A Letter from a Young Man Who Has Come to Cuba

By Graham Sowa

HAVANA TIMES — The following letter is written in response to two letters about leaving Cuba that can be found, respectively, at Rafael andIvan.

Dear Rafael and Ivan:

In high school I wanted to go to Cuba. This urge probably had something to do with my profoundly inspired, but inexperienced, political ideology. I renewed my aspirations to go to Cuba in University. But this time with more focus. I wanted to be a doctor.

A citizen of the United States, resident of the State of Texas, becoming a doctor in a socialist Caribbean island. Sometimes I wish it would have remained the fiction it sounds to be.

My position in Cuba as a foreign student is neither new nor novel. While consuming Christopher Hitchen’s autobiography Hitch-22 last year (in English of course, I doubt it will be published anytime soon in Cuba) I eagerly skipped through pages of his early life to arrive at the part where he wrote of his summer in Cuba. It was during the 1960’s.

Mr. Hitchens was in Pinar del Rio, picking coffee beans with other internationalists and trying to figure out why the Cubans had taken his passport as soon as he arrived (same reason they took mine I suppose: for our own safety, whatever that means).

Mr. Hitchens proudly wrote of his questioning freedom of expression in a public forum, for which he was spurned by his comrades. He also bragged of passing out literature against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. I smiled. And then I wondered if he was exaggerating.

But why second guess my literary hero? Because I’m a foreigner living in Cuba, surrounded by foreigners living in Cuba, and I know what it is like to be here. Most of us keep our heads low, voice problems to the point of being incessant amongst one another, and then ingratiate the Cuban system publicly.

What I want both of you, Ivan and Rafael, to realize, is that there is one more option in play in addition to “leaving Cuba” and “staying in Cuba”. That other option is to come to Cuba.

It is what I’ve done, and continue to do. As do the tourists, as do those seeking political refuge, as do students who believe in a system they do not know, or students who are taking advantage of an opportunity to study, local politics be damned.

My reasons are numerous and conflicting. Sometimes I feel my mind is only a battlefield where reasons for coming and staying in Cuba tag team the urge to go. No matter which side wins the earth of my mind holds the reasons that died, valiant or cowardly as they might have been. This is how experiences are made. Experiences I want to share with both of you.

I think that the three of us agree that the expectation of mine and Ivan’s generation can be broadly described as expectations of individuals in a globalized world. One does not have to be part of this interconnectedness to know that it exists, and to behold the potential that lies within and throughout.

In what other world could my expectation to become a doctor in Cuba turn into the reality that it currently is?

As you say Rafael, a young Cuban is more likely than his or her non-Cuban peers to be aware and practice the tenets of social justice because the Cuban is a product of a knowledgeable society.

And if we credit the Revolution for producing this social justice within this knowledgeable society, why can we not trust that those ideals cannot hold up to “those Americans”, as you so broadly put it, who will “confuse the people” if freedom of expression and speech are broadened in Cuba?

Rafael, I agree with you fully that the political system in my country is a capitalist endeavor which most voters don’t care about, since only about half of us bother to vote anyway. But to assume that the only choices are between the status quo in Cuba and the status quo in the United States is to be short sighted to the point of being legally blind.

To remain entrenched in either system is to violate the almost biological link between youth and revolution.

If ideas are to do battle, as is so proudly displayed to the point of irony on the back of a 100 CUC banknote, then they must be allowed to clash. Without clash there is not debate.

I did not come to Cuba to change anything here. I came here and remain here to become the best doctor I can be. But I also didn’t come to live my life as a ship passing another in the night. I came to share the indelible curiosity that we humans have of each other, the same curiosity that all good doctors much have every day of their working lives.

There is no good argument why Cubans should not be allowed to do the same, no matter where they want to go in the whole wide world.

Furthermore, I argue that the movement of young Cubans, on their own terms, around the world is the only assurance of preserving the legacy of the Cuban Revolution.

To do anything less than embrace the movement of young people to and from your country, Rafael, is to entrust that legacy to people living here temporarily, such as myself: someone who is ill educated of the tenets of the Revolution, unprepared to defend against ever ready detractors, and at the end of the day entrusted to those authors of liberty from my own country, as flawed as they might be.

Ivan, I agree with you that the decision to remain or leave our prospective countries should never be “judged in moral terms”. However the very fact that you must defend your absence from your country of birth shows that this is not the case.

Perhaps like myself you also have moral self-judgment that wells up from the inside.

The other day I was leaving the school to go to Havana. This requires a decision. Do I take the bus or a maquina (collective taxi).

Unlike working class Cubans my decision has nothing to do with finances. I can easily pay either, and I almost always opt for the maquina, a 50 cent ride. However when I arrived to the bus stop, where the maquinas also pick up their clients, I met one of my professors.

Here was this man, who like your father served in Angola, whom I immensely respect and share a friendship with. I know him well enough to know that if I offered to pay his maquina he would say no.

What to do? Do I get in a maquina leaving him at the bus stop, and invite the symbolic representation of the real socioeconomic divide that exists between us? Or do I wait for the bus, notoriously slow and packed?

I opt for the latter, and take a spot behind him in line. And as the bus brakes wine to a stop I have this ringing in my ears of the emptiness of my attempt at solidarity.

This is the Cuba I live in. I’m rich here. I have a monthly budget that I would not survive a week on in the United States, but puts me several rungs above the Cuban middle class. The moral weight of this borders on injustice. I’m only a student. How can I live head and shoulders above people who have achieved much more than I can even aspire to in my time here on earth?

Then complicate the whole matter with the fact that I study here for free. Add to this that Cubans are left in my foreign, un-acculturated, hands to receive their constitutionally protected right to health care. Are you getting the picture?

Ivan, I’d like to think that you and I, as two young people who have left our lands of birth, are sharing similar experiences. But even in our shared ability to travel we still remain gulfs apart.

You arrived in your new country and worked from the bottom up, moving laundry. I arrived here looking down from my privileged perch. And even though I know resentment exists against students like me, studying here for free, even writing on this blog, I receive none of it to my face. And sometimes I wish I did, just so I could know I wasn’t feeling this for nothing.

So I’m left with an irresolvable quandary. How could I even argue that young Cubans should be able to say and do more on their own terms, seeing that I am benefiting from the same system that tells them “NO” way too often?

Yet I still come to Cuba, I come knowing I will have these feelings. My only reprieve are those moments where I’m learning medicine, interchanging with my peers from Cuba and around the world, and hoping that in my own country I can go back and change the things that need to be changed.
—–

 

7 thoughts on “A Letter from a Young Man Who Has Come to Cuba

  • Once again, all that I read in your comments is fear. Fear that the Cuban people will be abandon their impoverished lives and diminishing hopes for the empty glitz and glamour of that horrible beast to the north. Stop and think about what you are saying…imagine one of your best Cuban friends living in Cuba. That is if you have one. If you don’t you have no right to an opinion in this issue. If that person had your freedom, if they had your internet access, or your widescreen TV, would that person turn into the devil you fear would be Cuba? Are you that devil? My Cuban friends are who they are. Yes, some are chomping at the bit to be capitalists yet others are happy in their socialist cocoon. Nothing I have said to them about what I have or can do is going to change their minds about their beliefs. As Pope John Paul said during his visit to Cuba some 14 years ago, “open Cuba to the world and open the world to Cuba”.

  • Anyone who doubts that removing the barriers to ‘open’ elections, and discussions, and ‘yada, yada, yada… should remember these “3 little words…”: Honduras; Paraguay; Libya. I could, and will add both Syria and Iran to the mix.

    To discuss a ‘Free Press’, and Multi-Party Politics Elections, without always being aware of the power of the US/NATO Empire, discloses unpleasant things about the advocates who insists on them for Cuba. Take your choice: Gross Stupidity, or a Bought and Paid for Representative of the Empire.

    We are not talking about an even playing field between opponents of the same power. We are discussing a tiny, almost impoverished Country, that has been fighting the wealthiest, most powerful Empire in History, for over fifty years.

    Can Cuba be more open and allow its Citizens more freedom without inviting the wolf to dinner? Only very carefully, and with tiny baby-steps.

    Perhaps more foreign travel for some: maybe older, retired, people. If they have worked productively for 30 or 40 years, they have probably more than paid back the cost of their education etc. They would also be mush less likely to emigrate. And, the US has a surplus of old people like me already, why would they bribe more to move in?

    Exchange Student Programs are also a very effective way to broaden the education and experiences of young people. Cuba already is providing free Education and living costs to foreign students. Perhaps a few carefully designed exchanges with close allies could be arranged. Three months studying in China, or India, or some of the Latin American Countries, could be very enlightening to Cuban Youth, and not cost Cuba needed cash. High School Students in particular would benefit. And, like their elders, they would be unlikely to emigrate, and less of a loss if they did [Not that we don’t love teenagers, but I talking economic loss].

    Baby steps are the only way to do something like this in today’s political climate. At any rate, the way Capitalism is going these days, it may implode sooner, rather than later…

  • Moses,

    To not admit that the U.S , as an integral part of its over-100 year old foreign policy, interferes in the elections of sovereign nations is disingenuous on your part.
    That history is too freely available and too well known for you to have not acknowledged in in your (paid) post.
    It is a deliberate and clumsy attempt to spread right-wing disinformation and to deny history.

    There are already Cubans receiving funding to oppose their own government such as the conviction of what’s-his-name Gary for doing so proved openly .

    Again, this will come as a shock to you but the U.S. has declared its intentions of making life unbearable for every man, woman and child in Cuba as it can through terrorist methods, biological warfare methods and for the last 50 years, very damaging economic measures which have, indeed made the Cuban people suffer.

    For you to deny that they would not at every opportunity, buy any Cuban election by using any methods possible is just an insult to our collective intelligence here and in light of Playa Giron, the declared economic war on the revolution , the use of bio-agents , you’re just plain lying .

    You’re not even bright enough to know what you can get away with posting without looking foolish.

  • Lawrence, do you read what you have written before you hit the REPLY button? Based on your last analogy, are you likening Cubans to hens in a henhouse and US Media to the fox? OK, I can live with the fox part, but I don’t see Cubans as the defenseless, gullible, mindless foul that you apparently do. Have you not argued that the US government does not want the American public to see that a better way is possible so they silence the alternative reality that exists in Cuba? Is this not your claim? Yet, now you are against opening up the island to outside influences? Pick a side dude. By the way, what’s wrong with my county?

  • What ‘Moses’ quotes, partially and inaccurately, is in Rafael’s letter, not Ivan’s. The complete sentence is:

    “You’ve always heard that a televised political debate, an open list of candidates and an open debate among them is nothing more than the politicking of capitalism and that if we open up this arena, Americans, the Miami mafia and dissidents will use their money to manipulate it and confuse the public.”

    The first part is certainly obvious: “a televised political debate, an open list of candidates and an open debate among [Americans] is nothing more than the politicking of capitalism.”

    And the second part – “if we open up this arena, Americans, the Miami mafia and dissidents will use their money to manipulate it and confuse the public” – is aptly illustrated by what ‘Moses’ is doing – taking advantage of a website that is open to criticism of the Cuban government by incessantly propagandizing on it. Just a small example of what ‘opening up’ leads to.

    ‘Moses’ writes, “If the ideals of the Revolution are worth a piss, then no amount of “American” influence should “confuse the people”. Revolutionary ideals, unfortunately are no guarantee against citizens’ confusion. One has to look no further thant the county ‘Moses’ lives in for a graphic example of that truth.

    ‘Moses’ spends time writing to convince us that the fox should be let into the henhouse. Hmm, I think I smell a fox

  • Thank you Graham, for your enlightening letter. I believe you made the best decision at bus Stop.
    Could you explain to me why the education in Cuba, is free to foreigners such as yourself? Thank you! Waiting in Canada for a reply.

  • Thoughfully written. The most profound aspect of Ivan’s letter in my opinion is exactly what Graham addressed directly in his letter. If the ideals of the Revolution are worth a piss, then no amount of “American” influence should “confuse the people”. There exists socialists who live in capitalists societies every day. Some of whom frequently comment to Havana Times and who despite the daily bombardment of capitalist propaganda that is endemic to capitalism appear to hold true to their socialists ideals. Why not so for the Cuban people who have lived with these “noble” ideals their whole life? The fear of the outside world coming in, therefore, is at the least unwarranted and at most emblematic of the real weakness of the Cuban regime. It simply can not stand on its own and must be protected from other beliefs and choices.

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