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Black Lives Matter Misses the Point About [Racist] Cuba
The Atlantic ^ | July 17, 2021 | Jorge Felipe Gonzalez

Posted on 07/22/2021 6:09:23 AM PDT by Conservat1

..Cuba’s racial inequalities resurfaced.

Remittances, tourism - government’s most important sources of income. Yet inequality in these arenas is stark. Sixty to 90 percent of white households have some relatives living outside the country; for nonwhite people, numbers are much lower. .. foreign currency coming into Cuba primarily benefits white Cubans. Black Cubans w no relative living abroad destined to work in the low-wage, state-controlled economy; black market; ..many private-sector business owners discriminate against Black job applicants, a prejudice visible in tourism..

..inequality gotten worse. Students.. universities today overwhelmingly white or light-skinned; only 4.8 percent Black or brown.. prison population disproportionately Black. Black neighborhoods .. poorest in Havana. “While 58 percent of white Cubans have incomes under $3,000,”.. in nytimes, “among Afro-Cubans that proportion is as much as 95 percent.”

Although embargo has undoubtedly played a role in the economic woes .. main obstacle to Cuban development, prosperity is government’s model of a state-controlled economy, system in which Cubans cannot materialize their entrepreneurial energy.. a policing regime frequently stops Black Cubans, and in which everyday items are hard to find. ...Havana’s primarily Black neighborhoods, the most neglected in the city, are the epicenters of the largest recent demonstrations.. seen clashes between demonstrators and the police and members of the government posing as civilians. As a result, Black Cubans, along with compatriots of all races, are disproportionately being beaten, brutalized, jailed for protesting.. government is publicly calling them “thugs” and “criminals” in state-controlled media.. Cuban government officially acknowledged death of Diubis Laurencio Tejeda..Black man from La Güinera, died.. confrontation with police...

particularly Black Cubans—are suffering. Cuban judicial system is prosecuting the protesters with sentences of up to 20 years. BLM, of all organizations, should be aware Cubans can’t breathe either. Black Cuban lives also matter...

(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: afrocubans; blm; communism; cuba; racism; racistsquad; socialism

1 posted on 07/22/2021 6:09:23 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1

...exacerbation of racism is the revolution’s inability to accept Afro-Cubans who want to claim a black identity.
Lusane, Clarence (2003). “From Black Cuban to Afro‐Cuban:Researching Race in Cuba”. Souls. 1 (2): 73–79. doi:10.1080/10999949909362164. ISSN 1099-9949.
https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10999949909362164

A barrier for Cuba’s blacks.

New attitudes on once-taboo race questions emerge with a fledgling black movement

Miami Herald Staff Report.
Published: June 20, 2007

HAVANA — Six-foot-two, brown skinned and with semi-curly hair, Denny walked confidently into a government warehouse for a recent job interview. Sitting across from the white manager, he rattled off his qualifications: high school diploma, courses in tourism, hard worker.

They weren’t good enough: He needed his white brother-in-law to vouch for him, Denny recalled.

“Black people tend to do everything bad here,” the manager said.

After Fidel Castro’s revolution triumphed in 1959, he declared that Cuba would be a raceless society, banned separate facilities for blacks and whites and launched a string of free education and health programs for the poor — most of them blacks.

Many blacks people still support Castro, saying that without him they would still be peons in the sugar cane fields. One black Cuban diplomat said he had no hope of an education, and his grandmother no medical care for her glaucoma, until the revolution came along.

A young girl peeks as Cuban schoolchildren practice marching in the Prado, a historic plaza in Old Havana. (Miami Herald staff)

But listen to some blacks, particularly those born after 1959, and the failures of the revolution also become clear.

“Everyone is not equal here,” said Ernesto, 37, as he dodged traffic on a Havana street. Tall and athletically built, he once hoped to be a star soccer player. He now gets by selling used clothing, and said he’s continually hassled by police just because he’s black.

In recent years, a new attitude has been emerging quietly, almost secretly, among Afro-Cubans on what it means to be black in a communist system that maintains ‘‘No hay racismo aquí’’ — there’s no racism here — and tends to brand those who raise the issue of race as enemies of the revolution.

“The absence of the debate on the racial problem already threatens . . . the revolution’s social project,” wrote Esteban Morales Domínguez, a University of Havana professor who is black, in one of his several little-known papers on race since 2005.

In another paper, he noted that “much of the research that has been done on the subject in general has been put away in drawers, endlessly waiting to be published.” Black filmmaker Rigoberto López also broached the sensitive topic in a TV appearance in December, saying that while the revolution had brought about structural changes toward racial equality, “its results do not allow us to affirm that its goals have been achieved in all their dimensions.”

A mural declares ‘Somos Uno’ — We Are One.(Miami Herald staff)

‘A NEW MOMENTUM’

Afro-Cubans familiar with the situation say black and white Cubans also have been establishing a small but growing number of civil rights-type groups. The government has not cracked down on such usually illegal activities, but neither has it officially recognized them.

“There is a new momentum, which the government is surely frightened by,” said Carlos Moore, a Cuban-born expert on race issues now living in Brazil.

In recent years, the Castro government has been on the defensive on the race question. In last year’s book 100 Hours With Fidel by French-Spanish journalist Ignacio Ramonet, Castro admitted that while the revolution had brought progress for women and blacks, discrimination endures.

“Blacks do not live in the best homes; they’re still . . . performing hard jobs, sometimes less-remunerated jobs, and fewer blacks receive family remittances in foreign currency than their white compatriots,” he said.

Still, Castro added: “I am satisfied by what we’re doing to discover causes that, if we don’t fight them vigorously, tend to prolong alienation in successive generations.”

But Castro’s own Communist Party and government fall short on the race front. Only four recognizably black faces sit on the party’s 21- member Political Bureau, and only two sit on the government’s top body, the 39- member Council of Minis- ters.

The highest-ranking black in Cuba is Esteban Lazo, a former party chief in the provinces of Havana and Santiago de Cuba. Lazo was tapped by Castro when he took ill last summer, along with brother Raúl Castro and four others, to help rule Cuba in his absence.

And yet, black faces populate Cuba’s political prisons. Some of the nation’s best known dissidents are black. They include independent librarian Omar Pernét Hernández, mason Orlando Zapata Tamayo and physician Oscar Elias Biscét. The latter was sentenced to 27 years for, among other things, organizing a seminar on Martin Luther King’s non—violent forms of protest.

“Race is the biggest social issue facing Cuba,” said Enrique Patterson, a Cuban-born Miami author who writes extensively about race, and calls this nation’s race problem a “social bomb.”

“If this problem isn’t addressed, Cuba will not be.”
http://web.archive.org/web/20080514135636/http://www.miamiherald.com/multimedia/news/afrolatin/part4/index.html

“Don’t you tell me that there isn’t any [racism], because I have seen it/ don’t tell me that it doesn’t exist, because I have lived it.”
de la Fuente, Alejandro (2011). “The New Afro-Cuban Cultural Movement and the Debate on Race in Contemporary Cuba”. Journal of Latin American Studies. 40 (4): 697–720. doi:10.1017/s0022216x08004720. ISSN 0022-216X

Afro-Cubans | Minority Rights Group

https://minorityrights.org › minorities › afro-cubans

Consequently, large numbers of enslaved Africans continued arriving in Cuba causing the African slave population to grow from about 10-25 per cent in the 18th c ...

The limited statistics available suggest that Afro-Cubans live in the most neglected parts of Cuba’s urban areas, especially in Havana. Of the country’s large prison population, the majority are estimated to be Afro-Cubans. They have also been economically marginalized and in keeping with the colonial tradition of itinerant trading they have had to create their own income–generating opportunities. This is particularly true in the informal sector and in the underground economy that surrounds the tourist industry.
https://minorityrights.org/minorities/afro-cubans/

Cuba acknowledges ‘vestiges’ of racism, launches program to ...
Nov 22, 2019
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-cuba-racism/cuba-acknowledges-vestiges-of-racism-launches-program-to-fight-it-idUSKBN1XX00C

Ending Systemic Racism Is the Revolution Cuba Needs
Afro-Cubans have long been pushed to the margins. The leaders of the post-Castro era must work to change the course of history.

Jan 25, 2020 — Afro-Cubans have long been pushed to the margins. The leaders of the post-Castro era must work to change the course of history...
A recent study looking at inequality in Cuba revealed a segregated society: 70 percent of black and mixed-race Cubans said they didn’t have access to the internet, compared with 25 percent of white Cubans. The racial wealth gap was also vast: While 50 percent of white Cubans had a banking account, only 11 percent of black Cubans said they had one. Moreover, white Cubans received 78 percent of remittances to Cuba, and they controlled 98 percent of private companies.

The discrimination and racism inherited from nearly four centuries of slavery during Spanish colonialism have endured 57 years after the founding of the Cuban Republic in 1902, and have not been resolved in the six decades since the 1959 revolution. A pressing issue for leaders in a post-Castro Cuba will be to keep black people from being pushed to the margins of society. Paving a path forward will require truly understanding the historical conditions that have long excluded Afro-Cubans from political life — whether it was under a representative democracy, authoritarianism or socialism...
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/25/opinion/international-world/ending-systemic-racism-is-the-revolution-cuba-needs.html

Racism in Cuba: banned by law, alive on the streets - France 24
Jul 18, 2020 — Havana (AFP). Six decades on from Cuba’s proclamation of equality and despite three top government officials being black, the Caribbean island nation has made little headway on racism.

“Racism in Cuba is very hypocritical ... No-one says they’re racist, even if they are,” researcher Tomas Fernandez, 79, an author of several books on the subject, told AFP. ...”There’s something that is a burden, it’s very subtle, but it’s a prejudice that keeps going,” said painter Salvador Gonzalez, 71, who exhibits his work in El Callejon de Hamel, a bastion of African heritage in the capital Havana.

Black activist Alexander Holl, 22, says skin color has a “huge influence” on relationships in Cuba.
https://www.france24.com/en/20200718-racism-in-cuba-banned-by-law-alive-on-the-streets

Cuba Loves to Criticize the United States, but the Island Has Its Own Police Racism Problem.

Cuba’s Government Needs to Look Within as It Denounces U.S. Racism

Fidel Castro claimed the revolution eliminated racial discrimination, but it is alive and well.

By Rebecca Bodenheimer

A police officer wearing a face mask stands guard at the Capitol in Havana, on September 1, during a curfew imposed to contain the resurgence of COVID-19. RAMON ESPINOSA/POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

SEPTEMBER 9, 2020, 7:05 AM

Since the Cuban Revolution of 1959, the Cuban government has consistently criticized the United States for failing to address institutionalized racism. During his famed trip to New York in 1960 to attend the United Nations General Assembly meeting, Fidel Castro complained of unfair treatment in a Midtown Manhattan hotel and ended up at the Hotel Theresa in Harlem, meeting with Malcolm X and making no bones about standing with African Americans in their fight for racial equality. Cuba has also famously given refuge to several high-profile Black nationalists sought by the FBI, most famously Assata Shakur (who still lives there) and dozens of Black Panthers, including Huey P. Newton and Eldridge Cleaver.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/09/09/cuba-government-blm-police-racism-black-lives-needs-to-look-within-as-it-denounces-us/


2 posted on 07/22/2021 6:09:56 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1

Heh, there’s no real point that BLM does not miss. It is an almost critical mass collection of evil and stupidity.

Sorry, BLM, but you folks are all talking asshats.


3 posted on 07/22/2021 6:10:57 AM PDT by Da Coyote
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To: Conservat1

Nothing matters to the dims except they got rid of Trump and they can do whatever they want.
They don’t have a honest workable plan so everything goes to crap in short order.
Especially around the world.


4 posted on 07/22/2021 6:19:10 AM PDT by Leep (Save America. Lock down Joe Biden!)
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To: Leep; All
While a cop in the US goes after a perp, white or Black, only when on blacks it hen gets the limelight, as if everything is just about "race." Yet, as it doesn't suit leftists agenda, racism in cruel oppressive anti-ANY -human -rights Cuba is fine with BLM, and AOC blames the US for it's woes.
5 posted on 07/22/2021 6:33:30 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1

Posted on July 17, 2021

Black Lives Matter : Apologists For Cuba’s Discriminatory Failed Communist Dictatorship

BLM praises Cuba’s dictatorship for showing “solidarity with oppressed peoples of African descent.” Failing to recognize that one of Cuba’s revolutionary hero’s Ernesto “Che” Guevara was an Argentine Marxist revolutionary, who was a flaming racist . Cuba has been a horrendous human rights abuser, a notorious persecutor of gays for most of the Communist rule, and has long discriminated against black Cubans in jobs (how many dark-skinned Cubans do you see working at the elite tourist hotels?).

Black Lives Matter has now been officially exposed as nothing more than a Marxist front group – and we hope the dupes on the left that continue to put BLM signs in front of their yards will now take them down.
https://theridgewoodblog.net/black-lives-matter-apologists-for-cubas-discriminatory-failed-communist-dictatorship/


6 posted on 07/22/2021 6:44:00 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1

no they dont

they are marxists

race is just a revolutionary tool to them


7 posted on 07/22/2021 7:42:32 AM PDT by joshua c (Dump the LEFT. Cable tv, Big tech, national name brands)
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To: joshua c

“Race is just a revolutionary tool to them”

___

!!!


8 posted on 07/22/2021 7:57:13 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1
Funny how socialist economies can't survive without capitalism being next door, so to speak. During it's entire existence the Soviet Union primarily depended on buying wheat from The United States.

It would almost always resell the same wheat for dollars
because the ruble was worthless on the international market. Cuba's economy tanked when the Soviet Union fell apart and if it weren't for remittances from Cuban expats and tourism Cubans would be eating each other.

Socialism has been a failure everywhere it's been implemented. A murderous failure.

I hate with a passion self described Marxists, Communists , socialists and other totalitarian scum who live in the greatest country in the world and prattle on, who terrorize, burn and destroy all in the name of "Socialism'' and would never dare to live in the crap hole systems they champion.

9 posted on 07/22/2021 10:58:31 AM PDT by jmacusa (America. Founded by geniuses . Now governed by idiots.)
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