Pages

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Foreigners and Cubans: Princes and Paupers

Foreigners and Cubans: Princes and Paupers
FRANCISCO ALMAGRO DOMÍNGUEZ | Miami | 15 de Junio de 2017 - 15:39 CEST.

A woman friend of mine who lives in Miami recently traveled to the
Island with her children. As her father is Cuban, she wanted her
children to meet the family members who are still there. She had
postponed the trip again and again, without knowing why. Something told
her that it could be an experience full of run-ins and incidents.
Fortunately, the family relationships unfolded with pleasantly
surprising spontaneity: the children and their Cuban relatives on the
Island got along as if they had known each other their whole lives.

The sad part of the trip was not the family, or the odyssey of
travelling to what was once the Paris of the Caribbean - today a
ramshackle city strewn with garbage. She was prepared, or at least
aware, of the blackouts, the potholes, the smell of kerosene, the jug
and pail of water for bathing, and the most elementary food
deficiencies. What she was not prepared for was seeing how Cubans treat
their own.

And she does not understand it, among other reasons, because only 90
miles away, Cubans are like "princes." There, Cubans are able to do what
no other Latin American can in the US, or an Englishman, for that
matter: legalize his immigration status and become a citizen in a short
period of time. In the south of Florida they control politics and the
economy. In fact, upon marrying a Cuban, he achieved a different
migratory status, one allowing him to find good jobs and continue
studying. And offending or humiliating a Cuban citizen because of his
nationality can land an American in some very hot water.

She claims to have detected, beginning right at the airport, a culture
of apartheid, discriminating against those Cuban nationals who,
unmistakable with their suitcases, beads and hats, were returning to
their own country. They moved her and her children up in the line,
passing other mothers with small children, because she was "not Cuban."
After that, and occasionally, it was harassment: the relatives who
accompanied her to restaurants and shops were considered potential
jineteros, or swindlers.

Very perceptively, she made a sad observation: despite all the snubbing
of Cuban citizens, who have nothing to give, and the fawning over
foreigners (outsiders thought to have it all, to be able to do it all),
Cubans are still, at heart, friendly people. They know how to love and
to give. They are, like Havana, a ruined city that is falling apart, but
that can still be rehabilitated.

Somehow, the Cuban capital today is faithful to my friend's observation.
Cities, their buildings, parks, theaters, schools and hospitals resemble
their inhabitants, their people. It is they, and their spirit, that
shape the atmosphere, and this, recursively, returns to the people the
magic of living in peace, and hope. This is what anyone notices when
they go to Madrid, Paris, New York or Mexico City: tourism is not all
about the Gran Via, the Eiffel Tower, the Empire Estate or the Angel of
Independence. The essence of tourism is the local people, as foreign
visitors are often treated better than the country's own citizens.

In an effort to expunge the legacy of the Gómez-Mena family (Cubans
whose crime was to be millionaires who actually got the country to
produce something), they have established a centenarian foreign company
just a few steps from the statue of José Martí in Central Park. The
luxurious Hotel Manzana – no longer belong to the Gómez clan, but rather
the Kempinski family – is surrounded by icons of Cuba's republican
culture and politics, as well as dozens of buildings and houses propped
up to prevent them from collapsing. Allusions to the past, the slap in
the face perpetrated by the Marinesthat produced such outrage,are not
mere coincidences. We may always suffer from a strange neuroticism,
hating and loving all that is foreign at the same time.

Staying at luxury hotel in the middle of a city devastated by
abandonment, and a population suspected of being a band of rogues, is
not really tourism. There can be no true tourism where there is no
water, or street lighting, or care for the environment, because
everyone's prime concern is to have a plate of food to eat. As my friend
said during her brief visit to Cuba: what most disturbs and pains the
tourist are the people who live on the island. They seem to be destroyed
inside. And yet, at the same time one can see that, with adequate
restoration, the Cuban people could shine. Like five-star hotels.

Source: Foreigners and Cubans: Princes and Paupers | Diario de Cuba -
http://www.diariodecuba.com/cuba/1497533982_31892.html

No comments: