Revolutionary Christmas / Somos+, Javier Cabrera
Somos+, Javier Cabrera, 24 December 2016 — I was an atypical Cuban child 
because I always had Christmas. My mother, whom they tried to expel from 
her teaching job once because Christians didn't have the morals to teach 
classes to the "New Man," said that she wasn't going to let a man tell 
her whether or not to celebrate Christmas or the Three Kings in her own 
home.
In those Decembers, she took out the little tree from her childhood, 
with what we called "the balls from before '59," and bought gifts with 
whatever she could. I remember perfectly that the gifts were 
increasingly fewer, and in the '90s moved from the floor to the little 
table. Of course, the celebration was never interrupted, not even in 
1994, a year to forget.
For me, the year started to come to an end when Christmas showed up in 
our house. And I suffered many conflicts in kindergarten and elementary 
school, because I couldn't understand that I lived in a country that was 
so equal, and so different.
Today I look back and understand that the best Christmas gift I got was 
this: "No one has the right to tell you to celebrate or not to 
celebrate. Your freedom ends when you let one group of the 'enlightened' 
impose their celebrations, wakes, or whatever they want."
Earlier this year, I landed a few hours apart in the same airport where 
the Chapecoense team's plane crashed. I was going to work, and I was 
warned that there was a huge local party. I heard some fireworks set off 
in celebration, but not even 3% of what was normal. In general, without 
imposition, or fines, or prohibitions, I saw a people in pain come 
together to fill stadiums.
An image in complete contrast to the imposed mourning that same week in 
Cuba, mourning that they are now trying to extend indefinitely, 
annulling our freedom to celebrate, or choosing not to participate 
without facing the loss of one's job, which in any event only pays a 
pauper's wages.
Christmas is many things, but above all it is home, family and 
celebration. Today it is no longer completely banned, and even so it is 
scandalous that no one has asked an entire people for forgiveness for 
forcing them to cancel it.
Today, Christmas day, I remember my mother a lot and thank her for not 
allowing them to tell her what to do. I also remember friends who didn't 
dare, and who didn't even hear about Christmas until they were older.
Today is a good day to tell the mother of all of us, Cuba, that we 
celebrate and we celebrate with her. That she gives us once again the 
ability not to listen to those who would bother a united family that 
celebrates. To them, as a nation, she also gives the freedom to 
celebrate their frustrations where no one interferes with them.
Source: Revolutionary Christmas / Somos+, Javier Cabrera – Translating 
Cuba - 
http://translatingcuba.com/revolutionary-christmas-somos-javier-cabrera/
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