The hack goes to Cuba
NOTE: I hadn't intended on posting this one so soon, but given the events in Cuba yesterday, I figured it was timely. Also, don't forget to enter the Dog Blog Competition! Entries accepted through tonight.

It's shocking, really, to think that the Duluth paper sent me to Cuba. I didn't know anything about Cuba. I'd never met a Cuban. I speak very, very, very limited Spanish--pretty much enough to order a beer and find my way to the bullfight--and not any Cuban Spanish at all.
But a group of Duluthians was headed to Cuba to explore a sister-city relationship with Pinar del Rio, and I made a pitch to go along. And my editor said yes.
The group was made up mostly of doctors; to make it legal, it was billed as a professional fact-finding trip, since tourism was outlawed and a sister city trip could be considered tourism. The United States had--and still has--a trade embargo against Cuba, though the Cubans referred to it as an illegal blockade.
There were about 10 in our group. We flew to Mexico, spent a day or two outside of Cancun, and then flew from Cancun to Havana. There is no mark in my passport that shows I've been to Cuba; they gave us paper visas to enter Cuba and took them back when we left.
There are so many stories I could tell you about that trip... about how beautiful Havana was, and how stopped-in-time it felt. The whole city looked like it hadn't been painted in about 50 years. There were gorgeous balconies and tall windows and ornate wrought-iron Spanish style architecture, and roosters that woke me up, crowing somewhere outside the window of my Hotel Inglaterra room early every morning.
In Havana, we walked along the Malecon and watched the lovers and the fishermen, and we toured elementary schools and met beautiful schoolchildren, in their neat red-and-white uniforms, the girls with pierced ears and huge dark eyes, the boys with red kerchiefs around their necks. One school we visited was in a crumbling mansion with cracked walls and broken tile floors, but the children sang and danced for us and looked clean and friendly and happy. One girl kept stealing glances at me and smiling, and hardly realizing I was doing it, I took out my earrings and handed them to her.
There were political billboards everywhere, many more than in Russia, and much more passionate. Instead of brawny workers smiling as they walked out of factories, these billboards showed feisty slogans and pictures of Che Guevera.
Venceremos! (We shall overcome.) Cuba si!
One billboard showed a Cuban man shaking his fist at a cartoonish Uncle Sam. The Spanish translated roughly to, "We are not afraid of you, you imperial bastards!"

At night, the streets were completely black; fuel was precious, and they did not turn on the street lamps. More than once I was almost run down by a bicyclist I could not see in the dark--just a last-second jingle of a bicycle bell, and then a quick rush of air as it zipped past.
One evening we went to La Bodeguita del Medio, one of the bars that Hemingway had loved, and had mojitos. The walls of all the tiny rooms were covered in autographs. We could not find Ernest's, if it is there.
And then we went off to Pinar del Rio, which I knew as the home of baseball player Tony Oliva. This was to be Duluth's new sister city.
I don't have the same kinds of stories about Cuba that I do about Russia; there was no fantastic surprising connection between our cities, as there was with Petrozavodsk and the American Midwestern Finns. Cuba was bawdier, and livelier, and more colorful. But it was also harder for me to understand; unlike in Russia, I did not meet very many people who spoke English, and nobody seemed particularly interested in the sister city friendship, or even in the United States. They were friendly, but they were not awed to see us as the Russians had been.
Because of an enormous shortage of gasoline, there were few cars on the road--and virtually no new ones. The cars we saw were the gorgeous finned 1950s cars that you've heard about, and all of them were in mint condition.
Most people got around by bicycle--often two and three to one bike--or by grimy buses that belched dark clouds of exhaust. Ox carts and mule carts were also fairly common, especially outside of Havana.
The buses were always jammed; a New York Times piece I had read before my trip described people as clinging "like spiders" to outside of buses. I loved that phrase, but I never saw that, exactly. But still, the buses were very full.

And sometimes people would just wait by the side of the road for someone to pick them up; it was considered good form to pick people up if you had room in your vehicle. So pickup trucks and Army trucks were often jammed with standing-room-only passengers.
Because this was a medical exchange, we toured neighborhood clinics and learned about their system. The infant mortality rate in Cuba was lower than in the United States, and the doctors in our group were curious to know why.
The reason was fairly simple: Many, many neighborhood clinics, and free medical care.
The neighborhoods in Cuba were set out in a grid; and in the center of each neighborhood was a clinic.
When you moved to a neighborhood, that clinic became your clinic, and that doctor became your doctor. If you moved away, the clinic handed you your medical records in a cardboard box and you brought them to your new clinic in your new neighborhood.
Our trip took place in 1993, shortly after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Without the USSR to send it supplies and buy its sugar, Cuba was starting to hurt. Basics such as medicine and even soap were in short supply; many of the clinics maintained back gardens, where they raised medicinal herbs.
Still, every clinic was scrupulously clean. The doctors were friendly and seemed to be forthcoming. Everyone lamented the "illegal American blockade." But I suspect it was really the collapse of the Soviet Union that was making their life so difficult.
One day we took a side trip to a fishing village. The sky was inky black; a storm was rolling in. I watched as two men in rubber boots hurried up the dirt road, trying to beat the rain. They held a heavy piece of cardboard between them; on it was a very large fish.
Even out in the countryside, people had small neat concrete block homes with electricity and running water. Most people had gardens, and chickens. There were no luxuries, but it seemed that everyone had the basic necessities of life--shelter, clean water, medical care.
One of the men in our group spoke Spanish, and one day he and I did an informal poll; we stopped everyone we saw and asked them what they had had for dinner the night before.
Chicken and rice. Chicken and rice. Chicken and rice.
A note on the photos: The top photo is photographer Joey M. and me, with two young men from Havana. I can't remember who they were or how we met them, but I think they just wanted to have their picture taken with two Americans.
The next two pictures are from Havana--a building I could see from my hotel, and the Hemingway bar.
And the next two are from Pinar del Rio, a smaller town, with shorter, more modest buildings than Havana. But just as beautiful, and just as much in need of paint.
The schoolgirl on the right is the one I gave my earrings to. And the last picture is a typical propaganda poster; this one was near Pinar del Rio.
COMING NEXT WEEK: More stories of the Hack.


















25 comments:
Very cool - I didn't know you'd been to Cuba. I've always thought of it as an intriguing, mysterious place. I like the fact that you were able, at least to some extent, to mingle with average Cubans. Your description of the free medical care there makes me wonder why we can't seem to provide free medical care to those who need it here.
I would have given her anything of mine she seemed to desire. What an absolutely beautiful girl. Those eyes are amazing.
My daughter saw Fidel Castro on television this morning and asked me how he was interviewed. She didn't think Americans were allowed to travel to Cuba for any reason at all.
When we were in Paris, my daughter bought a t-shirt that looks almost identical to the top left picture on that Che Guevera billboard.
What a wonderful story. The pictures are gorgeous.
i wonder if there is any way to tell you about the evening that Joey and i ended up calling "the night of prostitution..."
i'll think about that.
it was a very very interesting place.
First of all, I am totally jealous. I want to go to Cuba. Mostly because it is forbidden. :) Cuba is a holiday destination here.
Second, I don't think you can drop a little explosive, like "night of the prostitution" and then not make with the story.
Nobody likes a tease. :)
Yes, I want to go to Cuba, too! It seems a very interesting place to go, with good weather. I know a few people who have been. And who keep going back!
And yes, you can't drop a bomb like the "night of prostitution" and then not tell. I'm waiting for that post now...
I'd love to go to Cuba - fascinating place. And the girl you gave the earrings to is so beautiful.
My brother has holidayed in Cuba a couple of times recently. He was shocked by the poverty but he said the locals he chatted with are happy because they they have free medical care and they are getting education and housing. Tourists are extremely well catered for! He did say they were not very complimentary about America!
sorry! don't mean to be a tease. telling that story will require a bit of research, because it's a little foggy in my brain. (mojitos.)
I am so glad I found your blog. Your writing is delightful, and your subject matter surprising and fun.
all the best-
Patience
Although I've never been to Cuba, I grew up in Tampa during the Cuban Missile Crisis. I went to school with girls born in Cuba and whose families fled when Castro took over. And I lived in Florida when Jimmy Carter decided to allow Castro to send over his prisoners and mentally ill. To live in parts of Florida is to live in suburbs of Cuba. I love Cuban coffee, Cuban bread, chicken and rice, and many other Cuban specialties. I really should go to Cuba, but I thought we Americans weren't allowed to travel there.
Americans are not allowed to travel to Cuba as tourists. There are other ways to go. When Jesse Ventura was our governor a few years back, he led an agricultural trade mission to Cuba.
That was perfectly legal.
This sister-city group went as a professional medical fact-finding trip of doctors. That, too, was legal.
One of the colleges here in the Twin Cities sent its baseball team to Cuba a couple of years ago to play baseball; that, too, was legal because it was seen as a cultural exchange.
Journalists can go (on journalist visas) to cover the news.
Since my visit (1993) the U.S has tighetned restrictions further. And frankly, the restrictions are confusing to me, too, Wakeup--basically tourism, trade and commerce are forbidden, so I'm not entirely sure why Minnesota can now export corn to Cuba, but apparently we can.
but you and Kaycie and -ann are right in that you would not be allowed to just buy a ticket and fly to Cuba as an American tourist.
It is always surprising to me, when I am in Ireland or Canada, to see billboards touting vacations in Cuba. It looks so....illicit!
Beautiful pictures, Laurie, and as always, a great story.
It's interesting to see the comparisons between the rhetoric we hear, and the reality of a place seen through someone's eyes. Nothing is ever how you expect it to be.
And, "the night of prosititution"? Oh, please do tell!
Cuba is a very popular destination for Canadians and you can fly direct from most major airports here. My brother was there last year and wanted to catch the next plane back when he returned home. He absolutely loved it and would happily spend every holiday there.
aims, it's beautiful and foreign and warm and interesting. i agree with your brother.
people on our trip, though, had a lot of trouble coming to terms with the difference between visitors and residents.
we were offered sumptuous, huge buffets at our hotels--foods in great abundance, and foods not available to most people of Cuba.
and we rode around in an air-conditioned motorcoach, while native Cubans stood out in the rain hoping for a ride in the back of an Army truck.
it made us feel extremely guilty, and unfairly privileged.
Want to trade life experiences? Please? Damn it, woman. Cuba?? You've probably had a one nighter with Hugh Grant, too. (heh). You have had the most amazing adventures.(Insert bald envy).
And I totally agree that once you bring up a subject like "night of prostitution" you need to spill the story.
Really.
Excellent piece. I'd love to go to Cuba one day. I don't speak Spanish either so I'd have to take Brainbox as he's doing it at school.
Wow, would love to go to Cuba, even more now I've read this piece.
That was an amazing account, I learned so much about Cuba and their way of life.
And, of course, if you're a dual citizen, you just use your other passport.
Cool story. I don't quite get the whole Cuba thing.
Funny that we all commiserate on the poverty in Cuba, yet on pure numbers (ie not per capita) America leaves Cuba for dead in the 'Living in Poverty Stakes'.
If I had to live in poverty, I'd rather do it in a poor country than a wealthy one.
Sorry, it's still fairly early here, and I'm not a morning person.
Unlike Americans, Dutch people are allowed to go to Cuba and it is a favorite destination for some people. Everyone I've spoken to who has been there, has come back with very positive stories about the people there.
I am very happy for you that you were able to go there and see things first hand. I think a little paradise could be made of Cuba, given the right circumstances. Not too much capitalism, though, God forbid!
Their medical system sounds so fair and just, we could all learn something from it, especially since in the Netherlands the National Health System was abolished and we now have people without health insurance.
It will be interesting to see how Cuba would fare under a really different leader who was more "acceptable" to the United States and who would make better overtures to the United States himself.
Laurie, I loved Cuba and admired so much the positivity and pride of the people and also isn't it one of the few organic countries in the world now (accidental because of the embargoes, no Dupont and Monsanto crap on their farms, so everyone is very healthy.
I was SO in that bar, thanks for the photos, great memories for me too!!
XO
WWW
Great photos, Laurie! Cuba is a popular destination from here.
When Americans visit Victoria many of them head for the cigar stores to buy Cuban cigars. There's a cigar store a few doors from my office, so I often walk through clouds of the smoke. I've never been a smoker, but those stogies smell good....and as for the look on the face of each happy smoker........
oh, i'd forgotten about cuban cigars. once when i (as the Hack) went to International Falls on assignment, a colleague in the newsroom asked me to cross over into Fort Frances and bring him back some cuban cigars.
so i did.
and we got stopped at the border crossing on the way back, and our car was searched.
they took everything apart, searched the glove box and the trunk and i was quaking off to the side because cuban cigars are illegal to bring into the US...
and in the end they looked at everything except the modest flat brown paper sack that lay on the console and held the cigars.
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