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- <text id=94TT1229>
- <title>
- Sep. 12, 1994: Cuba:What's a Poor Patriot to Do?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 12, 1994 Revenge of the Killer Microbes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CUBA, Page 50
- What's a Poor Patriot to D0?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Cubans are angrier at the system and Castro than ever before.
- So why aren't more of them plotting Fidel's overthrow?
- </p>
- <p>By Cathy Booth/Havana
- </p>
- <p> It is late in Old Havana, and Calle Obispo is shrouded in darkness
- as Jorge, who fears giving his real name, walks down the narrow
- street. Once a fashionable shopping avenue, Obispo is now lined
- with decayed buildings. Jorge passes a tourist store, where
- three young Cubans are staring at a window display of souvenirs
- that would cost them the equivalent of several months' salary.
- At the corner, a young man whispers, "Pizza, pizza," hoping
- to attract customers to an illegal private restaurant. At 20
- pesos, the price of a pie equals what Jorge earns in two days.
- Light spills out of a wood-paneled bar for tourists: Jorge cannot
- afford the drinks there either.
- </p>
- <p> At the Plaza de Armas, the 44-year-old computer programmer joins
- a foreigner at a garden bar. Sipping on a fine, aged rum--a rare treat--he pours out the familiar Cuban litany of despair.
- He eats no breakfast or lunch and cannot find milk for his 10-year-old
- daughter. His car has no gas, his home no electricity. When
- he walks down Obispo at night, even the cheap tourist souvenirs
- tantalize him. He sips more rum. "People drink here to an extent
- you can't imagine," he says. "They don't go to work anymore.
- There is no hope. We talk about food shortages, clothes shortages,
- but it's our spirit that is broken."
- </p>
- <p> The flood of despondent people like Jorge pouring out of Cuba
- ought to herald an epochal end for Fidel Castro. For the first
- time in 35 years, his rule has begun to look genuinely at risk.
- Anger at the island's deteriorating economy is growing rapidly,
- and if something is not done fairly soon to make life easier,
- people's desperation could reach the combustion point. But a
- visit to the island shows little evidence of imminent revolt.
- For now, Fidel faces no organized opposition. Despite their
- open verbal attacks on Castro and the communist system, the
- discontented seem readier to leave than to rebel; many still
- pin their hopes on internal reform. The question is how long
- the Cubans will put up with such harsh privation before taking
- change into their own hands.
- </p>
- <p> The quickest fix for the Cuban economy would be an end to the
- 32-year U.S. embargo, but Bill Clinton is not eager to end the
- cold war-era isolation. In the long run, if Castro will not
- or cannot adopt free-market reforms, his country has little
- hope of ending what Cubans call the "special period": the current
- era of acute hardship brought on by the fall of the Soviet empire,
- which had sustained Cuba's command economy until 1991. If he
- does institute far-reaching changes and the rest of the world--despite the U.S. embargo--responds with trade and investment,
- he can probably survive indefinitely. His salvation lies in
- betraying the ideals of the revolution that he and devoted supporters
- have embraced for more than three decades. Yet increasing numbers
- of Cubans seem eager for him to do just that.
- </p>
- <p> Cubans have never expressed their discontent more openly or
- across such a broad spectrum. Many now speak frankly of their
- frustration with the entire communist system--and even with
- Fidel. Well aware that a local official of the omnipresent Committees
- for the Defense of the Revolution is listening, a bitter young
- professional says, "I hate Fidel. I think everyone hates Fidel."
- An elderly woman confirms that the sentiment is not limited
- to the young: "People who were with him a year ago are against
- him now."
- </p>
- <p> A majority of Cubans, both for and against Castro, fear he cannot
- lead them out of the current economic crisis. Some of the party
- faithful, who have always claimed Fidel enjoyed universal support,
- now acknowledge he may command the allegiance of only half the
- populace. Reformers are exasperated--and worried--by Castro's
- slow pace of change since he legalized the dollar a year ago.
- "The problem is not just food shortages," says a historian still
- loyal to socialism and Fidel. "The government has to redesign
- the whole system. If we don't reform and the U.S. blockade remains,
- the only possibility is an explosion. Cuba is a time bomb."
- </p>
- <p> A doctor in his late 30s, near the top in his field, despairs
- of the future. "I was a believer until the late 1980s. Now I
- am agnostic," he says. His home in the suburbs of Havana is
- comfortable by comparison with those of most Cubans: the prerevolutionary
- furniture is carefully preserved, and a 50-year-old refrigerator
- is stocked with black-market meat bought with dollars sent by
- relatives in Miami. Although his oven no longer works, he is
- an expert, like all Cubans, at resolviendo (resolving the problem):
- he bakes cakes in a pressure cooker.
- </p>
- <p> But resolving things at his hospital, where medicines and other
- vital supplies have almost disappeared, has left him frustrated.
- He lacks the opportunity to get ahead. Even his medical journals
- no longer arrive. "Things are changing, but there is no hope
- for a better life now," says the doctor, because he does not
- believe Castro will ever initiate full-scale reform. "There
- is a lot of support for the government in an emotional way,"
- he reflects. "You hear a lot of old ladies talking about Fidel
- as if he were Jesus Christ. But young people are like me."
- </p>
- <p> The doctor, however, is plotting to escape, not topple Castro.
- Like the 1980 Mariel boatlift, which carried 125,000 Cubans
- to Florida, this summer's exodus--23,000 so far--is siphoning
- off the worst malcontents, relieving some of the pressure on
- Castro. "People in the U.S. think things here could change rapidly,
- but I'm sure Fidel will be in power a long time," he says. Cubans
- are concentrating not on protesting but on building rafts. If
- necessary, say government sources, Castro is willing to shed
- 1 million of the island's 11 million people.
- </p>
- <p> For all the drama on the Straits of Florida, most Cubans struggle
- on, trying to patch together a normal life. Government workers
- returned to their desks last week from August vacations. Children
- put on their maroon uniforms and went back to classrooms lacking
- books, pencils and paper. In the streets of Havana, the gossip
- has turned from Castro's woes--the bad sugar harvest, the
- new taxes, the problem of prostitution--to the rafters.
- </p>
- <p> For Fidel and the older generation, who are proud of the superior
- education and health system handed down to their children, to
- leave is to break faith with the revolution. "Tell my son I'm
- fine," says Teodomira Rodriguez, standing in the doorway of
- her small pensioner's apartment in the Vedado section of Havana.
- The 62-year-old widow said goodbye to her two sons last month:
- Rafael, 34, died at sea; Pedro, 32, survived but was hospitalized
- in Miami with dehydration and blisters after six days afloat.
- "They left because of the economic problems," she says.
- </p>
- <p> Born to poor farmers in central Cuba, Rodriguez credits the
- revolution with improving her life. As one of 12 brothers and
- sisters on a marginal farm in the 1950s, she almost never ate
- meat. Her brothers worked the sugarcane fields three months
- a year, then the family virtually starved the other nine months
- during the farmers' traditional tiempo muerto, or dead time.
- Her whole family turned out when rebel Camilo Cienfuegos passed
- through on his way to fight the dictator Fulgencio Batista.
- </p>
- <p> Educated by the revolution and promoted from one government
- job to another, working her way up from seamstress to manager
- of an arts-and-crafts factory, Rodriguez still keeps a big photo
- of Cienfuegos on the wall. "I believe in the revolution. I have
- confidence in the revolution," she says softly. "I understand
- that the economic situation is bad, but we eat better now than
- when I was young. If there is a pound of rice, it is equally
- shared by all. Anyone can go to the hospital and get an aspirin
- or an organ transplant without anybody asking them for money.
- That's why I'm still a revolutionary."
- </p>
- <p> Considering that monthly government rations barely provide enough
- food for two weeks and a month's salary buys just one chicken
- on the black market, it is surprising how many Cubans still
- have faith in Castro's revolution. Domestic production is nearly
- nil. Unemployment is estimated at 20% to 25% among the young.
- Absenteeism from work is officially 10% but actually much higher.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, Havana's stoic, inventive populace manages to
- keep going. "It's better to work for yourself," says a railway
- laborer. "If you can earn just $5 a month, that's more than
- you get in a government factory." Sidewalk vendors selling everything
- from wood carvings and homemade jewelry to their personal possessions
- have popped up all over the capital. Everyone seems to be expert
- in the art of black-market dealing, trading what they have for
- what they cannot find in the stores.
- </p>
- <p> Yet capitalism must move beyond such rudiments if Castro's regime
- is to survive. Even faithful party members believe the time
- for thoroughgoing change has come, though they fear the economic
- anarchy of postcommunist Eastern Europe. "It's a difficult moment,"
- admits Manuel Gutierrez, who was born in 1959, the year of the
- revolution. "The system has much good and some bad. But things
- are changing. The young are taking over."
- </p>
- <p> Like many of his University of Havana friends, Gutierrez runs
- a new venture in Cuba with little government control: in his
- case, ecotourism tours for Costa Rica's LACSA airline. "Now
- the young have a chance for their own revolution, a revolution
- in the economy, a revolution in service," he says, grinning
- because he knows what people think of service in communist countries.
- And political change? "Yes, that must come too," he says. "In
- the '60s, '70s and even the '80s, the Cuban system was fine.
- Now, no. Often you hear people say, `I am not my father's son.'"
- </p>
- <p> Gutierrez is, nevertheless, a Communist Party member and prefers
- to work inside the system for change, though he knows the transition
- will be painful. Technocrats like him who earn part of their
- salaries in U.S. currency can often afford to buy foreign cars,
- rent big houses, take trips abroad and eat at dollars-only restaurants.
- Brought up to believe in the egalitarianism of Cuban socialism,
- some try to share, but they are often rebuffed by friends offended
- by their foray into capitalism. "It's difficult when I have
- $20 in my pocket and my friends have 20 pesos," admits Gutierrez.
- </p>
- <p> At the top, in senior Communist Party and government positions,
- there is no move to challenge Castro. Nor has a long-term strategy
- for reform emerged. But some economic changes are sneaking through.
- In the past year, more government-run farms have been converted
- to peasants' cooperatives. Farmers' markets, allowing growers
- to sell their produce directly, have been formally approved
- but are not yet open. Most of these changes are being forced
- on Castro from below. "Some want to do it with Fidel; others
- have dropped that hope," says a political analyst in Havana.
- "The people are pushing the leadership, but it's like a bike
- with no chain. You go nowhere until the chain--the system
- itself--is fixed."
- </p>
- <p> Even though the U.S. is the destination of choice for Cuban
- rafters, the millions who remain are stubborn about not wanting
- Washington or the exiles in Miami to cram changes down their
- throat. "I'm a party member, not a robot. We don't accept many
- things that the government does, but we are changing the country
- in our way," says a government official. Even entrepreneurs
- like Gutierrez draw the line at interference from Cuban Americans.
- "I'm not going to work for the people in Miami, even though
- a lot of them are my friends," he says. Almost all Cubans argue
- that the U.S. and the exiles would do better to encourage change
- on the island with economic incentives, as Washington has done
- with other communist holdouts like China and Vietnam. "All those
- congressional bills say, `Unless you do what we want, we'll
- kick your ass,'" says Juan Antonio Blanco, director of a private
- think tank in Havana. "What we need is not threats but an offer
- of help."
- </p>
- <p> A new drama at the National Theater of Cuba, called A Wall in
- Havana, speaks eloquently of the country's dilemma. As the play
- opens, a couple lives separated by a wall: she is an arts director
- for the government with a string of important titles; he is
- a photographer living for the moment with few possessions. He--representing the people--yearns for her, despite having
- found a young lover. She--the government--is enticed by
- a young love but rejects him. In the end, he is alone, using
- a pickax to batter at the wall. On the other side, she pulls
- back her possessions, trying to protect her way of life. "Won't
- you help me?" he yells.
- </p>
- <p> The richly metaphoric drama has played to standing ovations.
- One party member, told about the play, pauses to reflect. "Next
- year is our last year of hope," he says finally. "If we don't
- solve our economic problems next year, people will go crazy."
- Maybe then Cuba's wall will fall.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-