicians didn't break the 
habit of malfeasance, which quickly disillusioned the citizenry. In 
Havana especially, political gangs fought one another over turf and favors.
On March 10, 1952, Batista's coup further fueled the electorate's 
dispiritedness. At first, the opposition banked on negotiations to 
restore the Constitution of 1940 and hold new elections. For a bit in 
1955 a peaceful exit seemed possible. But Batista didn't negotiate in 
good faith, and the opposition abandoned the strategy of mass 
demonstrations that might have changed his mind. Thus, Fidel Castro's 
claim that only bullets -- not ballots -- would overturn the 
dictatorship gained ascendance.
After 1959, the revolution galvanized the Cuban people. Even after it 
had turned dictatorial, most Cubans still hoped for a better future. 
Opponents met the firing squads, suffered long imprisonment, went into 
exile or were forced into silence at home.
Cuba now has a domestic opposition entrusted to peaceful means. Exiles 
have largely renounced violence as well. In contrast, official Cuba 
depends on repression to remain as it is. Yet, down the road, 
opportunities for meaningful dialogue may arise. If so, I hope we've 
learned the importance of politics to get it right this time.
Marifeli Pérez-Stable is vice president for democratic governance at the 
Inter-American Dialogue in Washington, D.C., and a professor at Florida 
International University.
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