26.6.15

Another Dose of Cuban Hypocrisy

On Display This Week
        This week -- Thursday, June 25th -- Secretary John Kerry's U. S. State Department released its annual Human Rights Report. It castigated five nations in particular: Cuba, Myanmar, Vietnam, Iran, and Thailand. The report cited Cuba for "denying passport requests for certain opposition leaders, or harassing them upon their return to the country." Secretary Kerry tempered the scathing denunciations by saying they were "not intended to be sanctimonious," apparently in reference to the fact that the United States has a few problems in regards to human rights, especially involving blacks and other poor people.
         Not surprisingly, Cuba's most ubiquitous and dynamic journalist/television personality -- 26-year-old Cristina Escobar -- was quick to respond to Secretary of State John Kerry's labeling Cuba as one of the world's worst human rights violators. "By including Cuba," she said, "Kerry used one correct word -- sanctimonious. He should have used two others -- hypocrite and mendacious. I respect Mr. Kerry. He is helping to normalize relations with Cuba. But what would normalization be? I think it might be more of an opportunity for the Miami Cubans to suck the oxygen from the island so they and their Mafia friends can regain control of what they perceive as their piggy-bank and playpen. So, Mr. Kerry's Human Rights Report shows further cowardice on the part of the U. S. Government, which continually capitulates to the Miami Cuban extremists on this Human Rights Report and on everything else regarding Cuba, including the training, funding, and protection of the terror-bombers who downed our civilian airplane, shot up our coastal dwellings, and bombed our hotels...with impunity. Mendacious lies, sanctimony, hypocrisy...the U. S. government and the U. S. media approach to Cuba may fool Americans but not Caribbeans or Latin Americans." When Cristina Escobar speaks, Cubans, Caribbeans, and Latin Americans listen. She is hailed as "the new young voice of Cuba." On the island she is the host of "Cuban Television News." She is also a regular panelist or anchor on Cuba's top-rated "Round Table" discussion of news events. And now, as depicted above, she hosts her own program -- in English -- on the "Telesur" network. When John Kerry, Marco Rubio, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Robert Menendez, the Diaz-Balarts or anyone else assails Cuba, it goes unchallenged in the U. S. But that's no longer the case in Cuba, the Caribbean, and Latin America. Cristina Escobar now has forums, complete with microphones and cameras, to challenge anything she deems as "lies" about an island she loves.
         In other words, this week U. S. Secretary of State John Kerry and the U. S. media presented one side of Cuba's human rights record. Cristina Escobar quickly followed up before her ever-increasing regional audience with Cuba's side of that story. It differed quite sharply with Mr. Kerry's. "We have a city of 300,000 people...I speak of Cienfuegos...that goes six months to a year without a serious crime. Can you name me an American city that goes five minutes without multiple serious crimes...rape, murder? I ask Mr. Kerry...is blowing up children on a civilian airplane a human rights violation? Is shooting a harmless and unarmed black man in the back 8 times a violation of human rights? I know sanctimony, hypocrisy, and lies when I see or hear them."
           It is obvious Cristina Escobar keeps close tabs on how the U. S. media portrays Cuba. Recently in Washington to cover the last Vidal-Jacobson diplomatic session, she made headlines, speaking in perfect English, when she highlighted a news conference by asking White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest a blistering series of questions: "Do you think U. S. diplomats {at a proposed new embassy in Havana} will be respectful to Cuba?...etc. She followed up that news conference with one-on-one interviews and speeches around Washington...in both Spanish and English...in which she stressed, "The lies the U. S. media tells about Cuba hurts everyday Cubans the most. I am still young and I am hopeful, but I also realize that the small cabal of right-wing thugs with ties back to the Batista days still dictate America's Cuban policy."
         Throughout the Caribbean and Latin America, Cristina Escobar is now the go-to journalist other television reporters and anchors depend on the most for the Cuban side of U.S.-Cuban issues. "Cuba is not devoid of self-inflicted problems," she says. "But it is our right and our duty to deal with them, and more-and-more my generation is seeing a drastic improvement in that regard on my island. I see a U. S. publication this month that listed verbatim...how many was it?...38?...tax-funded programs currently in place for the purpose of either enriching the Miami Cubans or bringing about regime change in Cuba. How nice! 38. So, how much of the dissidence on this island originates here and how much originates in Miami and Washington? Impartial journalists posted in Cuba from abroad see little internal dissidence but they surely see a lot of dissidents supported and encouraged from Miami and Washington. I guess all of them get free Smart Phones, courtesy of U. S. taxpayers, in case they get to photograph or video what the U. S. could call a human rights violation. The Cuban government doesn't pay for Smart Phones that Americans could use to videotape human rights violations in the U. S. and if my government did such things I would use my forums to denounce it."
       This photo shows Cristina Escobar interviewing Cuba's omnipotent Minister of North American Affairs Josefina Vidal. Ms. Escobar says, "Vidal has more freedom in Cuba, or when she is off the island, to speak much more frankly about U.S.-Cuban affairs than any of her counterparts in the United States, including the capable Roberta Jacobson. Jacobson must get clearance from Mr. Kerry or Mr. Obama and they, in turn, must get clearance from the Miami Cubans. Vidal, on the other hand, has the freedom to make off-the-cuff comments and stick by them. Freedom is a wonderful thing. Cubans didn't have any of that in the Batista days. We have more of it now, but we want and are getting more. We would get all of it much faster were it not for the Miami Cubans dictating to Washington about embargoing, starving, depriving, bombing, nuking...or whatever...an island that in no way harms the United States. But I believe that process, those gross anti-Cuban dictates, harms the United States every bit as much as it harms Cuba. The two weeks I spent in California last year and the few days I spent in Washington this year amaze me most of all because of how easy it is to lie to the American people about Cuba, for sure, and I imagine about other things. I don't expect the U. S. to treat Cuba fairly but I am most disheartened because the American people don't seem to care what their government, or the Miami Cubans, do to Cuba on their behalf -- including blowing up children in an airplane or associating with the Mafia and terrorists in carrying out designs on a supposedly vulnerable little Cuba."
        A very unique generation of outraged Cuban women -- led by the incomparable Celia Sanchez -- played the decisive role in defeating the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship. That was way back in the 1950s. The retrenched Batistiano-Mafiosi forces -- in all the decades since -- have furiously lashed back at the nearby island from U. S. soil with massive help from the U. S. military, the CIA, and the U. S. Treasury. But, against all odds, Revolutionary Cuba still stands. A second generation of Cuban women, personified by Josefina Vidal, is helping defy Cuba's enemies. And now a third generation of Cuban women, epitomized by Cristina Escobar, is trying mightily to make sure Cubans on the island, not in Miami, define its future.
        Cristina Escobar is certainly the new face, voice, and soul of Cuba. When she speaks, she now has microphones across the island and across the region that spread her views. She believes "the Miami Cubans" harm Cuba but "harm the U. S. and democracy even more." Cristina has criticized aspects of the Cuban government whenever she feels it can better serve "everyday Cubans." But overall she is a staunch defender of Revolutionary Cuba as "far superior to any government dictated from a foreign country." She is loved by Cubans of her generation and deeply respected by older Cubans, including the not-so-old Josefina Vidal. This week the U. S. Secretary of State John Kerry denounced Cuba's human rights record. Cristina Escobar used her mounting forums to denounce that denouncement. There are, for sure, two sides to the U.S.-Cuban conundrum. The Miami Cubans represent one side; Cristina Escobar represents the other. It's still very much a David-vs.-Goliath proposition, but it is not as lopsided as it once was.
Beauty & Brains vs. Braun & Belligerence.
Cristina Escobar:  The new face, voice, and soul of Cuba.
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24.6.15

Cuba's Good Guys

They Happen to be...Girls!

          In the first week of January, 1959, the best and the bravest Cubans -- such as the three young women above -- rode into Havana on the back of trucks. They were extremely disappointed that the worst and the least bravest Cubans -- the leaders of the Batista-Mafia dictatorship -- had not stayed around to fight them. Tete Puebla today is a General in the Cuban army. If you take time to ask her why she looked so glum on such a glorious day, she will tell you it was because she was sad the Batistiano leaders -- such as Batista, Lansky, Diaz-Balart, and particularly Rolando Masferrer -- had fled the island for safer havens "to hook back up with their stolen loot." That's Tete on the left in the above photo. Eloisa and Lilia -- two of Tete's dearest friends in the all-female Mariana Grajales Brigade -- had also longed to fight the Batistianos, especially Rolando Masferrer, in a final do-or-die battle that they fervently hoped would serve as the coda to the Cuban Revolution, a seminal event in history because of historic women like Tete, Eloisa, and Lilia.
       Tete Puebla today is a Brigadier General. By the time she was 15-years-old, Tete had already earned a reputation as a fearless and deadly guerrilla fighter in the Sierra Maestra Mountains of eastern Cuba. To understand what motivated a teenage girl in the little Cuban town of Yara to become a do-or-die fighter against U.S.-backed Batista soldiers, you need to talk to Tete...or read her biographical book "Marianas In Combat: Tete Puebla And The Mariana Grajales Women's Platoon In Cuba's Revolutionary War." On Page 30 Tete began her vivid explanation of what inspired her, at the tender age of 15, to become a legendary guerrilla warrior: "There was a special unit of the tyranny at the time called Masferrer's Tigers. They were a death squad that tortured and killed people they captured. There was one Masferrerista in Yara, named Juventino Sutil, who would tie victims up and put them in a sack. Then he'd pour gasoline on them and set them on fire. He killed a number of people in this way. I'll never forget how two campaneras in Yara were raped by the dictatorship's forces: Amelia Puebla, a relative of mine, and Georgina Barban. They were raped by all the soldiers from the Manzanillo barracks. It was said that about fifty soldiers took part. The two of them subsequently dedicated their lives to the revolution. Things like this made us join the fight. Just about all the young people in the town did so. We joined the revolutionary movement, determined to take a direct part in the struggle. We didn't come from rich families. We were poor working people. What made us join the struggle were all the abuses, the outrages, the torture, the murders committed by the Batista dictatorship and its henchmen."
         This photo shows General Tete Puebla on a recent day when she was interviewed about her book by Cuban journalist Arleen Rodriguez. "If I am a heroine," Tete said, "there were thousands of others too."
     Rolando Masferrer was the leader of Batista's dreaded 3,000-man army known as the Masferrer Tigers. They were Batista's well-armed enforcers who routinely brutalized Cuban peasants even remotely suspected of being sympathetic to the anti-Batista movement. As Tete Puebla witnessed, the Masferrer Tigers would burn innocent Cubans alive merely to warn against resistance. As Tete also noted, Masferrer's soldiers would be ordered to rape young Cuban girls, as many as 50 soldiers assaulting one girl.
     This photo shows one of Batista's key Ministers -- Rafael Diaz-Balart -- in the center with the holstered pistol -- flanked by the infamous Masferrer brothers -- Rolando and Orlando, with the feared and legendary Rolando just to Diaz-Balart's left. They were attending a pro-Batista rally in 1958 at about the time rebel units that included Tete Puebla were beginning to drive Batista armies out of the foothills of the Sierra Maestra Mountains. When the rebels captured Santa Clara and were advancing on Havana, all the Batista leaders -- to Tete's chagrin -- fled. Rolando Masferrer, the Batistiano most coveted by Tete, reportedly fled Havana for Miami in a private boat that was stashed with $10,000 in cash. Both Diaz-Balart and Rolando Masferrer quickly formed anti-Castro paramilitary units to lash back at Cuba. Diaz-Balart became one of the richest Cubans in Miami, and two of his sons -- Lincoln and Mario -- were elected to the U. S. Congress from Miami. At one time it was reported that Rolando Masferrer, Rafael Diaz-Balart, and Jorge Mas Canosa were competing to see which one the U. S. government would return to Cuba as the island's post-revolutionary leader.
Rolando Masferrer's acceptance in the United States
     Once on U. S. soil in South Florida, the ousted leaders of the Batista dictatorship had no worry even though such brutality as perpetrated by the Masferrer Tigers on the island was well known by the U. S. government and by the U. S. media, especially as documented by Herbert L. Mathews of the New York Times. Rolando Masferrer was born in 1918 in Holguin, Cuba. In this photo he is nattily dressed as he left a government office in El Paso, Texas, on his way back to Miami as the leader of his paramilitary unit. The brutal Rolando Masferrer ended up dying brutally in Miami, reportedly from internecine warfare that raged in Miami throughout the 1960s and 1970s. On October 31, 1975, Rolando Masferrer turned the ignition in his car at his Miami home and was killed by a car bomb, a weapon used repeatedly by Miami Cubans.
         As far as I know, not one word in Tete Puebla's biography has ever been disputed and, in fact, her recollections have been corroborated by a myriad of independent sources. But Tete's views, it seems, have been verboten in the U. S. since 1959. On the other hand, two generations of the Batista/Lansky/Luciano/Canosa/Diaz-Balart/Masferrer families on U. S. soil have reserved and been accorded the right to define the Cuban narrative to justify everything from the Batista dictatorship to the Bay of Pigs attack to the terrorist bombing of Cubana Flight 455 to the embargo and to unlimited tons of tax dollars filling steady pipelines from Washington to Miami supposedly to bring about a regime change in Cuba. Thus, Americans who might study the photo above of the female guerrilla fighters on the cover of Tete Puebla's biography may wonder why the young Cuban women would become do-or-die guerrilla fighters against a U.S.-backed Batista dictatorship that treated the Cuban people so kindly. That wonderment has been spawned by a U. S. media providing just one side of the Cuban conundrum.
        For example, on a given day or night on U. S. television Americans may see someone such as Mario Diaz-Balart, one of Miami's gifts to the U. S. Congress in Washington, telling the world what a hellhole Cuba is, implying that the island had a wonderful government back when Batista, Lansky, and his dad Rafael Diaz-Balart were in charge. Congresman Mario Diaz-Balart recently made congressional headlines when he attached bills to the so-called "must-pass" Transportation Bill that was designed to block tax dollars President Obama might use to open a proposed embassy in Havana. Of course, Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart's attached bills also increased the already obscene Washington-to-Miami flow of tax dollars.
      While the U. S. media, by and large, remains too biased, too politically correct, or too intimidated to provide Americans with both sides of the Cuban story, that is not the case with foreign media that has a bit more freedom when it comes to Cuba. The photo above shows General Tete Puebla with her revolutionary friend Nidia Sarabia. It is a BBC photo that illustrated a documentary on Celia Sanchez that was hosted and produced by the BBC's top senior producer Linda Pressly. While she was preparing the documentary, Ms. Pressly called me a total of five times from London. In the fifth call she said she was flying to Cuba to finish her research on Celia Sanchez. I said, "Good! Make sure you interview Brigadier General Tete Puebla. She's easy to talk to and she is a fountain of information on Celia. They fought together against some powerful Batista armies. To know Celia, Ms. Pressly, you need to know Tete Puebla!" Ms. Pressly got this photo of Tete and Nidia the day the notable BBC journalist, indeed, interviewed Tete about Celia Sanchez.
            And speaking of both sides of the U.S.-Cuban quagmire, Cuba's ubiquitous young journalist Cristina Escobar leans rather strongly towards the side of Cuba's Tete Puebla and is openly appalled that "Americans are supposed to soak up only what the Miami Cubans say about Cuba." As host of the island's very popular "Round Table" television program, she says, "Frankly, it is hard to believe that educated Americans put up with, and apparently believe, the lies the Miami Cubans spew endlessly about Cuba. On U. S. soil I expressed my views on the U. S. media, which shames me as a journalist who believes in telling the truth." Ms. Escobar, age 26 and awesomely talented, has recently made two photogenic visits to the U. S. Back in December she spent ten days in California at journalism seminars. She also covered the last Vidal-Jacobson diplomatic session in Washington where she became the star at a Q & A with White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest. Later in one-on-one interviews and in speeches at pro-Cuban forums in Washington she said, both in English and Spanish, "The lies the U. S. media tells about Cuba hurts everyday Cubans the most. As a journalist and a Cuban, I don't like to see foreigners perpetually hurt Cubans."  
           Anyone who has any knowledge of U.S.-Cuban relations since the 1950s is abundantly aware that no one on this planet knows more about that subject than Peter Kornbluh. And that is precisely why Americans are supposed to get their Cuban information from the likes of the Bush dynasty, Miami Cubans in the U. S. Congress, or the Miami-based Diaz-Balarts whose matriarch was a key Minister in the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship that the Cuban Revolution chased to nearby Miami in the wee hours of January 1, 1959. Mr. Kornbluh is the key Director at the National Security Archive in Washington, D. C. On the NSA website he has posted numerous declassified U. S. documents that Americans are not supposed to know about because...alas!...Americans are supposed to know only what the Miami-based Cuban exiles tell them about Cuba. Because of the twin perils of cowardice and intimidation, the U. S. media generally shuns true and honest Cuban experts like Mr. Kornbluh but shower the airways and print pages with propaganda from the Cuban exiles. Recently, however, Peter Kornbluh authored a major article that was carried around the world by a plethora of international media outlets. If you want to Google it, the title was: "Historic New Era Between U. S. And Cuba Is About To Begin." Here is the first paragraph of that article, word for word: "Thirty-three years ago after U. S. President Ronald Reagan slapped Cuba onto a State Department list of nations that support international terrorism, the Obama administration has finally corrected that historic injustice. By 'delisting' Cuba, and removing the onerous financial sanctions that accompanied the terrorist designation, U. S. President Barack Obama has eliminated the last obstacle to one of the most historic accomplishments of his presidency -- the restoration of official diplomatic relations between Washington and Havana." Such brave words keep Mr. Kornbluh off U. S. newscasts. 
        American democracy-lovers should ponder these two sentences written in the aforementioned article by Peter Kornbluh, America's greatest and fairest Cuban expert: "Indeed, if harboring known international terrorists is criteria for being designated a terrorist state, then the U. S. State Department should add another country to its list: the United States of America. Throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, the CIA trained, paid, and provided bases to Cuban exiles engaged in acts of murderous violence and sabotage against Cuban civilians and property." Re-read those two sentences from America's best and fairest Cuban expert: 
"Indeed, if harboring known international terrorists is criteria for being designated a terrorist state, then the U. S. State Department should add another country to its list: the United States of America. Throughout the 1960s and the 1970s, the CIA trained, paid, and provided bases to Cuban exiles engaged in acts of murderous violence and sabotage against Cuban civilians and property." 
                        Peter Kornbluh; Director, U. S. National Security Archives; Washington, D. C.
            Indeed, in Cuba and elsewhere in the Caribbean and Latin America today there are memorials dedicated to the 73 victims of Cubana Flight 455. Like other great journalists such as Emilio Milian and Jim DeFede, Peter Kornbluh has been accused of being "anti-American" for denouncing U.S.-sanctioned terrorism against innocent Cubans and for denouncing Miami being used as a safe harbor for the most renowned Cuban terrorists. Of course, like other great Americans such as Milian, DeFede, etc., Peter Kornbluh is being extremely pro-American by repeatedly stressing that America's Cuban policy has shamed America and democracy for centuries, especially in the decades since the 1950s when {#1} the world's greatest democracy in 1952 teamed with the Mafia to support the brutal, thieving Batista dictatorship in Cuba; and {#2} from 1959 until today the world's greatest democracy has supported the most extremists Cuban exiles against what is best for most Americans, most Cubans, and most Cuban-Americans.
       In Cuba today there are still many Cubans mourning those killed aboard Cubana Flight 455. This girl waited with her mother at Jose Marti Airport in Havana for what she expected would be the safe return of her brother. The girl is a woman now. She still mourns the loss of her brother. I don't believe Americans who sympathize with her are anti-American. I also believe it is alright for Americans to know about such things as...Cubana Flight 455. This girl, now a woman, is not America's enemy, but her enemies are.
     "Back Channel To Cuba," the book Peter Kornbluh co-authored with William M. LeoGrande, is the best compilation of how the disastrous U. S. government's alignment with the most extremist anti-Castro Cuban exiles from the Batista dictatorship laid the disastrous foundation for the anti-democratic Cuban policy that President Barack Obama is currently trying to correct while Republican Cuban extremists led by Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Mario Diaz-Balart, etc. are trying to desperately and self-servingly keep it intact for another six decades or so. The front-cover, upper-left photo atop the Kornbluh-LeoGrande book depicts the April, 1959 handshake between Fidel Castro and Vice President Richard "I am not a crook" Nixon. Castro had been brought to the U. S. for 12 days that soon after the revolutionary victory over the Batista-Mafia dictatorship because Celia Sanchez had been promised that the Eisenhower administration was ready to make "a long-term peace with Cuba." That was a lie, of course. It was Nixon who informed Fidel that he would be overthrown by the U.S.-backed Cuban exiles "within a matter of weeks." That effort has indeed been well-supported by the U. S. government, not only for a matter of weeks but for a matter of months, years, and decades...and it is ongoing even as President Obama tries to amend what previous Democratic Presidents Kennedy, Carter, and Clinton tried but failed to correct. Mr. Obama will also likely fail, for two reasons: In 2015 the Bush-Rubio-Diaz-Balart extremists are far more powerful than the Nixon-Canosa-Posada extremists were in 1959, and in 2015 this generation of Americans is less intelligent and less courageous than even the generation in the 1950s that didn't utter a whimper when their government teamed with the Mafia to support a vile, cruel Batista dictatorship in Cuba...and, since it was overthrown, has supported a vile, cruel Batistiano-Mafisoi effort to recapture Cuba. As Peter Kornbluh and others repeatedly point out, if Americans didn't care a hoot about Cuban-exile terrorists downing a child-laden civilian airplane, it's a pretty strong indication they don't care a hoot about their democracy, or how it is perceived. If you read and study the Kornbluh-LeoGrande book, or the aforementioned scathing column Kornbluh penned, you will, I think, comprehend why I have concluded that the Cuban Revolution and Revolutionary Cuba say a lot more about the United States than they say about the island of Cuba.
     Ann Louise Bardach's seminal book -- "CUBA CONFIDENTIAL: Love and Vengeance in Miami and Havana" -- remains the best pure documentation of how the most extreme villains from the Batista dictatorship, once they were booted off the island and fled back to Miami, remained supported by the villainous right-wingers high-up in the U. S. government. Those villains hooked back up with hundreds of millions of dollars siphoned out of Cuba and they still had criminal enterprises such as the drug trade in Miami. But, even to their surprise, they didn't have to use their money and resources in their insatiable desire to recapture Cuba because they had the support of the U. S. Treasury, the U. S. CIA, the U. S. Military, and, most of all, they had the acquiescence of an unpatriotic generation of American citizens. Therefore, anything -- the Bay of Pigs attack, the terrorist bombing of Cubana Flight 455, incessant car-and-hotel bombings, etc. -- were openly available and tax-supported without drawing a whimper from American citizens. That milieu persists to this day, to the chagrin of good people like President Obama and to the delight of benefactors such as Bush and Rubio. But the background you need to put that into perspective is two-fold: {1} Peter Kornbluh's documentations of the Bush-Batistiano ties; and {2} Ann Louise Bardach's explanations about how the Havana-to-Miami-to-Washington villains codified a U. S. Cuban policy that shames all democracy-lovers in the U. S. and around the world. 
        This book chronicles an unending litany of terrorism against Cuban civilians. Its "Oral History Of Terrorism Against Cuba" includes the reaction of Cubans still mourning the loss of relatives or friends. It, of course, poignantly mentions the 73 victims of Cubana Flight 455, describing it thusly: "That crime engineered by Orlando Bosch and Luis Posada Carriles, who later found safe haven in Florida." This book also describes what happened to Cubans who survived murderous terrorist acts, such as Nancy Pavon.
       This is Nancy Pavon. When she was 15-years-old Nancy was asleep beside her younger sister in a coastal fishing cabin on the edge of Boca de Sama, Cuba. The aforementioned book and many other documentations reveal that, as Nancy and her sister slept, "gunmen from Florida conducted a murderous shootout from Miami speedboats firing cannon and machine guns mounted atop tripods." Two people were killed and many were wounded, included Nancy and her sister. Nancy says the lower portion of her right leg was blasted away "as if it had been cut by a machete." Because of recurring nerve damage, she has undergone many painful days and numerous operations. She makes speeches thanking Cuba for taking care of and she wonders "If the kind American people will ever consider compensating my government...or even me. We hear the Mafia figures are backed by the U. S. government when they claim their legitimate businesses in Cuba were lost to the revolution. Well, my right leg was legitimate when I turned 15. My dad, a fisherman, had bought me a pair of nice high heels just before the attack, but I never got to wear them." 
       This is 15-year-old Nancy Pavon in a hospital bed in Boca de Sama the day after the lower part of her right leg had been shot off by cannon fire from a large speed boat while she and her sister slept in a coastal fishing cabin. Two great Miami journalists -- Cuban-American Emilio Milian and American Jim DeFede -- were punished and excoriated for maintaining that "Terror against innocent Cubans is still terror." Nancy Pavon is proof of that, and proof that you cannot unring a bell. The 15-year-old girl depicted above lost a leg in a murderous speedboat attack. She is a woman now, a woman with just one leg.
        Nancy Pavon reminds me of Brigadier General Tete Puebla and why Tete, at age 15, was a do-or-die guerrilla fighter against much-better-armed Batista soldiers. At the top of this essay you saw a photo of Tete arriving triumphantly but subdued in Havana in the first week of January, 1959. She wasn't in a celebratory mood that day. She was sad to learn that Rolando Masferrer and other leaders of the Batista regime had fled...mostly to Miami. She was hoping they would stand and fight in Cuba and "not hide behind the skirts of the U. S. government in Miami." Americans are not supposed to know about Tete Puebla, or why the Cuban women who serve under her as border guards today revere her so much. I guess, to most Americans Tete is the bad guy because she fought against U.S.-backed good guys like Rolando Masferrer.
{The photo above was taken by Yaima Garcia Vizcaino on a day Tete's soldiers honored their General} 
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20.6.15

Celia Sanchez's Saddest Days

As She Fueled The Revolution
Reposted on Tuesday 25th, 2021 from June-2015 Posting:
          This photo {Courtesy of AFP/Yamil Lage/Getty Images} shows Cuban girls in Havana this week enjoying their mobile devices. Cuba is opening 35 WI-FI stations in its bid to improve Internet accessibility on the island. In June of 2015 there remain off the island some well-to-do, powerful, self-serving and greedy people who benefit, at least vindictively, from hurting innocent Cubans such as the six girls depicted here. In the past six decades, in my opinion, the person who has done the most to benefit these girls is...Celia Sanchez. That's a conclusion I didn't reach lightly. Permit me to explain.

       September 17, 1958, should have been a happy day for Celia Sanchez because the guerrilla fighter-revolutionary leader most responsible for ending the Batista-Mafia dictatorship in Cuba had known since the decisive Battle of Jigue two months earlier that the Cuban Revolution would triumph. But that day Celia learned that two of her dearest friends -- Clodomira Acosta and Lidia Doce {right} -- had been captured and tortured to death by Batista's dreaded enforcer, Colonel Estevan Ventura Nova. Celia wept the rest of that day and throughout the night after losing her dear friends Clodomira and Lidia, two prominent losses in the bloody female-powered revolution.
        But to put one of Celia Sanchez's saddest days into a proper perspective, one must also comprehend her happiest days, such as the one above -- May 14, 1954. She and her father, Dr. Manuel Sanchez Silveira, had just hiked to one of their favorite spots, known as Mora Cove, high above the city of Pilon in eastern Cuba. Celia -- who was born on May 9, 1920, in the little Cuban town of Media Luna ("Half Moon") -- had just turned 34-years-old. Her father had asked her what he could do to make her birthday "happy." She replied: "I want for you and I, one more time, to spend a day hiking to Mora Cove." And so they did. They had hiked there and camped many times before. But Celia knew, based on her father's age and on her increasingly demanding role in the anti-Batista underground, that the May 14-1954 trek to Mora Cove would be their last one. The above photo at Mora Cove also represented the last full day Celia spent with her beloved father who had encouraged her dangerous anti-Batista activities as underground recruiter and guerrilla fighter.
       As the daughter of a rich doctor...Manuel owned three farms and had been head of the Cuban Medical Association...Celia lavished her time and money on eastern Cuba's peasant children. By 1953, shortly after the Batista-Mafia dictatorship had regained firm control of Cuba for a second time, Celia began to hear that rural peasant girls were being kidnapped and used to lure rich pedophiles to Mafia-run hotel-casinos. That revelation had induced Celia to join the anti-Batista urban underground, at least as a part-time tangential operative, in the nearby cities of Manzanilla, Holguin, Baracoa, Bayamo, and Santiago de Cuba.
      The kidnapping and rape-murder of a ten-year-old peasant girl named Maria Ochoa not only elevated Celia Sanchez into a full-time, do-or-die urban underground participant but also set her on the path to becoming the prime reason the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship was overthrown on the island of Cuba on January 1, 1959. In the year 2015 Americans generally understand the significance of January 1, 1959 when it comes to Cuban-U.S. history but few Americans comprehend the significance or nexus of Celia Sanchez {and little Maria Ochoa} to Cuban-U.S. history or to Cuban-U.S. topicality. Americans are simply not supposed to understand or comprehend such things. The Cuban narrative in the U. S. since 1959 has been tightly controlled by two generations of anti-Castro/anti-Celia exiles from the Batista-Mafia dictatorship. Vilifying Castro became a lucrative, power-grabbing cottage industry in the U. S., first in Miami and Union City -- two prime Mafia strongholds -- and later Washington after the exile extremists aligned solidly and eternally with the Bush political and economic dynasty in the 1980s. Vilifying Celia Sanchez, the child-loving doctor's daughter whose importance to the revolution exceeded Fidel's, was not possible. But pretending she didn't exist or was a non-factor in the Cuban Revolution or Revolutionary Cuba was easily accomplished in the U. S. where Americans got, and still get, their Cuban information from extremist exiles.
     Beginning in January of 1959, the leaders of the ousted Batista-Mafia regime in Cuba regrouped in South Florida and, from that day till this day, they have defined the history of the Cuban Revolution from their viewpoints and standpoints. The photo above shows key Batista Minister Rafael Diaz-Balart in 1958, with the holstered pistol, flanked by the infamous Masferrer brothers, Batista's brutal enforcers. All three in January of 1959 fled to Miami where two of Diaz-Balart's sons became members of the U. S. Congress and to this day remain powerful anti-Castro zealots allowed to dictate Cuban policy in the United States. 
      More than five decades have passed since the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. Thus, a second generation of viciously anti-Castro Cuban exiles -- such as these three current members of the U. S. Congress from Miami: Marco Rubio, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, and Mario Diaz-Balart -- now dictate most of America's Cuban policy as well as most of America's history and media coverage when it comes to Cuba.
         For example, Esteban Ventura Novo {above} was blamed by Celia Sanchez -- and supported by historical accounts -- for the gruesome torture-murders of her friends Clodomira Acosta and Lidia Doce in September of 1958. In the wee hours of January 1, 1959, Ventura was on the very same getaway airplane with Fulgencio Batista that fled to the Dominican Republic, which was ruled by the vicious U.S.-backed dictator Rafael Trujillo. Ventura within a few days had set up his new operation in the sanctuary of Miami. In the ensuing decades, at least five democratic governments in Latin America begged the U. S. to extradite Ventura so be could be put on trial but the good people high-up in the U. S. government, when it came to Cuban issues, were not strong enough to comply. Thus, Ventura lived a long, heralded, protected, and lucrative life in Miami before he had a heart attack and died on May 21, 2001. {You can research or google many sources to learn more about Esteban Ventura Nova, such as the Nov. 26-2004 edition of Bohemia Magazine that featured the man Celia Sanchez called "the typical Miami Batistiano killer." And you need to know who Ventura was to comprehend why September 17, 1954, was Celia Sanchez's saddest day}.
       The above photo was taken by Celia Sanchez in August of 1958, shortly after the rebel victory in the ten-day Battle of Jigue in July of 1948 over Batista's strongest army. That shocking rebel victory alerted Washington that the revolution in Cuba had, as a matter of fact, taken on a serious hue. The lady in the white blouse next to Fidel Castro in this photo is Lidia Doce, who was 48-years-old then but was one of Celia's bravest mountain messengers. The dark-haired lady next to Lidia is Griselda Sanchez, Celia's lookalike sister. After this last journey to bring Celia supplies and information, Lidia returned to her vital anti-Batista urban underground work. But she was soon captured, tortured for days, and then murdered.
   Twenty-two-year-old Clodomira Acosta {above} worked with Lidia Doce in the urban underground activity that was considered the most dangerous endeavors associated with the anti-Batista movement. On September 12, 1958, Lidia and Clodomira were in a Safe House coordinating details with four young urban underground men. But a police-army unit led by Colonel Esteban Ventura Novo, who was tipped off by a paid informer, surrounded the house and captured all six of the rebels. The four young men were beaten and then shot dead in front of the tied-up Lidia and Clodomira. The two women were kept alive so they could be tortured until, hopefully, they divulged the names of others involved in the underground.
      The mutilated bodies of the four assassinated young men were left on public display as a warning to others in the neighborhood not to assist the urban underground led by Celia Sanchez and Frank Pais. So photos of the bodies, such as that of young Fructuoso Rodriguez above, were published on billboards and in Batista-controlled newspapers and magazines. Herbert L. Mathews, the famed New York Times reporter, wrote, "U. S. tax dollars are paying for these atrocities, these photographs? I wonder if Americans care."
        But Ventura, not unexpectedly, had other plans for the two women -- Lidia and Clodomira. They were tortured for four days and nights in an effort to get them to divulge information about the urban underground and its ties to the rebel guerrillas that were then beginning to fight their way westward toward Havana. The torturers soon realized that Lidia and Clodomira, already near death, would die before they would give up one iota of information that would harm Celia Sanchez and the revolution. So Lidia and Clodomira were tied together and attached to a concrete slab by ropes and a chain. In that manner, they were dumped into the ocean and their bodies never recovered. But their work, confirmed by the urban underground, and their fate, confirmed by their captors, have established Lidia and Clodomira as two of the most memorialized martyrs of the Cuban Revolution. Cubans know their names; Americans should.
        By the way, when he was one of Batista's most infamous enforcers in Cuba during the 1950s AND when he lived out the rest of his life in Miami from 1959 till 2001, Estevan Ventura Nova {above} was known for always wearing expensive white suits. For example, his biography at www.latinaamericanstudies.org describes him as "the killer from Havana's Fifth Precinct" and "the white-suited hired assassin." Of course, in Havana and later in Miami Ventura had plenty of money to buy all the white suits he ever wanted.
       On July 30, 1957, 22-year-old schoolteacher Frank Pais -- vital to the anti-Batista underground -- was betrayed by a paid informer and captured at a safe house in Santiago-de-Cuba. One of Batista's brutal enforcers -- Colonel Jose Salas Canizares -- took Frank to a public street in Santiago-de-Cuba and brutally killed him. Notice the pistol near Frank's right hand. It had been placed there by Canizares. A few weeks earlier, Frank's 17-year-old brother Jesus had been brutally murdered just because he was Frank's brother. Children younger than Jesus were routinely murdered as warnings in Batista's Cuba.
         Incredibly brave female marches like this one fueled the nascent Cuban Revolution and eventually doomed Batista. These "Madres Cubanas, Cuban Mothers" carried placards denouncing the murders of their children. The lady in the white jacket in the center of this photo is the mother of William Soler. William and three of his classmates had been tortured, murdered, and their bodies left in an abandoned warehouse as a warning not to actively oppose the Batista brutality and thievery. William Soler's mother, Celia Sanchez, Haydee Santamaria, Vilma Espin, Tete Puebla, Marta Rojas, Lidia Doce, Clodimira Acosta and many other Cuban women didn't heed those warnings. Females, not macho men, keyed the Batista defeat.
             In Cuba today this is the William Soler Pediatric Hospital. If William Soler and his mother are not a part of the U.S.-Cuban history you have been told about for decades, then you have been lied to. 
         To this day in Cuba there are airports, hospitals, etc., named for Frank Pais and Celia Sanchez. And billboards like this one tie them together as the two greatest leaders of the urban underground, the force that eventually defeated the Batista-Mafia dictatorship. Frank Pais died at age 22 making it possible. When Frank was assassinated, there was an even larger Batista bounty on Celia Sanchez's head. If that bounty had ever been collected, the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship would never have been defeated.  
       For sure, Celia Sanchez's revolutionary fire was sparked by the fate of 10-year-old Maria Ochoa and then ignited further by the murders of 22-year-old Clodomira Acosta and 48-year-old Lidia Doce. It was that fire, that fervor, instilled within the delicate frame of the 99-pound doctor's daughter from the little Cuban town of Media Luna that booted the Batistianos, the Mafia, and the United States off the island of Cuba in 1959 and has kept them off for going on six decades. Celia was very shy and quite modest. She wouldn't mind at all that Americans don't know about her nor would she be surprised that the transplanted Batistianos, now through two generations, have chronicled the history of the Cuban Revolution in a fashion to suit their indulgence rather than the facts. So, the saddest days of Celia Sanchez's life were the days she learned the fates of 10-year-old Maria Ochoa, raped to death in a Mafia hotel, and the torture-murders of her dear friends Clodomira Acosta and Lidia Doce. Such tragedies turned the doctor's daughter into history's all-time greatest female revolutionary. Her imprint on Cuba and Latin American is huge.
         As a guerrilla fighter, as the leader of the urban underground along with the murdered young teacher Frank Pais, as the prime recruiter of rebels and supplies, and as the prime anti-Batista decision-maker, Celia Sanchez was the heart and soul of the Cuban Revolution. Fidel Castro, to this very day, is modest and honest enough to say, "No one rivaled Celia as the most important figure in the Revolution." Cuban historian Pedro Alvarez Tabio firmly states: "If Batista had managed to kill Celia Sanchez anytime between 1953 and 1957, there would have been no viable Cuban Revolution, and no revolution for Fidel and Che to join."
        Fidel Castro, after almost two years in a Batista prison and then another two off the island recruiting in the U. S. and Mexico, finally joined Celia Sanchez's revolution in the Sierra Maestra Mountains in December of 1956. In the above photo, that is Fidel inspecting the telescopic rifle that Celia had just given him. From that moment on, each day they fought together, gradually wearing down Batista's best armies.
       At night, side-by-side and often by candlelight, Celia and Fidel planned for the next day's guerrilla warfare against Batista's U.S.-armed soldiers. They were night-owls and indelible soulmates to the end. 
           After the smoke of many battles in 1957 and 1958 had drifted skyward, Celia led Fidel on a triumphant week-long trek from Santiago-de-Cuba to Havana in the first week of January, 1959. This photo was taken on Jan. 4-1959, halfway on that journey. It shows a tired Celia and a subdued Fidel. If Celia looks sad despite the startling triumph, she was. She had stayed in radio contact with the advance unit led by Camilo Cienfuegos and Che Guevara, hoping they could tell her that the leaders of the Batista-Mafia regime were still in Havana ready to defend their dictatorship. At this stop on January 4th, Celia had just been told by Camilo that, "They all ran, Celia. They had getaway boats, ships, airplanes standing by when we took Santa Clara. Then they fled...to Miami, the Dominican...anywhere but Cuba." A few months later Camilo told Bohemia Magazine of Celia's acute disappointment when he told her the Batista leaders had all fled. He said, "Celia damned the bastards for fleeing but when she calmed down she said, 'I knew they would do what cowards do, and that is to hook back up will all the money they have siphoned on this island.' Celia was hoping against hope they would stand and fight. She wanted the chance to make the killers pay. She knew their names. One night in the Sierra I heard her rattle off the twelve names she wanted to settle with." Indeed, history has recorded that the top 21 Batista leaders each had more than a million dollars in 1950s money stashed in numbered Swiss bank accounts, and it was presumed they each had stashed far more than that in Mafia-connected banks in Miami, Florida, and Union City, New Jersey. That is confirmed by many sources, including the best online chronological history of Cuba, which is Jerry A. Sierra's historyofcuba.com. Remnants of that siphoned loot, undoubtedly, have fueled tons of anti-Castro zealotry in the U. S. for two generations since 1959 and in 2015 it still fights President Barack Obama's plans to normalize relations with the island.
           The best singular source of information today regarding Celia Sanchez, Fidel Castro, and the Cuban Revolution is Marta Rojas. In the photo above that is Marta introducing Fidel Castro in December of 1959 for his very first televised speech to the nation. As a young and trusted journalist in Batista's Cuba, Marta had access to Fidel during his prison years -- 1953 till 1955. Unbeknownst to Batista, Marta worked for Celia Sanchez and the urban underground. She carried notes from Fidel, destined for Celia, out of the prison in her bra; in the same manner, notes from Celia reached Fidel in his cell. Later, in November of 1956 Fidel's contact with Celia from Mexico arranged the exact spot she and a force of rebels would be waiting for his arrival on the old yacht Granma with 81 other men. The over-loaded yacht was sinking before reaching the destination, resulting in an ambush that killed all but 17 of the men, but the survivors included the Castro brothers Fidel and Raul as well as Camilo Cienfuegos and Che Guevara. It was then that Fidel first laid eyes on Celia. As he nears his 89th birthday on August 13th, he still worships the ground she walked on. 
           Marta Rojas was born in 1928 in Santiago de Cuba. U. S. journalists desiring facts about Fidel Castro, Celia Sanchez, and the revolution ask Marta. Her vivid memories, often buttressed with photos and documents, include visits from Celia, such as late at night when Marta was working at the Granma newspaper or Bohemia magazine. Marta also emerged as one of Cuba's greatest authors and novelists.
         In Revolutionary Cuba, till she died of cancer at age 59 on January 11, 1980, Celia Sanchez was the prime decision-maker in Cuba, with the full concurrence of Fidel Castro. Not once did he ever overrule her, even if he disagreed with her decisions. It was Celia who set the parameters that have, against overwhelming odds, sustained revolutionary rule on the island for all these decades. In 1959, and twice in the 1960s, she established this mantra: "The Batistianos will never regain control of Cuba as long as I live or as long as Fidel lives." Considering the odds, no one believed her then. But they do now.
            Fidel Castro is unwell as he approaches his 89th birthday on August 13, 2015. But he is still alive and, thus, so is Celia Sanchez's proclamation. Till his last moments, his fondest revolutionary memories will revolve around Celia. To him, she will always be "The beautiful flower of the Cuban Revolution."
          Americans to this day are not supposed to comprehend the historical significance of Celia Sanchez. That would mitigate against the Cuban narrative in the U. S. that has been dictated by the remnants of the Batista dictatorship. But the best historians know her. More importantly, Cubans on the island know her, especially an old man named Fidel who was beside her day and night from 1957 till she died in 1980. 
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cubaninsider: "The Country That Raped Me" (A True Story)

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