19.9.12

Cuba Inspired Empowerment of Latino Women

The Cuban Revolution's Primary Success
           Dr. Vanda Pignato [above left] was a very important visitor in Havana today.
         Dr. Vanda Pignato, to put it mildly, is a very interesting lady. For one thing, she is one of the planets most vociferous proponents of the Cuban Revolution, which she credits with inspiring two generations of Latin American women to "fully realize that we have enormous power far beyond the bedroom. So, it is up to us to use it or abuse it." Dr. Pignato, as you might imagine, has chosen to use it, not abuse it. She is today the powerful and very energetic First Lady of El Salvador.
       Dr. Pignato's husband, 52-year-old Mauricio Funes, was inaugurated as the democratically elected President of El Salvador on June 1, 2009. On that very day, in keeping a promise he had made to his rather influential wife, President Fumes signed an order that resumed full diplomatic relations with Cuba. For the previous five [often very bloody] decades, El Salvador's right-wing leaders had followed U. S. dictates, refusing to have official relations with Cuba. So today [Sept. 19, 2012] in Havana, Dr. Pignato not only represented El Salvador as First Lady but also as her country's very friendly diplomat. She also represents a regional transformation. 
        Dr. Vanda Pignato, shown above with four other prominent female wheelers-and-dealers in Latin America, has honored the Cuban Revolution and her gender as El Salvador's First Lady. Her prime focus has been fiercely devoted to improving the lives of the poor, especially the women and children in her country and the region. 
         Dr. Vanda Pignato of El Salvador [abovewas presented the 2011 Americas Award at the Renaissance Jaragua Hotel in Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic. It was in recognition of her stellar work on behalf of women and children in Latin America, with the voting conducted by the United Nations Institute for Training and Research. 
Dr. Vanda Pignato above is kissing her son Gabriel.
         America's First lady, Michelle Obama, is a great admirer of El Salvador's first lady, Dr. Vanda Pignato.
        Dr. Vando Pignato's inspiration to make a difference in the world came from Cuba's three incomparable female revolutionaries -- Vilma Espin, Celia Sanchez, and Haydee Santamaria [left to right above].
        Three exceedingly important Latin American nations -- Brazil, Argentina, and Chile -- have recently democratically elected female Presidents, and all three have acknowledged that they were inspired by Cuba's three famed female fighters and revolutionary leaders. Hopefully, more nations will continue the trend because female leaders are generally less greedy than men and far less inclined to send young people to fight endless wars, and thus progressive Western nations like Germany and Australia have better leaders today than the males that dominated their past. Dr. Vanda Pignato herself is prime presidential material and if she reaches that plateau she will continue to thank Cuban women who, beginning in 1952, began the toppling not only of the brutal Batista/Mafia dictatorship in Cuba but also the puncturing of the long-held machismo dominance throughout the Caribbean and Latin America.
      Women guerrilla fighters, as shown above, deserved to be the first rebel soldiers to take control of Havana in the first week of January, 1959, because these same women and their daughters were the first to take to the streets and denounce the brutality of the Batista/Mafia regime that particularly preyed on their children.
        The Cuban Revolution was the first in history to create all-female fighting units and a half century later they are still prime defenders of Revolutionary Cuba.
        The origin of the Cuban Revolution was stamped by Cuban women who took to the streets to denounce the Batista-Mafia dictatorship that, at the time, was considered invincible because it was supported by the world's superpower, the United States. The above march, in fact, emboldened and educated a young lawyer named Fidel Castro regarding the power, the bravery, and the fury of Cuban women.
       The most emphatic and the less surreptitious revolts in Latin America have been led by brave, outraged, upfront, unmasked women, with the precedent-setting 1950s Cuban Revolution at the forefront. If not for Cuban women, the Batistiano-Mafia control of Cuba would undoubtedly still exist to this day and, moreover, without them there would have been no model for other women to follow. Most male-oriented revolts hid behind ribbons of lies, such as, "We killed all those peasants because they threatened the region," instead of the truth, which usually was, "We killed all those peasants so we could steal their resources." Latin American female revolts were more honest and unflinchingly precise: "We will fight to the death to protect or to avenge our children." Ninos and bebes, not money and power, fueled female revolts.
        The biggest mistakes the Batista regime made in Cuba were infamous murders of Cuban children and then underestimating the reaction of their mothers.
       That's why females, like Celia Sanchez [above], were the best guerrilla fighters in Cuba's Revolutionary War, although that fact is dismissed by the machismo-leaning losers who find it preferable to blame their defeat on the more macho, and more easily pilloried, Fidel Castro.
          And that's why females, like Celia Sanchez [above], were the bravest and the most level-headed decision-makers in Cuba's Revolutionary War, although that fact, too, is dismissed by the machismo-leaning losers.
       The biggest and most decisive contribution Fidel Castro made to the Cuban Revolution was his recognition that Cuban women, half of the island's population, were the prime victims of the Batista-Mafia dictatorship. Moreover, he believed, if afforded the opportunity, that feminine half of the population could turn the tide in the revolutionary war. That judgment was both unique and astute, and it will stand as the cornerstone of the Fidel Castro legacy. A young Fidel is shown above consoling two of those brutalized Cuban women -- Melba Hernandez and Haydee Santamaria. Melba and Haydee, of course, would later become fierce guerrilla fighters in the Revolutionary War.
      Melba Hernandez [above] to this day remains a staunch supporter of Revolutionary Cuba. If you ask her why, her reply will be, "If the alternative is Batista and the Mafia, there is, you know, no alternative." Ask her how, against all odds, she and the other rebels won, she will say, "We were the most motivated. That  proves, I guess, that money is not in all cases the greatest motivator."  Ask her how, against all odds, Revolutionary Cuba has survived all these decades and her answer will be, "Cubana Flight 455 and all the other motivations Miami has provided us."
        Indeed, two generations of Cubans on the island, beginning on Oct. 6, 1976 [above], have been motivated by the terrorist bombing of Cubana Flight 455.
        Liaena Hernandez, once all the nuances of Revolutionary Cuba are analyzed and then sifted through multiple lenses [including Marco Rubio's], is a fairly good bet to one day become the democractically elected President of Cuba. That's her goal and back in June a real Cuban insider, Fidel Castro, told his son Alex: "Let her know she has my blessing and my hope." That blessing and that hope, as well as that speck of clairvoyance, still has meaning on the island of Cuba.
       At age twenty-two, Liaena Hernandez already has a strong political voice in Cuba as an elected member of the National Assembly. Her influence among the island's youth seems to grow with each passing day. And that's the faction that will predicate Cuba's future path. If it's a peaceful march to democracy, Liaena will be content to wear pretty dresses, like the one above. But if it's a revolutionary path that would be necessary to defend the island against outside forces, Liaena still keeps her uniform handy, like in the photo above the podium photo. It's that spirit, rationale, and determination that makes her attractive to growing legions of youthful followers, and also attracted the attention and approval of the island's most famous old rebel who -- long, long ago -- took full advantage of Batista's most glaring mistake. And so, that's where we are today: The old rebel is very sick and 86-years-old; Liaena Hernandez is very healthy and 22-years-old. The torch will soon be passed...to her or someone like her if the much-maligned island is fortunate.   
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14.9.12

Photos That Define Today's Cuba

And, of course, America Too
         The island of Cuba is a prime location for bird watchers. The little guy above is a Cuban tody. The adults are always red, white, green, and yellow. The current edition of Birds and Blooms magazine raves about the tiny tody's vocarious appetite. An expert team of birders tallied between 924 and 1,596 insects one tody ate in one day!
     England's major newspaper, The Guardian, this week featured a huge pictorial highlighting the first day of the new school term for Cuban children. The photographer was Ramon Espinosa. In the photo above a mother watches her little girl exuding a huge yawn as they await entry into the school.
       As their mothers anxiously observe, the two little girls above are mounting the stairs leading to their classroom.
        In the above photo, a mother and aunt console a little boy who is not quite ready to venture all alone into the vast unknown -- his first day in the first grade.
        The third-grader above is all dressed for his first day back at school as his dutiful Cuban father makes sure his son brushes his teeth before embarking on the big day. All of which, unfortunately, is a reminder of the huge (and unnecessary) divide between Cubans on the island and Cuban exiles in Miami..........................
         "Vamos a Cuba," the children's book depicted above, was banned [and removed from 34 schools) by the Miami-Dade County School Board, apparently because it showed Cuban children on the island actually smiling.  Americans, it seems, are not supposed to know that children on the island actually smile and, in fact, are actually loved. Of course, neither the ACLU nor the U. S. government mounted a defense of the little book, which is nothing more than one in a respected series of non-political children's books that introduce children in one country to those in a foreign country.
          The London-based BBC, the world's most renowned news organization, this week used the above photo to illustrate a long article-and-video presentation stressing that Cuba is the one nation in the Caribbean with a "zero tolerance" for illegal drugs. Sara Rainsford was the reporter and producer. The BBC video revealed how the Cuban Coast Guard is the world's most diligent at both capturing drug-runners and then disposing of the drugs in furnaces while also taking possession of some really nice speed boats that then become efficient anti-drug tools.
       Sara Rainsford and her BBC cameramen followed Yoandrys Gonzalez Garcia [above] on one of his typical days of battling illegal drug activity in Cuban waters. She began the article and video with these words: "The golden beaches of Cayo Cruz lie at the long path through a nature reserve. It is an idyllic stretch of Cuba's northern coast but this is key territory in the fight against international drug trafficking. Cuba sits between the world's major narcotics producers in South America and the biggest market for those drugs, the United States." [The report can be found at www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-19538588]
                                                            
       The BBC's Sara Rainsford visited notorious drug-trafficker Boris Adolfo Busto [above] at Havana's Condesa Prison where he and dozens of other renowned traffickers are serving long prison sentences. Busto admitted that Cuban waters should be avoided by his compatriots still plying the drug trade.
        In a region notorious for drug-trafficking and the resultant plague of vicious criminals, Cuba stands out as a success story. Rainsford explained that Cuba routinely cooperates with the U. S. Coast Guard in its efforts to deter the drug cartels that have discovered the perils of using Cuban waters to transit their illegal drugs to their huge customer-base in the United States. The BBC report revealed why Cuba has virtually no drug or crime problem, something that the U. S. and its territories (Puerto Rico, for example) should, perhaps, aspire to. If Cuban forces don't catch traffickers in its own waters, it quickly alerts the U. S. Coast Guard to commence the chase. Such revelations regularly appear in the BBC but rarely in the U. S. news media because the BBC exercises its freedom to present positive as well as negative views of the island, whichever is considered both warranted and newsworthy. The BBC report stated: "Cuba has called for a formal co-operation agreement with the U. S. to help stamp out smuggling in both directions." Unofficially, the U. S. lauds Cuba for its cooperation in fighting drug trafficking but, in deference to radical Cuban exiles, refrains from publicly making such declarations. The BBC report also stated that European nations, recognizing Cuba's anti-drug diligence, not only help fund it but try to learn from it. The U. S. news media simply does not report such Cuban positives.
           Meanwhile, here's another view of the Cuban tody, one of the world's most beautiful and most useful little birds. He is a mortal enemy of mosquitoes and other harmful insects while possessing looks, expertise, and grace that fascinates bird watchers. The tody is found only in Cuba and has never considered fleeing to South Florida. Yet, even the U. S. media gives him positive coverage.
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29.8.12

Time for Truer Cuban Revolutionary History

A More Unbiased Critique Is Needed
           Any unbiased and competent historian could easily reach the conclusion that the two young Cubans above -- Frank Pais on the left and Celia Sanchez on the right -- were/are the two most important figures in the historic, ongoing Cuban Revolution.
           The more biased and less competent historians will, undoubtedly, continue to project and dissect the myth that Fidel Castro and Che Guevara were/are the most important figures of the Cuban Revolution. The fact that they are wrong seems not to factor into the equation but I believe it should, especially at this propitious time.
           Fidel Castro has passed his 86th birthday and heads into the fall of 2012 barely clinging to life. Quite mindful of history and his legacy, and somewhat of an authority on the Cuban Revolution, he has long maintained to intimates that Celia Sanchez was/is the most important figure in the Cuban Revolutionary hierarchy. It is also known that he would not disagree with the notion that Frank Pais also should rate with her in the Top Two spots. When discussing that topic recently, he lamented, "It has been said that the winners of revolutionary conflicts get to write its history. But it's clear now that the losers, the ones who fled the Cuban Revolution to a permanent superpower sanctuary, have mostly written the history of the Cuban Revolution. That is why, to many in the Western World, the two people most responsible for its success, Celia and Frank, are rarely even mentioned."  Okay. An old man who would know and who probably realizes that he has nothing more to gain or lose from his legendary spot in the historical perspective is most likely correct -- about the losers, this time, writing the history and about Celia Sanchez and Frank Pais being the Top Two in importance when it comes to the Cuban Revolution. Let's examine his reasoning and start at the beginning -- where Fidel and most historians believe the Cuban Revolution started.
         On July 26, 1953 a band of about 130 rebels, organized and led by Fidel Castro, attacked the Moncada Army Barracks on the edge of Santiago de Cuba, the island's second biggest city located on its eastern end. All of the rebels were either killed or captured. That day young Frank Pais led a successful diversionary attack in the nearby city of Bayamo.
        Fidel Castro [shown above being interrogated] was among those  captured after the ill-fated Moncada attack. He was shortly sentenced to fifteen years in prison. Only two things prevented him from suffering the fate -- torture and execution -- of most rebel prisoners in Batista's Cuba and they were (1) Fidel was the hero and hope of the vast majority of Cubans; and (2) journalists as famed as Herbert L. Mathews of the New York Times kept a close watch on the most notable young rebel prisoner.  But for all intents and purposes, in the summer of 1953, Fidel Castro, except for his stoic reputation, became a non-factor in the fledgling anti-Batista revolution, at least for the next very vital three years. And in any case, no one believed any revolution would ever be a serious threat to the powerful Batista dictatorship that was supported by the world's strongest criminal organization, the Mafia, and by the world's strongest nation, the nearby United States. All three entities wanted to cling to their ownership of the island because, for the greedy few, it was indeed a goldmine.
         But a handsome young school-teacher named Frank Pais [above] picked up the mantle dropped by Fidel. At the time, in the summer of 1953, Frank was 18-years-old (he would not turn 19 until December 7th). With incredible courage Frank ventured from city to city, from farmhouse to farmhouse, creating and recruiting anti-Batista cells. As his successes mounted ever so slowly, Batista put powerful forces, including the infamous and murderous Masferrer Tigers, on Frank's audacious trail. Anyone -- male or female, adult or child -- remotely tied to Frank were rounded up, tortured [to reveal information], and then gruesomely executed.
        In June of 1957 Frank's 17-year-old brother Josue Pais was captured, tortured, and executed. Then his body [above] was left on a street in Santiago de Cuba as a warning to Frank. But Frank worked harder than ever and by now he had urban and rural anti-Batista cells throughout the island, especially in the eastern region far from Havana. Batista increased the soldiers and police assigned to track down Frank. And a huge bounty was put on his head. The bounty led to Frank being betrayed. He was captured at what he thought was a safe-house.  He was tortured to reveal information about his operation and to divulge other rebel names. Frank gave them not one iota of information nor did he beg for his life, angering his captors.
         Frank Pais was then taken to a public street in Santiago de Cuba and murdered, execution-style, on July 30, 1957. Note the cocked pistol [in the above photo] that was placed near Frank's right hand. It was put there to give the impression that Frank died in a shoot-out. Of course, he had been disarmed back at the safe-house where he was captured. Frank -- who was born on December 7, 1934 -- was 22-years-old.
        The Frank Pais funeral cortege [abovefilled the streets of Santiago de Cuba in defiance of the brutal Batista dictatorship. 
       Frank Pais was laid to rest with the July 26 banner [commemorating the Moncada attack as the start of the revolution) across his chest. That day, July 26-1953, when Fidel led the ill-fated Moncada attack, the teenage Frank Pais at that moment was leading a successful diversionary attack in Bayamo, another nearby Cuban city. 
       Above is the tomb in Santiago de Cuba where Frank Pais and his younger brother Josue are buried. At the time of his death, Frank Pais was considered more vital to the revolution than even Fidel Castro because Frank was responsible for the recruitment and organization of the rebels and supplies that awaited Fidel and Che when they entered the fight in the Sierra after their journey from Mexico. 
         So that's why young Frank Pais ranks #2 in the pantheon of Cuban Revolutionary heroes, topped only by a heroine named Celia Sanchez. [Fidel and Che, I believe, round out the Top 8 along with Vilma Espin, Haydee Santamaria, Camilo Cienfuegos, and Raul Castro] So, you ask, what makes Celia Sanchez more important than Fidel Castro and more important even than Frank Pais? First off, from 1953 till Frank's death in July of 1957 Celia was every bit as brave and every bit as successful as Frank in recruiting rebels, supplies, and money that formed the foundation for the incredibly successful revolution. Cuba's top historian, Pedro Alvarez Tabio, has recounted the startling bravery of Celia in carrying out those endeavors. Yes, Batista put the feared Masferrer Tigers on Celia's trail and Tabio as well as fellow rebels have detailed instances when she had to shoot her way to safety. And, of course, Batista put a huge bounty on her head. But they never captured her and no one ever betrayed her. 
     Thus, the great historian Pedro Alvarez Tabio [above] rendered the decisive quote regarding why Celia Sanchez rates above Frank Pais and Fidel Castro on the pantheon of the most important Cuban revolutionaries. Tabio stated: "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." That expert and definitive quotation reminds me of Fidel's recent comment about, in the rare case of the Cuban Revolution, the losers, not the winners, writing its history. He meant the Batista and Mafia exiles from the island who maintained the support of the United States, the world's only superpower and, in regards to Cuba, remain the primary chroniclers of Cuban history, which, in fact, is not exactly the way the Batistianos and the Mafiosos envisioned it and tried there best to construct it. But, you know, the next best thing, I reckon, is to write it...and that they have done, conveniently leaving out or diminishing the roles played by the young school-teacher Frank Pais and the young doctor's daughter Celia Sanchez. Demonizing and vilifying macho men was easier in the reconstruction of history as opposed to admitting that a very young school-teacher and a 99-pound doctor's daughter were the prime reasons they lost.
        Roberto Salas [above], the great photographer, wrote in his book "The Pictorial History of the Cuban Revolution": "Celia Sanchez made all the decisions for Cuba, the big ones and the small ones. When she died of cancer in 1980, we all knew no one could ever replace her." Considering that the highly respected Salas has known Fidel Castro intimately from the 1950s till today, his quote must be tough for the reconstructors of Cuban history to deal with. So, I guess they pretend there is no Roberto Salas, and no such quotation related to the revolution's most formidable icon.
       Marta Rojas [above] was a young reporter who befriended Fidel after the Moncada attack both while he was on trial and in prison and then years later, in December of 1959, she introduced Fidel for his first television address to the nation. She is internationally renowned as a historian, journalist, and author [published by Random House, etc.] When Linda Pressly of the BBC contacted me because she was doing a documentary on Celia Sanchez, I told her via email and phone calls that on her research trip to Cuba she had to talk with Marta Rojas because Marta knows more about Celia Sanchez, Fidel Castro, and the Cuban Revolution than anyone on the planet. In a 2005 email, Marta told me: "Since Celia died of cancer in 1980 Fidel has ruled Cuba only as he precisely perceives Celia would want him to rule it." Considering that the deeply admired Marta Rojas is the world authority on the Cuban Revolution, I imagine the reconstructors of Cuban history pretend there is no Marta Rojas and no such quotation relevant to a female guerrilla fighter her enemies would prefer to forget. 
         That's the young Marta Rojas above, in December of 1959, introducing Fidel Castro for his first television address to the nation. 
        The photo above is the first one ever taken of Fidel Castro and Celia Sanchez together. It was at daybreak on February 3, 1957. He is examining a telescopic rifle that she had just given him. A couple of months earlier she had saved his life when a Batista army ambushed the 82 men debarking from the leaking yacht that had transported them from Mexico to rendezvous with Celia's rebel unit at a pre-arranged beach the old yacht didn't quite reach. All but 17 of the 82 men were killed before Celia's rebels could race to the thicket-plagued beach and beat off the Batista soldiers. In other words, before the names "Fidel" and "Che" would become two of history's most famous names, someone had to save their lives under dire conditions at a lonely, briar-infested beach in southeastern Cuba. That someone also had an historic name. It was Celia.
          Before Fidel Castro ever reached the Sierra Maestro war zone, and before Che Guevara ever set foot on the island of Cuba, Celia Sanchez and her dearest friend Haydee Santamaria were do-or-die guerrilla fighters. In the above photo, Celia on the right and Haydee on the left are taking a cautious break after leading a successful attack on a unit of  Batista soldiers in the foothills of the Sierra Maestra, an attack that netted the rebels two jeeps plus rifles and ammunition.
         With their rifles at the ready, the two female warriors are awaiting the counter-attack after Celia made the decision not to retreat higher into the mountains. About five minutes after this photo was taken [as revealed years later by Haydee Santamaria], the point-man outfitted with binoculars scrambled up to inform Celia: "They have now been reinforced by forty more men who have two jeeps with Gatlings on tripods. They are using two-man machete and saw teams to clear the path for the jeeps. They'll be in rifle range of us in 45 minutes. Do we move higher or do we stand and fight?"
         Without hesitation, Celia replied, "We stand and fight. I can use two more jeeps and two more Gatlings."
            The grainy photo above shows Celia Sanchez and Fidel Castro celebrating the decisive victory of the Revolutionary War -- the ten-day Battle of Jigue in July of 1958. It marked the turning point in the war, when they knew Batista would lose and they would win. The losing Batista commander was Major Jose Quevedo. He and his surviving men were captured. Celia and Fidel gave them cigarettes, food, drinks, and had the wounded soldiers cared for. Quevedo thought he and his men would all be shot because Batista's forces quickly killed all their prisoners. Celia and Fidel told Quevedo's forces to "go home" as soon as they were well enough to travel. History records that Quevedo and his men were so taken aback that they stayed and fought the rest of the war with and for Celia and Fidel. 
          Terrance Cannon's book "Revolutionary Cuba" tells the detailed story of the Battle of Jigue, beginning on Page 92 with these words: "The Battle of Jigue, which lasted for ten days in mid-July (1958), was probably the most important and certainly one of the the most interesting, revealing the complex nature of the war. During it, letters were exchanged, troops on opposite sides shared their food, and a commander changed his allegiance." 
         Cannon then revealed how the out-manned rebels out-fought and out-smarted the superior Batista army and then, after it surrendered, consoled it with "water, food, and cigarettes." Cannon concluded that chapter with this sentence: "Major Quevedo, who remained at the Rebel Army headquarters, deeply influenced by what he had experienced and by his discussions with Fidel, joined the revolutionary forces and convinced several other military units to surrender or defect to the rebel side."
           Terrence Cannon [above] is considered one of the more perceptive authors when it comes to Revolutionary Cuba. He believes the four main reasons the rebels won are: (1) The extreme thievery and brutality of the Batista dictatorship inspired a do-or-die rebellion; (2) the Batistianos wanted to live long enough to spend their loot off the island and recapture the island later, thus they were not the best fighters; (3) Fidel fully utilized the 50% of the island's population, the female portion, that the Batistianos most brutalized and disrespected, and (4) as illustrated by the Battle of Jigue, being less brutal and much nicer, even to enemy soldiers, induced many of Batista's men to defect to the rebel side, shifting the balance of power.  
        Indeed, the Federation of Cuban Women, beginning in January of 1959, became a powerful force on the island and remains so till this day. 
         Women today are the leading professionals on the island of Cuba, in stark contrast to how they were treated in Cuba prior to the revolution.
        The three women depicted above were more important than any three men in the Cuban Revolution and in Revolutionary Cuba. That's Celia Sanchez in the middle flanked on her right by Vilma Espin and on her left by Haydee Santamaria. They were guerrilla fighters during the war and prime decision-makers after their victory.
     And Celia Sanchez rates as the greatest female revolutionary of all-time and edges out Frank Pais and Fidel Castro as the most important figure in the Cuban Revolution. After she led the fight to kick the Batista-Mafia dictatorship off the island, she also provided the grit to keep them off. In April of 1959, and at least three later times, Celia Sanchez proclaimed: "The Batistianos will never regain control of Cuba as long as I live or as long as Fidel lives." No one, with the possible exception of Fidel Castro, believed her then. But they believe her now.
       Celia died of cancer on January 11, 1980 at age 59. So, what will happen to Cuba when the now 86-year-old and very unwell Fidel Castro dies? I don't know. I wish I did. I learned to believe Celia Sanchez's proclamation and I admire its audacity and its prescience as the centerpiece of her remarkable and, yes, incomparable career. But in that proclamation, as in the other phases of her being, she never promised anything beyond her life and Fidel's life. But this I do believe...................
       After Fidel dies, Celia Sanchez disciples -- like the young woman above guarding the Cuban coastline -- will have to rise to the forefront and remain ever vigil. Since 1492, when Columbus discovered it, Cuba has been coveted by one imperialist power after another as well as international criminal organizations supported by powerful countries. Minus Celia Sanchez and, soon, minus Fidel Castro, the odds clearly favor the outsiders. I believe Celia Sanchez understood that reality. 
        To this day, Cubans on the island sit around and discuss the life of Celia Sanchez, as the group above is doing in front of her native home in the town of Media Luna. But to this day, Americans are not supposed to know who she was or what she did although who she was and what she did massively affected America's history and still significantly colors America's image. And all that, I believe, is why a very old and frail man in Cuba recently lamented that, in regards to the Cuban Revolution, the losers, not the winners, have primarily registered its history.
         The above photo was taken by Rosa C. Baez and sent to her Facebook friends on August 30, 2012. The two Cuban girls are enjoying a sunny day in Havana. It's a typical scene that the two million-plus tourists this year have regularly seen in Cuba. Unlike the Havana of the 1950s, and unlike many cities around the world today, the two girls above need not fear crime either in the sunlight or the moonlight in Havana. Some positive offshoots of the Cuban Revolution are reflected in Rosa's photo and, along with any truthful negatives, the Western media has an obligation, I believe, to also present the positives. The smiles, contentment, and beauty apparent in this photo are typical of Havana. The two carefree teenagers above are positives. And, lest we forget, so were the contributions of..................
      Celia Sanchez, the Cuban Revolution's greatest guerrilla fighter and the most important defender of Cuban children in Batista's Cuba and in Revolutionary Cuba.
      The photo above is courtesy of Tracey Eaton and was posted today [Aug. 31-2012] on his superb Along the Malecon Blog, which remains easily the best day-to-day chronicler of what is happening in Cuba and about Cuba. This photo depicts a typical daily happening on the island; the girl is jumping off a pier at Puerto Esperanza, which is north of Vinales.             
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cubaninsider: "The Country That Raped Me" (A True Story)

cubaninsider: "The Country That Raped Me" (A True Story) : Note : This particular essay on  Ana Margarita Martinez  was first ...