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Friday, April 01, 2016

What Cubans don’t know, and don’t know they don’t know

What Cubans don't know, and don't know they don't know

A Miami Herald reporter reflects on five days covering President Obama
in Havana
BY PATRICIA MAZZEI
pmazzei@miamiherald.com

HAVANA
A few steps from la esquina caliente, the shady spot in Havana's Parque
Central where men gather at all hours to engage in their favorite Cuban
pastime — talking baseball — a 54-year-old sailor who gave his name as
Manuel de Jesús Richards Adams admired the ornate theater across the
street. He hoped to glimpse at President Barack Obama.

Obama didn't plan to deliver his landmark speech at the Gran Teatro
until the next day. But to Richards, Obama's schedule remained a mystery.

"Do you know if he's there?" he asked me. "Do you know when he's coming?"

In Cuba, people don't know.

And not only about Obama's itinerary, though the lack of detailed
information about his visit seemed particularly stunning given how
palpably excited Cubans felt about his trip.

Down Old Havana's busiest drag, Obispo Street, 34-year-old Alexander
Noriega sold wooden statues — whittled by his uncle — at a small
handicraft market. He seemed surprised to learn Obama had held a news
conference moments earlier, side by side with Cuban leader Raúl Castro,
who was forced to field a couple of reporters' questions.

"They'll show it to us later," Noriega said confidently, referring to
state-run television. His assumption proved only partially correct: A
government network did re-air the joint appearance — but without the
inconvenient Q&A bit where Castro was asked about political prisoners.

In Cuba, people don't know what they don't know.

During Obama's speech, Jesús Magán and his wife, María Lastres, stared
in disbelief at a president who could give such lengthy remarks without
flipping pages in front of him. They'd never seen transparent
TelePrompTers. (The state-run newspaper Granma was quick to point out
the next day that Obama was, in fact, reading.)

While I waited for Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine's delegation one
afternoon, his Cuban tour guide inquired why I'd left Venezuela, the
country of my birth and childhood. Crime, I said, offering the shortest,
most concrete answer I could muster. She'd never heard of Caracas'
infamously high homicide rate.

"What do you mean?" she asked, puzzled. She referred to the late
Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. "Not during Chávez? Because Chávez was
the best!" I tried to explain. "I don't understand," she continued.
"We're not told about that."

OBAMA EN CUBA: IMPRESIONES DE UNA REPORTERA EN LA HABANA
The five days I spent in Havana last week — my first in the Cuban
capital — reminded me, jarringly, how isolated Cuban people are, even
though they're a mere 45 minutes away from Miami, so short a distance by
plane that the captain hardly gets a chance to tell passengers they can
unbuckle their seatbelts once they're in the air before they must buckle
them again to land.

I'd been to Cuba once before — six months ago, to the eastern town of
Holguín, during Pope Francis' visit — so I expected to again feel
secluded. But I'd figured Havana, with its mobs of tourists, would feel
different. It did, and it didn't: More establishments boasted Wi-Fi
connections and satellite TV. But the services are still mostly for
foreigners, not Cubans themselves.

"We lead simple lives," Levine's guide told me.

European tourists tell her they want to experience Cuba "before it
changes," as if Cubans were museum or zoo exhibits stuck in time. Here's
Cuba before it changes: Tufts University graduate students traveling
with Levine and staying at Airbnb properties learned they had no CVS, no
7-Eleven, no corner market where to pick up bottled water and snacks.
(When a family offered me homemade guava juice, they made sure to note
it was safe to drink, because it was "made with boiled water.")

American tourists tell her they appreciate Cuba's unhurried pace,
because Americans don't regularly devote time to talking to each other
like Cubans do. In Cuba, she said, Americans can share a leisurely,
uninterrupted meal. Unsaid: in restaurants most Cubans can't afford,
undisturbed by emails and cellphone alerts and
let-me-Google-that-right-now searches that most Cubans can't choose to
turn off because they can't turn them on in the first place.

Before my trip, a colleague and I planned to write parallel stories
about watching Obama on TV in Miami and Havana. We'd each go to a public
location — say, a Hialeah restaurant — and record viewers' observations
at the same time, to compare the experience on both sides of the Florida
Straits.

When I got to Cuba, I asked several people where I could go. They all
stared at me blankly. A public gathering space to watch politics with
other Cubans? You mean, outside of hotels and restaurants for tourists?

Maybe the government will put up a big screen somewhere, one man said
hopefully, like it did during the 2014 World Cup.

But only Lionel Messi gets that treatment. The man watched Obama from
home, alone.

Source: What Cubans don't know, and don't know they don't know | Miami
Herald -
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article69172597.html

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