At one time, Mario Chanes de Armas had far more in common with Castro
than age, but today he is a humble spectator, watching Havana's political
events unfold through the haze of exile.
But from where Chanes sits, such diplomatic gestures seem to be nothing
more than choreographed steps in a fleeting dance. Once the presidents are
gone, he knows, it all resumes -- the brutality, the bogus trials, the
political pathology that invades every inch of Cuban life. This is simply
what happens in Cuba, even when the world is watching.
``What is it all for? After all these years, the world still embraces
an
assassin,'' Chanes lamented, his words fading into the sweep of traffic
along Southwest 57th Avenue.
For a man so seemingly anonymous, Chanes played a lead role in just
about every historic event of the early revolution, from the founding of
the rebel movement to the 1953 attack on the Moncada army barracks, to the
landing of the Granma, to the Sierra Maestra expedition. But just months
after their triumph, Castro betrayed Chanes, throwing him in jail on
trumped-up charges. What's more, Castro erased Chanes' name from the
revolution's own history lessons.
As Castro continued his veering course, Chanes became the revolution's
most distinguished casualty. His ludicrous sentence came to symbolize the
cruel core of the regime.
He was sentenced to 30 years in prison -- and he served 30 years,
longer
than any other Cuban political prisoner. To explain it in a more global
context, Chanes served longer than one of the world's most famous
political
prisoners, Nelson Mandela. Yet while the world prayed and lobbied for
Mandela, it ignored Mario Chanes and his fellow political inmates.
``At the Isle of Pines prison, we'd ask one another, `Which of us will
be the one to turn the lights out?' And it turned out to be me,'' recalled
Chanes, who was allowed to leave Cuba in July 1993.
From 1961 to 1967, he watched 15,000 men pass through that prison.
``I watched men get shot, point blank, beaten with bayonets,
arbitrarily
pulled out and punished. But we were alone. The world didn't know,'' he
said.
In subsequent jails, Chanes witnessed the most extreme manifestations
of
revolutionary justice. He also watched as his life painfully slipped
away.
On March 21, 1962, two days after he began to serve his sentence,
Chanes' wife Caridad gave birth to their only child, Mayito. He came to
know his son through rare, high-security visits interrupted by long
periods
of isolation. As the regime tightened its fist against the political
prisoners, pressuring them to wear the garb of common criminals and to
embrace a ``reeducation'' plan, Chanes and fellow political prisoners
declared themselves plantado, unyielding. This posture cost Chanes and his
comrades family visits, medical care and other privileges.
From a muffled distance, he learned of the deaths of his father and his
mother. Then, in 1984, he heard his son died during routine surgery.
The revolution he had risked his life for denied him the right to
attend
the burials.
It did, however, grant him the distinction of being the longest-held
plantado. Long before presidents were offering lip service to Cuban
dissidents, he wrote the prologue on Cuban defiance from a dark and
forgotten place.
Ex-inmate knows Castro's brutality