Now, 40 years to the day, the Cuban people suffer a revolution in
ruins. The excruciating reality was comprehensively documented in this
week's Herald series 40 years of Castro by staff writers Juan O. Tamayo
and Fabiola Santiago, and in John Dorschner's Special Report, The
Vanishing Revolutionaries.
How much longer, dear Lord? Forty years of sacrifice and suffering,
isolation and separation, and for what? A megalomaniac's pipe dream that
has left a once-proud nation battered and bankrupt, selling its patrimony
and souls to foreign investors for hard currency.
Fidel Castro, who led the 26th of July Movement into power, refuses to
let go the reins. He mocks the people whom he allegedly serves by
regularly electing himself head of state on ballots where opposition
candidates are banned. This is the man who early on promised freedom from
imperialism and corruption, a diversified economy, an egalitarian society.
``I am a man who knows when to leave,'' he said in his first major speech
in 1959 in Havana. ``We cannot ever become dictators.''
But what did he actually do? Calling the United States the imperialist
enemy, he traded relations with it for dependency on an imperial Soviet
Union. So when annual Soviet subsidies of up to $5 billion ended in 1991,
Cuba's anemic economy went into tailspin. Food consumption now falls below
1950s' levels, as does production of such staples as milk, beans, and
coffee.
Even the sugar harvest, source of vital export earnings, this year
yielded well under 1958 figures. The narrow reliance on sugar and tourism
that Castro so criticized has been supplanted by reliance on
. . . sugar, tourism, and remittances from Cubans abroad. As
historian Hugh Thomas describes it, today's Cuba has a ``19th Century
economy'' with living standards ``at less than half'' what they might have
been without the revolution.
Factor in the desperation for hard currency, and Cuba has a widening
gulf between those who have, and don't have, dollars. The results include
widespread corruption, everything from prostitution to theft to black
marketeering. So much so that gains -- whatever they may have been -- also
have been corrupted.
Thus ordinary Cubans' access to health care is curtailed by lack of
sutures, antibiotics, and other medical supplies while well-off foreigners
fly in for cosmetic surgery. Then there is the educational system that
puts political indoctrination above all else to produce great moral
deception along with high literacy. So much for the egalitarian
``socialist paradise.''
Castro and his allies blame the 37-year-old U.S. embargo on trade with
Cuba for this national catastrophe. No, sir! The United States did not
make the Cuban state export revolution and squander resources on fruitless
wars in Africa and Latin America; it did not impose upon Cuba a
centralized economy that, as the Soviet empire well demonstrated, simply
does not work; it never has prohibited Cuba from buying technology,
industrial goods, food, or medicine from any other nation.
Cuba's failures are its own. Principally they have been the failures of
Fidel Castro, now 72. In 40 years the dictator has allowed no challenge to
his power. He has used seemingly disastrous events, such as the Mariel
boatlift, to strengthen his iron-fisted control. He has manipulated world
opinion by rationing foreign-press visas and gagging Cuba's independent
press. He has persecuted and jailed peaceable dissidents. Moreover,
whenever U.S. administrations appeared open to improving relations, he has
found a way to sour them -- the latest notable example being the shoot
down by Cuban MiGs of two Brothers to the Rescue planes in 1996, which
killed four South Floridians. Next year in
Havana
Let us each in our way contribute to the rebuilding of Cuba's civil
society -- be it through communication with loved ones, moral support, or
material contributions. Let us encourage healthy, respectful conversation
within the exile community. We have more in common -- the goal of a free
Cuba -- than our differences in strategy. Let us focus on the future. Have
faith that democracy will triumph, someday. Let us continue dreaming, in
the hope that positive change will finally visit Cuba in 1999.The isle of broken dreams
CUBA'S REVOLUTION
Alas, 40 years later, Cuba's omnipotent state has
achieved widespread political, material, and moral bankruptcy.
Promises versus reality
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald