Saturday, November 30, 2013

La Tercera Apertura Económica Cubana: Responderá Estados Unidos?


Nelson P Valdés

"Nosotros no podemos guiarnos por el criterio de lo que nos guste o no nos
guste, sino de lo que es útil o no es útil a la nación y al pueblo en estos
momentos tan decisivos para la historia de nuestro país.. El país
preservará todo lo que pueda ser preservado (APLAUSOS), y negociaremos todo
lo que pueda ser negociado. Pero si tenemos que introducir una determinada
dosis de capitalismo, lo introduciremos; lo estamos introduciendo, con
todos los inconvenientes."  - Fidel Castro, Agosto 6, 1995

                                   -------

Los que consideran que Cuba se está abriendo al capitalismo y que por lo
tanto la influencia de Fidel Castro ha disminuido o es nula y que dentro de
poco Cuba será capitalista - no le han estado prestando atención a la
realidad Cubana  por lo menos desde 1982.

Cuba ha tenido tres diferentes aperturas al mercado, a la inversión
extranjera y a los pequeños empresarios desde la década de los 80s.  Por
desgracia se tiene poca memoria de esa historia.

El hecho de que la isla se mantuviese en la órbita del "no capitalismo" [no
se le puede llamar socialismo ni comunismo], se debe al empecinamiento del
gobierno de los Estados Unidos.

Repasemos la historia.

Ya en 1982 Cuba anunció una legislación que permitía las inversiones
extranjeras. [1] O sea, Cuba trató de hacer una apertura cuando aún Vietnam
no lo había hecho y China iniciaba tal proceso en 1979. La Unión Soviética
le tomó hasta Mayo de 1991 iniciar similar proceso.

Pero entonces, en 1982, el gobierno de Estados Unidos, junto con los
gobiernos de América Latina, iniciaban el gran proyecto de fomentar las
tesis de Milton Friedman y de la liberalización de las economías en la
región. Era la etapa del presidente Ronald Reagan y Jorge Mas Canosa
dictaba la política hacia la isla. Los países de América Latina en vez de
atraer capitales extranjeros entraban la etapa de la enorme crisis de la
deuda externa.  Cuba, por su parte, comenzaba su propia apertura en los
precisos momentos en que América Latina entraba en lo que después se llamó
"la década perdida". La apertura cubana a una economía mixta (o que fuera
progresivamente más capitalista)  fracasó por razones externas. No eran los
mejores momentos ya que estados Unidos buscaban una mayor aislamiento de la
isla.

Cuando cae el Muro de Berlin (1989) y Boris Yeltsin toma el poder
(1991-1996) y desaparece el llamado "campo socialista"  casi todo el mundo
pensó que a la revlucion cubana le quedaba solo unos días. Se describía a
Cuba como un "Parque Jurásico." Por lo tanto, lo que Cuba ofrecía desde
1982 no se le prestó atención y la isla - por lo tanto - entró en el
período especial en tiempos de paz [parecido a lo que V. I. Lenin llamó en
su momento el "comunismo de guerra"]. En el exterior no se vieron los
paralelos ni se prestó atención a lo que los cubanos habían anunciados aún
antes de Mikhail  Gorbachev llegara al poder.

En 1993, cuando Boris Yeltsin ya está en el poder en Moscú,  Cuba abre el
país a la circulación del dólar [Julio 26]  y en dos años y dos meses
después [Septiembre 6, 1995] revisa la legislación sobre inversión
extranjera. [2] Nuevamente el gobierno de los EEUU hace todo lo posible,
como en el '82, para que la isla no pueda obtener inversionistas, ni
préstamos y no pueda entrar en las instituciones globales del capitalismo.
La política norteamericana siguió siendo la del aislamiento y la
persecución económica. Es más, se le pone presión a los países de la Unión
Europea y casi toda Europa termina jugando el juego norteamericano de mayor
aislamiento a la isla.

Ahora, más reciente, Cuba de nuevo recupera la legislación sobre inversión
extranjera del 82 y del 95, mientras comienza a abrir nuevos espacios
dentro de su propia economía así como en el puerto del Mariel, que es una
nueva y tercera versión, de la legislación sobre inversión extranjera;
igual que hizo a mediados de los 90s. [3]

Pero la reacción del exterior fue casi nula en aquellos momentos.

Hoy, sin embargo, las condiciones son otras. El mundo ha cambiado. La China
del 82 no es la China de hoy, tampoco lo es Vietnam. Rusia y los países del
BRIC ya tienen una política exterior propia y una estrategia económica
mundial. Y América Latina es más independiente, con más de una década
recuperada.

Pero hay que notar que lo que Cuba nuevamente está tratando de establecer
es un sistema donde coexistan ciertas formulas e instituciones y
territorios capitalistas con un sistema estatal donde todavía se debate
cuál debe ser el papel del estado y el sector público en la economía.

Esto no es la primera vez que sucede. La cuestión es si el gobierno de
Estados Unidos, en esta ocasión,  está dispuesto a iniciar algún tipo de
cooperación económica  - real y sustantiva - con una Cuba independiente.
==========================================================

[1] Decree-Law No. 50, "On Economic Association among Cuban and Foreign
Entities," February 15, 1982,

[2] Gaceta Oficial de Cuba, No. 3, septiembre 6, 1995.

[3] http://www.granma.cubaweb.cu/2013/11/20/cubamundo/artic03.html

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

La Cachita Y El Ché: Patron Saints of Revolutionary Cuba


By Nelson P. Valdés as told to Nan Elsasser


They are an unlikely duo: she is self-centered and he is self-sacrificing. She likes to dance; he thinks it's a waste of time. She is a hedonist; he is a fervent Marxist. She is originally from Africa; he was born in Argentina. About all they have in common is striking good looks and the love and adoration of the Cuban people who have adopted them.

Official Cuba lionizes Ché Guevara, the hero who fought his way to power by Fidel Castro's side and was killed by government soldiers in Bolivia. When Cuban soldiers return from supporting the Marxist regime in Angola, they are awarded medals for following el camino del Ché (the path of Ché). Yet within a few days of receiving their medals, the same soldiers will visit Cachita's shrine and leave their medals among the gifts of her devotees.

Cuba's political, economic, and cultural life rests significantly on a shaky compromise between the values represented by Cachita and Ché.

The Ermita, or shrine, of Caridad del Cobre, called Cachita, the patron saint of Cuba, is to the north of the city of Santiago, over 400 kilometers east of the Museo de la Revolución in Havana. It is at the ermita, rather than at the museum, that the rich history of revolutionary Cuba is on display, flickering in the shadows of votive candles. In the half-light of the tiny flames is the vial of hometown dirt that orbited the planet with Comandante Tamayo, the first and only Cuban astronaut; gold, silver, and bronze medals from the recent Pan American games in Indianapolis; and petitions from Fidel's mother from the days when her son was fighting in the sierra nearby. Side by side with these artifacts of national unity and revolutionary sacrifice are letters requesting a new car or a bigger apartment, and the traditional honey and cigar left in exchange for good sex.

In this small island nation, the fact that young communist "internacionalistas," the spiritual heirs of Ché, pay homage to a virgin from Spanish colonial times surprises no one. Nor does the fact that Caridad, alleged mother of God, most sacred of Catholic icons, bears the decidedly unholy nickname of "Cachita," central character of a popular song that choruses: "Cachita está alborotá, ahora baila el cha cha chá (Cachita is wild, now she's dancing the cha cha chá)."

Caridad del Cobre, like much of Cuba, is not what she appears to be. And hundreds of thousands of Cubans know the truth: Cachita-Caridad del Cobre is neither Catholic, Spanish, nor white. She is Oshún, the mulatto goddess of pleasure. An African hedonist masquerading as a Spanish saint, a Catholic shrine in a communist country, consumerist dreams in a revolutionary setting - Caridad del Cobre epitomizes the contradictions and combinations of Cuban life. In the past and in the present, Cubans have learned to live comfortably with the combination of power politics and mystical imagery.

In a country accustomed to signs from the other world, it was logical, for example, that Fulgencio Batista chose December 31 to abandon power and flee to the Dominican Republic. For Cubans, it is essential to leave the old year's problems behind before a new year begins. On the last day of December, housewives all over Cuba "se hacen la limpieza"; they throw a bucket of water on the floor of the innermost room and sweep it through the house and out the front door, pushing evil spirits along with the dirty water. If Batista had remained, he would have been burdened throughout the coming year with the bad karma of his defeat.

Nor were Habaneros surprised when a relatively unknown Fidel Castro descended from the mountains of Oriente. Since Spaniards first landed in Cuba with boatloads of human cargo in the early 1500s, the easternmost province has been a refuge for those escaping tyranny. For the past three hundred years, Santiago and the mountains that surround it have been the actual and symbolic home of freedom, a cradle of rebellion, and the preferred territory of the African gods called santos. In Oriente, where Santería (the worship of African gods with the names of Catholic saints) is the dominant religion, everyone understood when Fidel came down from the mountain and told the assembled masses, "..I do not speak in my name. I speak in the name of the thousands and thousands... who made victory possible. I speak in the name of our dead. .. This time the dead will continue to be in command." It does not really matter that Castro was probably expressing his heartfelt commitment to those who died in the struggle to overturn Batista.

To believers, those words, like the white eleke (necklace) he wore around his neck, were a sure sign that the gods were speaking through Fidel. Any doubts were dispelled on January 8, when Fidel first entered Havana and addressed the Cuban nation. I remember that day, because my family owned the only TV on the block. Everyone in the neighborhood was either in our living room, standing in the doorway, or looking in through the front window. We were all listening to Fidel with one ear and to a neighbor with the other. 

Until, seemingly from nowhere, two doves appeared and, illuminated by television lights, circled Camp Colombia where Fidel was speaking. As if on cue, one landed on the podium, and all of Cuba went silent. When the second dove perched on Fidel's shoulder, people gasped, then began chanting, "Fi-del. Fi-del." Over the years, many interpretations of this phenomenon have circulated. The New York Times said the dove symbolized the dawn of peace in a troubled land; the conservative Cuban press claimed the Holy Spirit had blessed the revolution. Both missed the mark because, appearances notwithstanding, neither Catholic nor Marxist-Leninist interpretations of reality have deep roots in Cuba. Behind the icons and the anti-imperialist billboards beat Santería drums.

Originally, Santería was a new world synthesis of various animist religions from southwest Nigeria. When threatened by Spanish slave owners for practicing heathen rites, African slaves clothed their beliefs in the protective coloring of Catholicism, and a new synthesis occurred. Today, the two religions share the same altars, the same images, sacred dates, and even prayers. In January 1988, Jaime Ortega, the archbishop of Havana, visited the chapel of Santa Barbara in nearby Guines (reputed to be a "bewitched" town). He was moved by the profound devotion he observed, which he chose to interpret as a manifestation of strong Catholic faith. But this chapel is maintained by santeros, not priests. And while the forms of these two religions overlap, the content does not. The eighty-year-old mayordomo who cleans and protects the church will tell you that the real power dwells behind the statue of Santa Barbara in the otá, or sacred stone of Changó. What distinguishes otá from other stones is that sacred stones are alive. They grow up and have children, assuring worshippers of a steady supply of supernatural energy.

The otá is not the only difference between Catholicism and Santería. According to santero theology, Olofi created the universe. Initially, his creation was immobile, but soon, bored with the static cosmos, he added plants, animals, flowers, seas, clouds, rain, human beings, and more than three hundred male and female gods called orishas. Each orisha, or santo, bears both an African Yoruba name and a Catholic name, as well as unique personalities and powers. Obatalá, for example, is unimpressed by money. Oshum, on the other hand, adores it, although she prefers a good party. Elegguá alone determines the future. What he predicts cannot be forestalled by man, woman, or other gods.

Unfortunately, by populating the heavens with so many strong characters, Olofi had also created interminable wrangling. Tired of endless conflict, he chose Obatalá to rule over other gods and human beings, who were also behaving poorly. Obatalá, who speaks through Fidel, is the leader, the god of thinking and consciousness. He is also the god of justice.

In Santería, both men and women serve as santeros. Over them are the babalawos, who have the power to make animal sacrifices, initiate believers into the religion and read the future with the Ifá oracle or with the eight largest pieces of a smashed coconut shell. Although there is a titular "king" of babalawos, he lacks the theocratic and administrative control of a Catholic pope. There are no "Thou shalt nots" in Santería. Believers do not attain salvation through good works and a pure heart. They get what they want in direct proportion to the adequacy of their offerings. The santos communicate their feelings via the orishas, or supernatural messengers. White doves are the messengers of Obatalá, the right-hand man of the god of all creation. Thus when the bird landed on Fidel, everyone watching knew that Castro was blessed; he was El Elegido (The Chosen One). Since then, Fidel has been called El Caballo (the Horse), the term used to designate someone whom an orisha has mounted and possessed.

On January 8, 1989, thirty years after the triumph of the Cuban revolution, Fidel spoke once again from Camp Columbia, and once again a white dove perched on his shoulder. He spoke of sacrifice, commitment, and hard work, and he invoked the spirit of Ché. But masses of Cubans attending the annual event saw and heard the spirit of Obatalá. Whether the dove, like the site, was orchestrated, is irrelevant. What is important is the continuing influence of Santería on Cuban popular culture, and, consequently, on political life. Contemporary Cuban values are rooted in a past without hope. Africans who had been seized and transported in chains across an ocean, deprived of family, land, and language, had little incentive to believe in their power to shape the future. Unlike Pilgrims, Puritans, and even indentured servants. their futures were determined by the whims of a slave master. In this despondent milieu, Santería was born and flourished. A stepchild of medieval Catholicism and African polytheism, Santería is the antithesis of Calvinism.

The descendants of slaves and landless peasants are convinced that material and spiritual well-being is not the reward for hard work and clean living. Three hundred years of experience taught them that happiness is fleeting and often achieved only at someone else's expense. Whether you acquire a new house or lose the one you already have, whether the sugar content of cane is high or low, whether the economy prospers or stagnates, depends not on budgeting, technology, or international banking policies; it is in the hands of a pantheon of capricious gods.

When Oshún asks for a sacrifice, she expects you to kill a pigeon; she is unimpressed by Ché's sacrifice, the kind where you die fighting imperialists. Nor is she impressed by a capitalist working himself to death, accumulating money for the benefit of generations down the road. A people who worship the goddess of sex, lover of gold, and patron of parties is not a people favorably disposed to endure the hardships required to surmount economic dependency and construct socialism. No one knows this better than Fidel Castro. For thirty years, Fidel, chief apostle of revolutionary sacrifice, has dedicated himself to transforming the ideology of the Cuban people; for thirty years he has exhorted his people to scorn the siren Cachita for the selfless Ché.

As perestroika rolled across the former Soviet Union and much of eastern Europe, Fidel pushed "rectification" - a return to asceticism, voluntarism, and collectivism. Political pundits interpreted Fidel's endless sermons as a direct challenge to Gorbachev's neo-capitalist policies. But Castro's devil was not Russian; she was/is a happy-go-lucky, mulatto goddess who cha-chas to the name of Cachita. In a 1979 speech, Castro said, " . . the most powerful weapon... is an ethic, a consciousness, a sense of duty, a sense of organization, discipline, and responsibility.

Castro knows that to bring prosperity and socialism to an underdeveloped society, he must provide Cuban citizens with a revolutionary version of the Protestant ethic. He has to make people believe in their power to shape their individual and collective futures. They must have faith that in their labor lies the foundation for the future. In other words, they must emulate Ché, a man who gave everything and asked nothing in return, a guerrilla who believed devoutly in his ability to shape the forces of history by sheer willpower.
To this end, whenever children in the Young Pioneers (a Cuban version of the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, organized by the Communist Party) set off to work in the fields or march in a parade, they raise their right hand and pledge, "Seremos como el Ché (We will be like Ché)."

Ironically, the same government which expends tremendous energy inculcating revolutionary values has inadvertently enhanced the power and prestige of Santería.

When Castro assumed control of Cuba, he did not exhort the poor to construct socialism through voluntary labor. As the bourgeois fled, the revolutionaries seized their assets and distributed them among their former servants, prompting the poet, Nicolás Guillén, to write: "Te lo prometió Martí y Fidel te lo cumplió." [What Martí (hero of the Cuban war for independence) promised, Fidel delivered]:'

In Santería, a promesa is a contract with a god-if you make an adequate offering, your petition is granted. This unexpected bonanza reinforced many people's belief in magic. According to the First Party Congress in 1975, Santería was permissible as folklore, a relic of an ignorant past. When religious superstitions failed to wither away, the ever-pragmatic Castro did more than recognize them: he created a national association of babalawos, invited the Nigerian king of all santeros for a visit and promised to build a temple and hold a national congress of santeros.

In the interim, Santería benefited from the revolutionary leadership's confrontations with the Catholic Church. As the authority of recognized "official" religion was curtailed, the influence of Santería expanded to fill the vacuum. Finally, Santería’s prestige was augmented by the mass movement of Cuban troops and technicians to Africa, where religions similar to Santería are practiced openly. More than 200,000 Cubans have visited the motherland over the last ten years. This re acquaintance, instigated by the government, has made it more difficult to repress African-inspired religions.

Castro is not unaware of the extraordinary convergence between Santería and revolutionary holy days, nor is he above manipulating their significance. January 1, the day of El Triunfo, is also Elegguá’s day. July 26, officially commemorated as the commencement of the struggle against Batista, is also celebrated as the day of St. Ann, mother of Mary, who, as any Cuban can tell you, is really the benevolent Nana Burukú, goddess of Justice and mother of Babalú-ayé. No one knows if it is coincidence or foresight that the red and black of the 26th of July Movement happened to be the colors of this powerful goddess.

But relying on signs from the gods is risky business. In 1987, the Ifá Oracle, the annual prediction for the new year, announced that Castro would die unless the Yoruba "king of kings;' the "great Oni" of babalawos, traveled to Cuba and kissed the ground. The revolutionary government duly issued the invitation, and a picture of the great Oni arriving at the José Martí Airport in Havana graced the front page of Granma, the newspaper of the Communist Party. Reportedly, the Nigerian kissed the ground. Fidel did not die. And neither has Santería.

Contemporary Cuban politics is the child of an unlikely marriage. The children of the revolution admire Ché, their handsome, idealistic lather; they worship Cachita, their beautiful, fun-loving mother, and they hope to grow up to be both.