ROOTS OF HOPE
Roots of Hope inspires a new generation to help Cubans find freedom
BY CARMEN PELAEZ
www.carmenpelaez.com
As I was lining up in the corrals before our run in the ING Miami Half 
Marathon for a fundraiser for Roots of Hope, a U.S. college network of 
students and their supporters who are helping find ways to connect with 
young Cubans on the communist-controlled island, I felt kind of helpless.
Ironic considering how empowering the many months of planning, training 
and fundraising felt. As a group, we chose to dedicate our inaugural Run 
for Roots race to Ladies in White founder Laura Pollán, who died in 
October in a Cuban hospital. But standing in front of the Freedom Tower, 
looking down at my bib number and the words "para LAURA" (for Laura) 
made me wonder if anything that I had done, or could ever do, for a 
civil society in Cuba would matter. As the fireworks went off signaling 
the start of the race, I decided to use the run as a meditation on Cuban 
dissidence.
I thought of Wilmar Villar, the 31-year-old political prisoner who died 
Jan. 19 in prison while on a hunger strike. I imagined how confused his 
two little girls, who will never know their father, must be. I wondered 
how they'd feel for the rest of their lives when people said to them 
that their father was a hero. Would they believe their family's 
sacrifice was worth the reward?
I thought of José Martí and how he spent more time in exile than in 
Cuba, fundraising in young American capitals and writing a few lines 
that would inspire a people for centuries to come. Our Bronze Titan, 
Antonio Maceo, flashed before my eyes as a figure of unwavering courage, 
the same kind of courage that Havana blogger Yoani Sánchez exhibits when 
she takes to her laptop to liberate all of us one tap of a computer key 
at a time. Though divided by centuries, they were united by purpose in 
even the most abysmal circumstances.
Looking at the thousands of runners ahead of me, it struck me that every 
Cuban I know strives for a better Cuba in their own way. Individually it 
can be inspiring, but collectively, it's made our best intentions the 
collateral damage of our heartfelt hopes. And why?
If we're all on the same side, why must the quest for a Cuban civil 
society be so divisive? More often than not, the talking heads like to 
pin Roots of Hope as counterpoint to the other Cuban exile groups 
because of our youthful membership and modern-day approach to Cuban 
relations. But in reality, we're just filling a gap, coming at the 
struggle with fresh eyes and a new set of possibilities.
We don't oppose our elders, we're the natural evolution of their work.
Thinking about that continuum, I wondered if we could move beyond our 
differences and focus on the net gain of our efforts. There's clearly 
not one right way to take on a dictatorship, no one person can do it 
alone, so why shouldn't we swarm in, like a pack of ants, each one of us 
working in our own way to eliminate the false construct of "us" vs. 
"them," transforming us once again into a "we."
As I crossed the finish line, exhausted, dehydrated and in pain, I 
wondered if Laura could have ever imagined that on any given Sunday, 
we'd be running for her. Could this 63-year-old literature teacher have 
guessed that she would have made such an impact on a young group of 
Cuban Americans so profoundly that we would choose to train for weeks, 
ask our friends and family for money and tell all that would listen 
about this small woman who liberated an oppressed people?
And no, Cuba has not been completely liberated yet — but at the end of 
this horrible chapter of our story, Laura she will be recognized as the 
lioness who showed unimaginable courage in the face of grotesque 
oppression. Her efforts paved the way for our forward motion. She 
mattered, and by mattering she showed us all we do, too.
Carmen Pelaez, who grew up in Miami, is a playwright who lives in New York.
 
 
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