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- <text id=94TT1188>
- <link 94TO0199>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Cover:You Can't Eat Doctrine
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 36
- You Can't Eat Doctrine
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Why some Cubans stay and some go, when everyone on the island
- is struggling desperately just to survive
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Cathy Booth/Havana
- </p>
- <p> Jose Alberto Potuombo is sitting in La Atarraya, the cafe he
- manages across the street from the great bay, attempting to
- hear Fidel Castro on his Korean-made boom box. But there are
- distractions. A crowd is forming on the seawall across the way.
- "Ven aqui! Ven, mira!" yell the little children, and people
- are indeed coming and looking. Now there is a crowd of 70, staring
- down into the water. They laugh, they cheer. Some drivers stop,
- others honk and yell, "Balseros! Balseros! A Miami! A Miami!"
- (Rafters! To Miami!) Potuombo scans the scene sourly. "Let the
- bastards go," he growls. On the radio, Fidel drones on.
- </p>
- <p> It is Wednesday on the Malecon, where Havana meets the swelling
- breast of its bay. The Malecon is Cuba's promenade, its boardwalk,
- its Champs Elysees. Across the Straits of Florida in Miami,
- kingdom of dollars, citadel of wealth unimaginable, the exiles
- have a favorite T shirt: it portrays the Malecon after Castro's
- fall as an endless vista of shiny, neon-lighted fast-food joints.
- The crumbling, once graceful seafront is still a long way from
- that plastic vision. Potuombo gestures at the crowd in his cafe,
- who are placidly consuming not Whoppers or Big Macs but the
- tepid brown soda that is the sole item on his depleted menu.
- "These are the real Cubans," he proclaims. "These are the people
- who will defend the revolution despite the limitations of the
- moment."
- </p>
- <p> People stay because many Cubans are still loyal to the revolution--if not the man--that they believe gave them 30 good years.
- According to people on the street and in their homes in Havana
- and its environs, it is mainly the economic deprivations of
- the past four that have shaken their faith and their pride.
- Every Cuban must work out his own calculation for the moment
- when devotion turns to desperation, when the hardships become
- too much to bear, when the natural desire to stay is overpowered
- by the need to go. This summer that moment came for thousands--especially the young--not so much because the hardships
- have grown worse but because they seem to have no end. People
- go when they have no future and no hope.
- </p>
- <p> This week the Malecon belongs to the balseros. But the weather
- is not on their side. Juan, 20, stands knee-deep in the swelling
- surf. Despite cheers from the crowd above, he is finding it
- impossible to lash his inner tubes to the plywood he hopes will
- bear him away. The waves are too high; lightning flashes and
- a pelting rain begins. Does it matter whether he ends up in
- Miami or only Guantanamo? "Who cares?" he asks. "So long as
- it's out of here." He has no job, no money, no prospects, he
- says; he must escape. But not today. He hauls his gear back
- over the seawall to his building across the street. His aunt,
- who has been watching the Castro speech, shoots him an inquiring
- look. "Tomorrow," he mumbles, brushing past her into their
- tiny apartment.
- </p>
- <p> Farther down the avenue, Baldomero Alvarez Rios, 70, shakes
- his head. "The problem with young people in Cuba today," he
- says, "is that they have no idea what it was like before the
- revolution." His wife Maria Luisa Vina Alonso, 67, nods solemnly.
- Before 1959 they were members of what Maria calls the petite
- bourgeoisie, but then Baldomero's revolutionary fervor turned
- him into a party-line journalist. They worked all over the country
- and even abroad, spreading Castro's word in receptive capitals
- like Santiago and Mexico City.
- </p>
- <p> While they now live modestly on Baldomero's 300-peso-a-month
- pension (just over $3), Maria claims they long ago "learned
- to scale back for the benefit of the country." Her husband expounds
- on a widespread theory: young Cubans who never experienced American
- capitalism are far more eager to put to sea in its pursuit than
- their parents, who knew capitalism's dark side firsthand. "They
- see pictures of their relatives in Miami with late-model cars
- and Seiko watches and Levi's," he says, "and they are tricked
- into thinking Cuba's problems are internal and salvation lies
- elsewhere." The revolution brought fair distribution of the
- country's wealth, he says, and improvements in health and education.
- Even if it had not brought those things, he went on, it is justified
- on patriotic grounds alone: it made Cuba free and independent.
- Would the youngsters prefer the Cuba of 1958--that pitiful,
- oppressed colony of the United States? They will learn, he says.
- So will all the exiles. "They will realize what they had here
- and praise Fidel and the revolution," he says. His aging companera
- nods fiercely.
- </p>
- <p> In the warrens of Old Havana, farther along the bay, Ana, 25,
- has another generation in mind: that of her three-year-old son.
- He has been waiting for a hernia operation for two years. At
- his day-care center, which lacks books and toys, there is no
- Mercurochrome for skinned knees. "All the children have colds,"
- Ana explains. Flushed with anger, she beckons a visitor to accompany
- her to the nearest pharmacy. "Is there aspirin?" she demands
- of the clerk. "Is there flu medicine for my baby?" The answer,
- as always, is no. "You see!" she says. "They take all the medicine
- to the tourist stores, where you must have dollars."
- </p>
- <p> Nearby, Jesus, a 31-year-old bank teller, shelters himself from
- the storm beneath the facade of Old Havana's Almacenes Lux department
- store. The Lux is filled with busy people buying soap from Mexico,
- soda from Venezuela, baby strollers from Europe, and shoes,
- clothes and neon-color backpacks, some made in the U.S. The
- buyers are Cubans with dollars, but Jesus has none. He lacks
- relatives in America and does not work in a dollar-paying job.
- Is he bothered by his deprivation? He shrugs. "It's in the nature
- of the poor to covet what the rich have," he says. "All I can
- do is wait for a little bit of luck to fall from the sky." The
- rich? The poor? But what happened to the revolution? "What revolution?"
- Jesus snaps. "The revolution ended a long time ago. What we
- have now is a system that has stalled." He pauses. "Well, at
- least it's stalled for me."
- </p>
- <p> To the west, in the Nuevo Vedado district, Eugenio, a sports
- trainer, produces his ration book. For July he was allotted
- 6 lbs. of rice, 10 oz. of beans, 1/2 lb. of oil, 3 lbs. of sugar,
- 1 oz. of coffee, one bar of bath soap, three packs of cigarettes.
- No meat. In May it was rice, beans, sugar and coffee; no oil;
- no soap; no cigarettes; two cans of beer. No meat. Yet Eugenio
- will not be rafting. He is a master of resolviendo--the Cuban
- art of barter, the cut corner, the gray market. His wife works
- in a cigarette factory and brings home unofficial samples. With
- the purloined packs, Eugenio heads for the local government
- bodega to find the old man who sits on the sidewalk outside
- to trade illegally in yuca. He sells his yuca for 10 pesos per
- lb., but tobacco is always an acceptable substitute. Thanks
- to such enterprise, Eugenio eats well enough. "We survive because
- we're strong," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Southward lies the dilapidated neighborhood known as La Vibora.
- There, a gaggle of elderly women cluster in a disintegrating
- foyer. Pointing to one in the group, they say, Talk to her.
- She is the anti-revolutionary. Asking to be called Luisa, the
- 66-year-old mother of an exile is glad President Bill Clinton
- cut off remittances, even if it means no more money from her
- son in California. "He pockets the money anyway," she says.
- Who? "Fidel. Who else?" Alarmed, her companions shush her, and
- she lowers her voice. "I'd rather suffer a little more than
- see this damn government prosper anymore," she whispers. "They
- have everything--generators, cars, gas, the food they want--and we have nothing. They talk about Fatherland or Death,
- Socialism or Death. Bullshit. I'm not going to die while they
- fatten themselves."
- </p>
- <p> Have you noticed, she asks, that there is nothing on the walls
- around here? Her voice drops lower still. That is because at
- night, people who are very angry and a little drunk tear down
- the revolutionary posters. "No one is scared anymore," she asserts.
- "We have suffered too much."
- </p>
- <p> For three days the weather achieved what Clinton could not,
- stemming the tide of rafters. On the beach at Guanabo, east
- of Havana, Saturday night's forecast is for 15-ft. waves and
- more rain. The balseros along the shore use their time to work
- on their rafts, dream, complain. Jorge Luis, 36, introduces
- his raft's crew. "Just because we're discontented, we're considered
- antisocial," he says. "But in fact we're all professionals.
- Cuba is like a prison these days. You work one month to eat
- one day. You..." And then he pauses and smiles, surveying
- one raft after another beached on the white sands. Someone has
- passed the word. The forecast for Monday is clear.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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