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The growing evangelical movement throughout Latin America is at the center
of the counter-revolution in that continent, as in Brazil, for example. Now
it's showing its face in Cuba. While completely opposing them, we should
also ask ourselves how it is that these evangelical religious fanatics
could get any sort of base in a country that overthrew capitalism
generations ago. Here's an article from today's SF Chronicle:

Evangelicals mount drive against same-sex marriage

By Andrea Rodriguez

HAVANA — A Cuban government push to legalize same-sex marriage has set off
an unprecedented reaction from the island’s rapidly growing evangelical
churches, whose members are expected to widely reject a state-proposed
constitutional reform in a nationwide referendum this month.

The reform is almost certain to pass by a broad margin of Cuba’s 7 million
voters — language opening the door to same-sex marriage is only one element
of the reform — but the evangelical vote could shave hundreds of thousands
of votes from its victory.

With many pastors promoting “no” votes from the pulpit, the swelling
evangelical rejection of the measure is a novel development for a state
that prides itself on projecting an image of ideological unanimity. Cuban
government-endorsed candidates and proposals typically receive ‘yes’ votes
well above 90 percent in one of last communist nations on earth.

“I can’t vote for something that goes against my principles. It’s sad but
it’s a reality,” said pastor Alida Leon, president of the Evangelical
League of Cuba. Hers is one of a dozen evangelical denominations that are
actively speaking out against the reform.

There are an estimated 100 evangelical denominations active in Cuba, 52
legally registered, and many are taking softer lines against the new
constitution, or staying officially neutral. The same is true for many
Catholic and non-evangelical protestant clergy.

There is no official count of evangelicals in Cuba, whose people have
historically been Catholics and followers of the African religions known as
Yoruba or Santeria. The number of evangelical and non-evangelical
protestants is estimated to total a million people.

Raul Castro handed the presidency last year to Miguel Diaz-Canel, the first
top Cuban leader from outside the Castro family since the revolution. Under
Diaz-Canel, the Cuban government maintains its near-total control of life
on the island but has made a series of concessions to interest groups
including artists, entrepreneurs and evangelicals.

The constitutional reform maintains Cuba’s single-party political system
and centrally planned economy while recognizing private property and small
businesses, which have been part of the island’s economy without formal
legal status for more than a decade.

Andrea Rodriguez is an Associated Press writer.

-- 
*“In politics, abstract terms conceal treachery.” *from "The Black
Jacobins" by C. L. R. James
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