coco fusco on Sun, 20 Jun 2004 15:46:36 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Choking Cuban writers |
I am Cuban American and have travelled to Cuban dozens of times in the past twenty years. I agree that the embargo is not an effective strategy and that it hurts the population. I'm very familiar with all the anti Communist campaigning from the 60s onward designed to create an image of Cuba as a gulag. I also know Cubans who spent years in the UMAP labor camps there in the 60s because they were gay or hippies. Oneo of my artist friends there was imprisoned a few years ago for taking a shit on a Communist newspaper in a gallery as a performance. I have worked with artists there, exhibited there, and host an indepedent artist-run gallery's webpage on my website. So please do not write off what I will now write as a tirade from a fanatic anti-Castro exile. I'm not, I deeply resent non-Cubans who pretend to know more without having lived through the tragedies of the Cuban situation, and I've paid dearly in many ways for keeping a dialogue open with Cubans on the island. However.... 75 writers and independent librarians were jailed last year on trumped up charges of being subversives. They are still in jail. The "subersive" activity amounted to circulating literature on human rights, engaging in organizing to promote constitutional changes through LEGAL MEANS, and accepting paper and pencils from the US consulate. US officials are reported by an infiltrator to have told these Cubans that they wanted articles on food and energy shortages in Cuba. To suggest as the Cuban government did that such reports would damage Cuba is absolutely ridiculous, even obscene. Everyone who knows anything about Cuba knows about the shortages. Everyone with relatives there (I have many) is contacted by them to ask for dollars to buy food and medicine because of shortages. There was no need for Fidel to react in a way that has choked those writers. To suggest that it is a criminal act to lend books out of your own house is perverse and completely totalitarian. For twenty years I have hand carried bags of books and magazines to artists who circulate them among friends. That is the only way for many to have access to foreign literature since the Cuban economy does not permit publishing of many translations for which rights must be paid. The idea that Cubans are building secret libraries of anti-Communist literature in order to destroy the political system is just absurd. It was after this outrageous move and the EXECUTION without trial of two men who hijacked a boat unsucessfully last year (without harming any of the passengers)that I decided I did not want to give the Cuban government my money or my tacit acceptance of such measures by travelling there during high profile cultural events. A major funder of the Havana Bienal,the Prince Claus Fund in Holland, withdrew support after these events. I still care very much for my family and friends there, but at a certain point, I believe those who have been involved with the Cuban situation for a long time have to begin to take a stand that opposes gross violations of human rights and due process. Indeed you are right that internet access is controlled and since the jailing of the 75 writers, new laws went into effect in Cuba further curtailing access. It troubles me that this would not cause you any discomfort in your call to support Cuba. What happened to "virtual democracy"? Is that only for Europeans?. Do you really think that by travelling there you are going to have a positive effect on policy? Please don't be naive. Travellers in cultural fields bring money and the prospect of art and educational exchange that means that the Cuban government can make more money. Of course artists and intellectuals there like to have the opportunity to meet foreigners, but there are still serious ethical implications to be dealt with. I boycotted grapes as an adolescent because I was against exploitation of Mexican farmworkers. I boycotted South Africa because of apartheid. I have not wanted to boycott Cuba but I can no longer accept its excessive repression of its own citizens. It is very ironic and sad to me that this list has been filled with calls to support CAE against unwarranted repression by the FBI, but that at the same time you would advocate tacitly endorsing the policies of a country that is jailing its own "radical" intellectuals. Does that mean that civil rights are only meant to be for Americans? Coco Fusco # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net