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July 26th: History absolved him. Now what?

By Saul Landau

Televised contemporary events marginalize the role of history. TV
broadcasts death from Lebanon, Gaza and Israel, but paid scant
attention to the 53rd anniversary of Cuba's revolutionary beginning.
On July 26, 1953, Fidel Castro led 150-plus men to capture the Moncada
Barracks in Santiago de Cuba. This act of nationalist voluntarism
failed. The revolutionaries had hoped the heroic act would catalyze an
island-wide uprising. In January 1959, however, Fidel's guerrilleros
took control of the island.

As Cubans celebrated the 53^rd anniversary of the Moncada attack, they
again confronted Fidel Castro's famous words. "History will absolve
me," he concluded his defense. His accomplishments more than absolve
him. But the age of revolutionary innocence that fostered the Cuban
revolution has ended, as 9/11 dramatized.

Fidel remains a larger than life leader who never relied on TV spots
or political "handlers" to preach his messages to Cubans and millions
of others around the world. People listen because he has something to
say. His agenda - justice, equality, ending poverty, facing the perils
of environmental erosion - retains urgent cogency. Compare his
presentation to the "lite ideas" offered by major power heads of
state!

From the 1960s on, critics have ignored Fidel's noble ideas and
focused  their barbs at Cuba's rationing system and chronic shortages.
The anti-Castroites systematically neglect to compare the island's
life with that of its neighbors, whose health, and living standards
rank far worse. Unlike residents of other South American countries,
post Batista era Cubans did not fear death squads or "disappearances."

Cuba does not have a free press or political parties. But they have
led to problems that Cuba faces today - the absence of critical public
dialogue. These deficiencies, however, do not detract from the
accomplishments.

The revolution converted an informal U.S. economic colony (until 1958)
into a proud nation whose citizens danced on the stage of contemporary
history. In the heady days of the 1960s and 70s, students returned
from studying abroad to join those at home in building hospitals,
schools, roads and day care centers. The revolution also gave Cubans
rights only dreamed of by other third world people. Not just education
and health care, the right to a job and pension, but the chance to
change history.

In 1993, at Nelson Mandela's inauguration after the demise of the
apartheid system, the new South African President embraced Fidel
Castro: "You made this possible," he whispered audibly, referring to
the 1987-8 Cuban military defeating of the apartheid South African
forces at the battles of Cuito Cuanavale.

In Africa, from the 1960s through the 1980s, Cuban troops played
historical roles in safeguarding Algerian, Angolan and Ethiopian
integrity. In solidarity, Cuba sent 1,500 soldiers to fight alongside
Syrian troops in the 1973 Middle East War. Cuban doctors and
technicians offered aid to Vietnam in the 1960s and 70s. Cuban doctors
are the first to volunteer to help earthquake and other disaster
victims all over the world. Indeed, Pakistanis will remember the
contribution Cubans made to their recent earthquake victims.

Cuban artists, intellectuals, writers, athletes and scientists have
also engraved their works and feats in the annals of many countries
throughout the world. Cuba has more doctors abroad than the entire
World Health Organization. Its doctor-patient ratio is similar to that
of Beverly Hills.

Other third world revolutions and independence movements in small
nations did not achieve this level of success. After imperial powers
looted their resources and brains for centuries, they "gave" them
independence; in some cases, the colonized won it. The "beneficent"
former rulers allowed them ten or twenty years to "shape up" into
fully operating capitalist "democracies." The imperialists did not
replace stolen resources or share technology; they offered no easy
credit or beneficial terms of trade. The one option: "get IMF'd" as
the late Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley called it.

Cuba's good fortune, having a veritable insurance company ready to
write a long-term development policy, meant the Soviet Union would
provide for infrastructure and the know-how necessary for development.
For the hideous warts of the Soviet system, it worked. Cuban infant
mortality and life expectancy reached first world levels. Cuba has a
literacy rate equal or better than the United States.

The Cuban Revolution was a success. What is it now?

In 1990, the Soviet Union dissolved. Cuba lost its aid given and trade
partner. Its leaders reluctantly compromised - dollarization and
tourism - to survive in a U.S.-sponsored hostile climate. Facing
severe hardships, tens of thousands of Cubans, placed their destinies
in the fate of rafts or, later, in the hands of smugglers, and the
uncertain seas that separate the island from Florida.

Before the USSR's dissolution, however, Cuba had already begun to lose
its revolutionary purity. Heroic guerrilla warriors often turned into
poor heads of ministries and worse politicians. They did not build
democratic transition into their model, by transferring their power in
a compact of trust to the very generations they educated. Instead, the
leaders who enjoyed certain material privileges began to lose close
contact with the people. Paternalism, inherited from centuries of
Spanish culture, also began to erode the spontaneous rapport and
enthusiasm of the early years.

In 1968, while filming Fidel, a PBS documentary, Fidel told me that
"socialist democracy should assure everyone's constant participation
in political activity." This insight is incompatible with fatherly
control - even for people's "own good." Paternal attitudes sapped
initiative from Cuban society. By "giving" people what they needed
without demanding mature responsibility and by maintaining control of
virtually all projects, the Communist Party and government helped
depoliticize the very people they had educated.

The 1959 revolutionaries swore to fulfill the goals of the 1860s and
1890s independence leaders who began the struggle for nationhood.
Fidel expanded their vision into one of communist consciousness: full
political participation for each citizen. In 2006, much of the
population does not respond to calls for communist consciousness, or
participate in meaningful politics.

Instead, visitors to the island hear: "No es facil" (It's not easy), a
preface to a laundry list of complaints. In fact, government salaries
don't allow most Cubans to live at levels to which they've grown
accustomed. The black market, therefore, remains vital.

Cubans consume - not as much as they want - but don't produce goods
that bring in foreign exchange. Both producers and those in the
service sector, however, don't suffer from the kinds of job stress
Americans experience. "Hard work at boring jobs, that's capitalism," a
Cuban friend told me. "Socialism doesn't erase people's energy in
meaningless tasks that don't benefit him or society."

In Cuban socialism's human face, people continue to risk their lives
to leave the island for an uncertain existence. Young Cubans, on and
off the island, demonstrate high levels of culture, except when
political themes arise; their eyes glaze.

After I returned from Vietnam in March, a Cuban friend asked about
that country.

"Prospering," I said.

"Imagine, the Americans bombed them into the Stone Age and they're
prospering. Not a bomb has fallen on Havana and yet we live like we're
in the Stone Age."

This habitual whine should be taken with the proverbial grain of salt.
Cuba's investment in human capital did initially stimulate political
consciousness. Cubans defended their revolution against a relentless
U.S. dirty war, because they understood their cause - and their
enemies. An anti-imperial and a class struggle!

Through the 1970s, Cubans remembered the murderous practices and
invidious capitalism of the pre-revolutionary era. Today, 75 percent
of the population doesn't remember Batista's cruelty or U.S.
neo-colonialism. Lacking vivid memory and without having political
input, they have grown tired of Party jargon and slogans that bear
little relationship to their reality.

This disturbs me because Bush's July Cuba plan calls for the
resumption of U.S. control in the post-Castro era; privatizing its
economy and reshaping its politics structure to make it compatible
with current Administration views of democracy. The United States
would even show Cubans how to manage their schools and farm
efficiently. As of July 2005, Bush had already appointed a transition
coordinator - without even bothering to invade Cuba, as he ordered for
Afghanistan and Iraq.

The "Made in Washington" blueprint shows the mind-altering glue
inherent in imperial memory. In Washington, the policy crowd sticks to
old economic claims on Cuba. The July plan should remind Cubans that
they will lose free education, health and housing and start paying
heavy prices for these services. Cubans should imagine life under
real-estate hungry Miami exiles. How hard and meaningless their
work-lives would become when their labor went to enrich a true
parasite class!

Bush's re-colonization of Cuba plan offends Cubans. But that ugly road
is possible if cynicism deepens on the island. Will Fidel have the
will to wage yet another campaign, a movement for socialist democracy?
A good start premise would be the recognition that educated Cuban
citizens merit trust and thus power to make choices as well as
participate in the policies that guide their nation. It would put
renewed meaning into "patria o muerte!"
--
Jim Devine / "An economist is a surgeon with an excellent scalpel and
a rough-edged lancet, who operates beautifully on the dead and
tortures the living." -- Nicholas Chamfort (1741 - 1794)

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