The Slow Death of the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR) 
/ Orlando Delgado
Posted on September 27, 2013
The Cuban Government is ready to celebrate another congress of one of 
its most sui generis organizations: the so-called Committees for the 
Defense of the Revolution (CDR). This organization, in theory, brings 
together more than 8 million people and was created to monitor and 
inform on individuals or groups who from early on showed their 
disagreements with the Castro regime and its Marxist ideology. Castro 
himself had no shame in declaring (in the excitement of those early 
years) that these committees arose to "see what people do and what they 
are dedicated to."
His words legitimated and protected the snitching and opportunistic 
denouncing of others, and the grossest violations of people's privacy. 
The CDRs became the primary link in the chain of control that the 
Government exercises over its citizens, still reflected in the slogan of 
the repeated Castro conclaves: "United, vigilant and combative."
These words call on what the ordinary Cuban now has the least 
inclination to do, because whom are they going to spy on and combat? 
Will it be the neighbor who has a better standard of living thanks to 
the fact that he now works in a warehouse where he can "find things." Or 
the neighbor who feeds her children through prostitution or selling what 
falls into her hands? And so we could list thousands of activities 
considered illegal by the Government that are a part of daily life on 
the island.
Last September 27th (the evening of the day before is chosen to 
anticipate the 28th, the day of its creation), in many Havana 
neighborhoods there was not the traditional bonfire and stew that 
usually "celebrates" the such a negative organization. Not even in the 
most critical years of the regime, in the 1990s, did the neighbors fail 
to get together a little soup pot and fill the block with flags. But if 
there is something relentless it is the passage of time and although the 
Castro clan resists challenging it, the CDRs (the whole system) shows a 
prolonged wear.
Proof of this is that long before the regime filled with city with 
yellow ribbons to divert attention from the pressing problems of Cuban 
society, they were gradually pasting a new sticker on the doors of the 
presidents of the CDR to reaffirm that here lives the maximum leader of 
the block and the organization is working, or seems to be working, 
although many of the residents of the place do not know that person and 
show their apathy towards the sporadic calls to activities.
In the dreamed of transition, this organization would be the first to be 
dismantled to make way for full respect for the most elemental 
individual freedoms and a legitimate Rule of Law, which itself would 
lead (stripped of authoritarian or vertical elements) to an effective 
community life.
Orlando Delgado | Havana
 From Diario de Cuba
|27 September 2013
Source: "The Slow Death of the Committees for the Defense of the 
Revolution (CDR) / Orlando Delgado | Translating Cuba" - 
http://translatingcuba.com/the-slow-death-of-the-committees-for-the-defense-of-the-revolution-cdr-orlando-delgado/
 
 
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