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Author Topic: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.  (Read 127430 times)

Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #60 on: November 16, 2008, 06:40:39 AM »
Without legs with trophy
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,16,2008


Days ago, when I found out that Generation Y was a finalist in the Bitacoras.com awards, I wrote a letter to the organizers of the event.  I learned today of the prize awarded by the jury and the lines written that Tuesday are appropriate to celebrate the triumph:

Make it or don’t make it, win or don’t win, I feel like the disabled runner that manages to reach the finish line, even if he does it after everyone has passed the flag.  In my case, the key is not in my coming out ahead, but rather in overcoming my own demons who have told me many times, “Leave the race,” “It’s not worth the pain,” “You can’t do anything.”

Well yes friends, we have moved the line.  I crawling, you giving encouragement and some offering insults as incentives.  It’s too bad that the stadium is half empty, missing those who cannot access the site from within Cuba.  To them, so that they will undertake their own marathons, this prize is dedicated.

* Clearly I do not mean the disabled who are competing in the Paralympic Games, but others who have all their limbs available to them.

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The boats
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,13,2008
To relax a little bit, because I see that the blog is sliding down the slippery slope of drama, I am posting a video clip made by Orlando Luis Pardo.  This is a song by the Polish singer-songwriter Vladimir Vysotsky.  A member of Porno para Ricardo, Ciro Garcia, made a version that, coupled with the photographs of Orlando, makes you want to slit your wrists.  Please do not bleed all over the blog.

A hug to all and enjoy the theme, “The boats.”  If you want to know more about Ciro’s project, visit the site of La Babosa Azul [The Blue Fool].




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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #61 on: November 17, 2008, 06:13:36 AM »
Numantia
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,16,2008


A little pioneer shouts slogans at school in the morning.  Her face reddens and a vein bulges in her forehead, reinforcing her shrieks.  Among the phrases she repeats is a dreadful metaphor:  “We will see the island will sink into the sea first, rather than give up the glory we have lived.”  On a Committee for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR) mural, a few words take up the entire top:  “If I advance follow me, if I pause push me, if I retreat kill me.”  The newspaper this Saturday demonstrated the same thing, when the Maximum Leader published one of his Reflections:  “Following lives laid down and so much sacrifice defending sovereignty and justice, one cannot offer Cuba the other shore of capitalism.”

Numantia returns to my memory and I refuse the scaremongering it implies.  I thought of this story once, when a girl ran to the shelter as the sirens announced an invasion that never came.  The insular shelf will not collapse—I regret to give the heralds of the debacle this news—because we have one or another government, a system of this kind or that.  The trees will not turn pale, the stones that saw the indigenous people die out will not change places, and probably the sea itself will not notice.  So please, do not frighten me with cataclysms and apocalypses.  I’m much too old for that now.

Everything that will happen is already happening.  Numantia will only happen in the minds of some, and in those of others the future will be much longer than what is left behind.

Translator’s note:
Numantia, a town in what is now Spain, was conquered and destroyed by the Romans in 133 BC.

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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #62 on: November 18, 2008, 06:37:57 AM »
It’s not me
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,18,2008


A boy approaches me to ask if I am “Yoani.”  He extends a sweaty and cold hand to me.  I’m afraid that he’s coming to give me the first slap, but he only points, “Hopefully you are real.  Because now we’ve seen everything!”  He makes me want to follow him and show him my navel.  There is no bigger proof that one exists, that one is “real,” than a navel knotted in the abdomen.  He’s leaving and with the full weight his doubt and of his faith in me—this last is what frightens me the most.  He didn’t give me time to warn him that I don’t intend to found any creed, certainly his uncertainties left me more relieved than his possible convictions.

If the boy with the cold hand and the short sentences reads this post, I want to tell you that I can’t save you.  It’s not me whom he should burden with the responsibility that we should take together.  I too have seen everything… people who applaud and then betray; hands that slap on the back and in the end push away; cries of “Viva” that are transformed into whispers of hate… However, I don’t have to know who he is to be sure that we share doubts, dreams and guilt.

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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #63 on: November 19, 2008, 05:48:02 PM »
Havana winter
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,19,2008


The sky is not always that precious blue of the tourist postcards.  Thank goodness, because I can not imagine a year with scorching sun without the pause of these weeks that bring cold fronts.  Since Monday a cloud has come, bringing London to Havana and severe flooding in the east of the country.  The streets are remarkably empty at night because the cold scares away the usual denizens of the parks and sidewalks.  Boarding a crowded bus is no longer the fastest way to acquire pests in one’s armpits, rather the entrance to a warm and friendly space.  With the low temperatures, humor and tolerance improve; for the old, their bones ache and hot chocolate becomes a recurring hallucination.  December is so close that it’s not worth starting anything, say those who have postponed projects throughout the year.  The time to spend more is coming, presaging that pockets will be especially empty this Christmas.  However, the most sensitive topic is that of coats and blankets, the little protection from the damp cold that enters through the gaps in the windows.

I see people on the street with sweaters and thick, padded synthetic coats, but none of these garments could be purchased with the wages they earn from their work.  One has a leather coat sent to him by a sister who lives in New York and the striped one was given to the girl as a gift from a tourist passing through the city.  A young boy has a waterproof raincoat inherited from his brother, who in turn got it from an uncle who confiscates luggage at customs.  The old woman crossing the street is careful of her half-wool coat, which she got from a neighbor in exchange for a  blender.  Only the guard at the hotel boasts a denim jacket, with shiny new buttons.

I like the winter and the affability it awakens in people, but I know that for many it’s the season of certain worries and shame.  Of not being able to sleep on the park bench, where the rest of the year one gentleman with raggedy clothes has his only home.  Of children mocked in school for wearing a coat purchased during the rationing of the 1980s.  The cold emphasizes the differences between those who can close the door and those who don’t have a house with windows that shut.  It highlights the contrast between those with a long-sleeved garment and those who wear two sweaters because they don’t have a coat.   Everything depends on the thermometer and its not dropping another ten degrees, because the housing and clothes of the poor will not withstand a single snowflake.

Until the 27th of this month, each new post will carry a reminder of the online voting for the Bobs awards. Remember that Generation Y is competing in three categories: Best Weblog, Reporters Without Borders Special Award and Best Blog in Spanish. Here is the link:
The BOBs: CLICK HERE TO VOTE!!



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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #64 on: November 20, 2008, 09:26:40 PM »
Matrimony without patrimony
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,20,2008


Two of my friends were married in the nineties so that they could buy the cake and beer that the ration market allowed for weddings.  They were not a couple and had never exchanged more than a hug, but reselling the drinks and the sugary desert produced enough money to live for several months, each in his own place.  Like them, a lot of people signed the marriage record in hopes of the desired products and the three honeymoon nights in a hotel, listed at great price on the black market.

With these examples around me, I took seriously the signing of the marriage contract.  I lived for a lot of years under a consensual union without a trace of paper.  Likewise, many of my acquaintances cohabit with a partner with whom they have never stepped foot in a notary’s office or gotten a certificate of their union.  It’s not just a postmodern or irreverent trend, but a loss of the sense of the sanctity of marriage.  Among the reasons for this fading sense is the absence of a family patrimony to be preserved with the signing of a contract.  What difference would it make to a child to have legally married parents if they lack any assets for him to inherit, or any property that needs the oversight of laws.

Those of us under forty today, come to romantic relationships with the property that can be contained within our own epidermis.  Because when the idyll comes to an end, the belongings—frequently—fit in a suitcase.  With the love nest located in the parents’ house and with a salary that’s not enough to buy any durable or transferable goods, the signed paper and legal stamp that attest to the marriage are of little importance.

Until the 27th of this month, each new post will carry a reminder of the online voting for the Bobs awards. Remember that Generation Y is competing in three categories: Best Weblog, Reporters Without Borders Special Award and Best Blog in Spanish. Here is the link:
The BOBs: CLICK HERE TO VOTE!!



Translator’s note: You can leave a comment on the BOBs Awards website, which strengthens your vote. The final choices will be made by the judges, not by votes alone. So tell them WHY Yoani’s blog is the best!!!! Thank you! (Yes, sorry, how to leave a comment is not obvious.  Go to any of the category pages and go to Yoani’s blog and click on ‘details’.  Then you will see in the middle of the page, under the blog picture and above the ratings, in light blue type, “Rate this”.  Click on that and the comment screen will appear.  Your comment will show up in every category she’s competing in, so you only need to leave it once.)

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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #65 on: November 22, 2008, 10:09:52 AM »
Last week we were talking about ants, people and the small traditions that sustain us day to day.  Well, a few meters from my house I found this billboard with the same metaphor of the insects.  Unlike the anthill imagined by me—where everyone has a place—here there is a creature apart.  It frightens me to think that the lonely little ant represents the intellectual, or people—like me—who are informal workers because we have no licenses to be Spanish teachers or other worthy occupations.  The tiny segregated one could refer to those who receive remittances and see no sense in working for a salary more symbolic than useful.   On the left, below this billboard, you could see a woman who sells coffee at the corner of my house, who gets up at five to brew it and plays hide-and-seek with the police. The young man who left his studies and sews shoes at the workshop of his cousin, though the Sector Head considers him an habitual vagrant, a derelict, who refuses a job commensurate with his qualifications because he’s not politically correct.  Many could be the tiny ant who carries no leaves in his hands… because the others are not only the workers, but also the authorities, the group of those who never get out of line.


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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #66 on: November 24, 2008, 06:16:58 AM »
not a lot of celebrating goin on there . geeze


Nov
 
24
 
2008
  Against forgetting
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y


Noon Saturday found us on the highway heading to Pinar del Río.   The grass at the side of the road had already grown, but the leafless palms recalled the disaster that happened just two months ago.  Life is slower, as if Ike and Gustav had reimposed the nineteenth century image these fields once had.  If not for an old tractor here or an electrical tower there, you would think you had traveled two centuries back in time.  Some houses had new roofs of asbestos cement, which will be food for the winds of the next hurricane.

The two backpacks of medicine and clothes we’d gathered among friends turn out to be very limited for all the needs facing us.  Food is scarce, especially, and ironically, that which comes from the furrows.  Even the children, who normally pick out the pieces of cucumber from their plates, miss the peculiar flavor of this vegetable.  The land delays its healing.  The small independent farmer has seen increased pressure to sell his crop to the State rather than in the free markets, where he could reap greater profits.  This generates disinterest in production, and empty stalls at the points of sale.  Again, as in those years of adversity in the nineties, it’s necessary to leave the city to buy yucca, onions or a piece of pork.

Between Havana and Pinar del Río there are two police checkpoints choosing cars at random to verify no one is trafficking in milk, cheese or food.  Like the sophisticated medical devices that look inside the human body, people have baptized these checkpoints “CAT scans.”  In the stretches of highway without patrols, illegal vendors show their merchandise and hide themselves whenever a vehicle with official plates passes.

Although for the media the news of disaster is fading from view, in the lives of the victims it’s the lead story of every day.  We have to avoid letting our tendency to forget cover up the situation, letting the triumphalism make us believe that everything’s already over, letting the avalanche of positive reports deceive us about the depths of the catastrophe.  I remind everyone that we have to go to the affected areas, deliver aid directly, and record the testimonies there.  The hurricane-force winds are still blowing in the lives of these people and will not diminish because we cover our ears.







Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #67 on: November 25, 2008, 06:33:03 AM »
Nov
 
25
 
2008
  I’d love to choose
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y


For weeks, there are words like “ballot box,” “votes,” and “candidates” that persecute us everywhere.  First there were the elections in the United States and now the issue has been revived with what happened on Sunday in Venezuela.  It’s as if at the end of the year everything conspires to remind us of our condition as non-electors, our limited experience in deciding who leads us.

You become accustomed to not being able to choose what to put in your mouth, under which creed they will educate your children, or to whom to open the door, but that resignation shatters when you see someone else vote.  Because of this it has risen up, these days, the desire to fold the ballot, to push it into the slot and to know that with it goes my stentorian shout that demands: “to choose.”


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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #68 on: November 27, 2008, 07:14:31 AM »
Finally the excitement around the BOBs awards comes to an end. We know that Generation Y came in first in the public vote in the Reporters Without Borders category, but we still have to wait for what the jury says. Whatever happens we are going to celebrate it, because we don’t need much of a reason to open a bottle of rum and sprinkle a little over the area for commenting on this blog.  It will be a good time to call a truce between the trolls and the frequent readers, between the Cyber Response Brigades and those who actually come to join in the discussion.

Pull up your chairs in front of the screen, from where we will broadcast the ceremony right here. Grab a handful of peanuts and some caramel corn, and don’t miss even a second when they announce the awards. Those of you who’ve already bitten your nails to the quick, try not to chew on your fingers; we’re going to need them for a lot of typing in the days to come.

Before the merriment begins, I want to congratulate all those who win, people—like myself—who have used their blogs to narrate their lives and pose questions. Without the support of the global blogosphere and without the protection belonging to it has afforded me, I’d have had to hang out a “Blog Closed” sign some time ago. With what has already happened in the BOBs voting, there is no one who can stop this penultimate letter of the alphabet.

Thanks to everyone who voted!


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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #69 on: November 28, 2008, 06:18:01 AM »
 *clap*  She won

 Page 1  2  »The 2008 BOBs Winners Have Been Decided!
2008-11-28
Generación Y Wins Best Blog of 2008


The jury for the Deutsche Welle International Weblog Awards -- The BOBs -- has announced the winners in all 16 of the competition's categories.

Of the 11 finalists in the Best Blog category, Generación Y, a Cuban blog written by Yoani Sanchez, claimed the Jury Prize for Best Blog.

The jury said that Sanchez gives voice to an entire generation of Cubans and provides the world with a window into Cuba through her clear and poetic writing.

In addition to a slew of other obstacles in her way, Sanchez can't even post her own entries to the blog. Instead she is forced to e-mail them to friends outside of Cuba in order for her words to go online. Despite the challenges she has to overcome, she's managed to keep in contact with her readers and create a huge international community around her work.

For the Reporters Without Borders award, the jury decided to honor two blogs. One went to Zeng Jinyan, the wife of an imprisoned Chinese human rights activist Hu Jia, and 4equality, a Persian blog that fights for women's rights in Iran.

Placed under house arrest, Zeng Jinyan's blog describes life under constant surveillance by the Chinese authorities. The Persian blog 4equality is working to gather one million signatures on a petition for increased women's rights in Iran.

Here are all the Jury Prize winners for the BOBs 2008.

Congratulations to the winners and to all the blogs who were nominated. And thanks also to all of you who participated in the online voting, making this year's BOBs the most successful ever!

Cheers,

The BOBs Team


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #70 on: November 29, 2008, 06:52:26 PM »
In reference to the jury prize for Best Weblog and the award for Reporters Without Borders in The BOBs contest.

Well yes, but there is still much that I lack.  Not exactly prizes, but rights long neglected, like the ability to be read within my own country.  I must be able to say all this in reality and not just in the virtual world of a blog.  To transform this civic plaza that is Generation Y into a concrete existence where trolls also abound and the consequences are much stronger than a simple hack.  I need something more than kilobytes, I need realities.

We still lack that which is the most coveted prize: the right to dialogue, dissent and to dye ourselves in the political colors of our choosing within our Island.  We must not let this phenomenon be limited only to the blogosphere, we have to go in search of the jackpot: free opinion.


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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #71 on: November 29, 2008, 06:57:01 PM »
Goodbye to the tutu
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y
 


Diplomacy is one of those arts that makes me itch, one of those dances where watching the performance makes me seasick.  However much I try to understand the ambassadors, foreign ministers and that whole stripe of cunning characters, their actions only manage to confuse me more.  They embrace and smile, exchange promises and take pictures holding hands.  They speak in my name, even though it’s been some time since they rode the bus, they don’t have to stand in line, nor do they know the high price of an egg in the black market.

In the past year, the ballet presented by “our” diplomacy has had much of the dance of seduction. They’ve gone dancing with the Red Stockings and their promises of openings have dazzled a few.  However, from the third balcony where we citizens sit, each fouetté seems earthbound and the new turns, so predictable, elicit only yawns.

Bored and disappointed by these choreographers of appearances, I choose to dance to the popular diplomacy.  With so much buffet and champagne wasted, I think it’s better to skip the black tie envoys. There must be more civic ways for the people to meet, connect and help themselves. Let’s leave the farce of protocols of intention and the signed agreements that are not met to the foreign ministers.  We, meanwhile, let’s get together and come to an agreement.


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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #72 on: December 01, 2008, 08:00:04 PM »


<>


There is a glaring absence in our daily landscape.  Those calls to march, so frequent two years ago, have become rarer, leaving behind the impression of a city permanently on edge.  It used to be a rare month that Habaneros were not called to a demonstration to shout slogans and applaud passionate speeches.  They regularly administered the spoonful of necessary hysteria to keep us feeling that we were in a permanent state of siege.

On those days of successive marches, public services were closed and the entire city’s transport system was put to work moving people from other provinces who came to swell the number of participants. Days in which the streets were filled with trampled paper banners and water bottles to calm the thirst. The city collapsed and for those of us who were waiting for the parade to pass, we had the sensation of living through a never ending mobilization.  They were days when it was best to stay home and hope that the shouts, the edginess and the loudspeakers were easing off.

Nevertheless, it wasn’t entirely like what the cameras and the press reports showed.  Political rallies—organized by the government itself—also had an enjoyable side.  The high school students were delighted that classes were suspended and they could play in the middle of the crowd.  In the workplace, many preferred the confusion of the demonstration—which allowed them to sneak home—over a day of working under the control of a boss.  Even those who  were brought in by bus found the crush of the demonstration offered an magnificent place for the lewd excesses.  The informal vendors waited for the mob to shout “Vivas” and sold them untold amounts of peanuts, pastries and soda

It’s not that we miss the marches, but my city looks different without these euphoric outbursts, without the leader shouting from the podium, without the thousands of genuine and false enthusiasts who were waving the flags.

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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #73 on: December 04, 2008, 02:44:12 PM »
At nine in the morning an official looks, with boredom, at the citation we have presented at the door of the 21st and C station.  We are left waiting on one of the benches for about 40 minutes, while Reinaldo and I take the opportunity to discuss all those things the dizziness of daily life always keeps us from talking about.  At 9:45 they take my husband, asking first if he has a cell phone.  Ten minutes later they return and take me to the second floor.

The meeting is brief and the tone energetic.  There are three of us in the office and the one who raises his voice in song has been introduced as Agent Roque.  To my side another, younger one, watches me and says his name is Camilo.  Both tell me they are from the Interior Ministry.  They are not interested in listening, there is a written script on the table, and nothing I do will distract them.  They are intimidation professionals.

The topic was as I expected: We are close to the date for the blogger meeting that, with neither secrecy nor publicity, we have been organizing for half a year;  they announce we must cancel it.  Half an hour later, now far from the uniforms and the photos of leaders on the walls, we reconstructed an appoximation of their words:

We want to warn you that you have transgressed all the limits of tolerance with your rapprochement and contacts with counter-revolutionary elements. This totally disqualifies you for dialog with Cuban authorities.

The activities planned for the coming days cannot carried out.

We, for our part, will take all measures, make the relevant denuciations and take the necessary actions. This activity, in this moment in the life of the Nation, recuperating from two hurricanes, will not be allowed.

Roque stopped talking–nearly shouting–and I asked if he would give me all this in writing.  Being a blogger who displays her name and her face has made me believe that everyone is willing to attach their identity to what they say.  The man lost the rhythm of the script–he didn’t expect my librarian’s mania to keep papers.  He stopped reading what had been written and shouted at me even louder that, “They are not obliged to give me anything.”

Before they send me off with a “get out of here, citizen” I manage to tell him that he won’t sign what he told me because he doesn’t have the courage to do it.  The word “Cowards” comes out almost in a guffaw.  At the bottom of the stairs I hear the noise of the chairs pushed back into place.  Wednesday has ended early.

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Dic
 
02
 
2008
  First round
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y
I swear I haven’t run a green light, nor have I bought cheese on the black market for more than two months, and I have not walked out of any store without paying.  I don’t recall having violated the laws–too much–these last days, not even by passing myself off as a foreigner to use the Internet in some hotel.

I have, however, a citation, along with Reinaldo, for tomorrow at the police station at 21st and C in Vedado.  I wonder if I should bring a toothbrush or if I will get only a brief box on the ears.

Below is the official document I received from a sweaty official who ascended the fourteen flights of stairs, since I haven’t had an elevator for a month.

At nine in the morning I’ll know what it’s about; wait for my news after two.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #74 on: December 06, 2008, 07:03:53 AM »
In the ‘90s, a poem satirized the disappearance from Cuban tables of several agricultural products.*  Its author never signed the friendly verses, but the caustic style pointed directly to a well-known writer.  Those were the years when CAME [Council for Mutual Economic Assistance, or Comecon] was going to hell in a handbasket along with the socialist camp, and our navels were painfully close to our spines.  Food seemed to have gone into exile, leaving us a poignant reminder of its sweetness.

The sweet potato, banana and yucca returned later, when the social explosion of 1994 forced the government to open the demonized free markets.  At their stalls we found varieties of tubers that had regularly graced the plates of our grandparents, but at a price that didn’t match the symbolic salaries we received.  Still, they were there.  By “squeezing our nickels” we could have a smooth puree of malanga to introduce a baby to solid food.

While these indigenous products were returning, some foreign ones arrived to replace the domestic.  The hotels began to buy oranges and mangoes from the Dominican Republic, flowers from Cancun, and pineapples from other islands in the Caribbean.   In the kitchens, it was common to find imported lemon extract replacing the lost citrus used in sauces and marinades.  Sugar was brought from Brazil and a package of frozen carrots was easier to find than the lanky ones that grew in our own dirt.   Only the guava found no competition among the misguided imports and stood—with dignity—as a replacement for all the other lost fruits.

For me, the ultimate was when, a couple of weeks ago, I received my quota of rationed salt and noticed it comes from Chile.  I can’t manage to reconcile our 5,746 kilometers of coastline with this white and blue packet transported from the South.  If our sea is just as salty, what happened to its minuscule crystals that no longer come to my salt shaker.  It was not mother nature—we can’t put the blame on her again—but rather this dysfunctional economic system, this production inertia, and the tremendous underestimation of everything native and domestic that is embargoed to us.  Neither has it been the blockade.

Now, we would have to rewrite the sarcastic poem about the extinct products, and add a brief and missing monosyllable: salt.

*

The yucca, that came from Lithuania

the mango, sweet fruit of Krakow

the yam, originally from Warsaw

and the coffee that is planted in Germany.

The yellow malanga of Romania

the honeyed Moldovan sweet potato

from Liberia the fine-textured mamey fruit

and green bananas grown in the Ukraine.

All this is lacking and through no fault of ours

for to fulfill the food plan

one wages a fierce intense battle.

And now we have the first sign

that the necessary effort is being made:

 There is food on television and in the newspapers.

 

Translator’s notes:

CAME/Comecon:  Council for Mutual Economic Assistance.  Founded by Stalin in 1949 with the Soviet Union and five Eastern European countries, it was eventually expanded to ten full member countries, including Cuba, which joined in 1972.

Social Explosion in 1994:  The “Maleconazo” which was a protest/riot on August 5, 1994, along Havana’s waterfront seawall, which is called the Malecón.

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