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Sunday, May 30, 2010

Negritude in Cuba

Negritude in Cuba
May 30, 2010
Regina Cano

Many people assume that being black is one of my daily concerns, as if
that condition condemns me to always being a victim.

Each one of us has felt discrimination at some time in their life: for
being fat, bald, homosexual, or very thin, for being left-handed or shy,
elderly or a kid, for belonging to the female sex, or for being slow or
very intelligent, for being Russian, Arab, Chinese or African. My
goodness! – the list is long.

In Cuba, where black slaves were once brought, the issue remains touchy.
The problem is that there always existed a thousand ways to humiliate,
subjugate, control and relegate, as well as to subdue and sway blacks.

Some people here treat us with paternalism, which becomes annoying. And
referring to us as "people of color," morenos (brown-skinned), prietos
(blackish) or "the darkest," they continue to mark the difference.

It's worth mentioning that interracial discrimination also subsists and
divides us. Some blacks react aggressively if you refer to them
directly as "black" (which is the "color" of our race); they look at
this as if you had intentionally "shit on their mother."*

Accepting ones blackness in an atmosphere that is discriminatory (though
generally muted), in a country that formally declares itself
non-discriminatory with regard to race, entails much practice and great
effort at being a full "human being," above everything else. It means
being aware of wanting to live this short life with whatever it brings
for each living soul, and by this I'm referring to the consciousness and
valuation of who I am from my inner self.

Therefore, among my people there are those who have already surpassed
this obstacle, while others are at different points on the map of
discrimination.

I have heard and seen how we as blacks coexist with this atmosphere.
I've witnessed the defenses that are created that discriminate against
the rest, such as:

- That's a black thing.

- People of our color have to help themselves.

- Black people are something else.

- (S)he's a black piolo (Uncle Tom).

- or ridiculing a white for certain things they do.

Likewise, there are discriminatory phrases toward others, such as:

- If a black person doesn't do it at the entrance, they'll do it at the
exit.

- You didn't do so badly, for a black person.

- Need makes you give birth to mulatto children.*

Or notions of self-marginalization like:

- He/she thinks like white people (so they'll do better).

- Those are white people's things.

I think that if black Cubans subjected to discrimination would see the
reality from the perspective of the observer who analyzes the pros and
cons, the origin and the consequences of what holds us down; they would
notice that what really paralyzes us is self-discrimination.

That need was created for us to compare ourselves with the others, but
it was based on the very conditions that the others imposed.

Black people, genetically and socially, possess the same conditions here
as everyone else to develop themselves. In addition, our being greater
in numbers and our strength, opinions and social incidence should not be
dismissed.

Pain doesn't allow us to look beyond, and the capacities possessed
allows for seeking a place within integration. Though others insist on
making us feel different but we have sufficient weapons to confront that.

I believe that discrimination against blacks in Cuba is something to
leave to the minds of those who are not black or who don't consider
themselves as such, and who suffer because the race exists.

* Referring to children born of black and white parents. Well! It seems
that having sex with blacks is done out of necessity.

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