A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, April 1, 2016
Cuba: The Communist toddler without parents ( An Interview )
Ordinary life in Havana – Image Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons.
Olivia Solis ( Photo – special arrangement )
( March 30, 2016, Serbia, Sri Lanka Guardian) With
President Obama’s historic visit, the Communist island of Cuba is back
in the world headlines. Politically unique since its 1959 revolution,
Nilantha Ilangamuwa of Sri Lanka Guardian, spoke with one of its many exiles, Olivia Solis, a Cuban currently living in Serbia.
Here is an excerpt of the interview;
Nilantha Ilangamuwa (NI): You were born and raised in Cuba. What
are your childhood memories of the social-political situation in the
country?
Olivia Solis (OS): Nothing about Cuba is black and
white. Taking sides always brings conflict. It takes time and wisdom to
understand the scope of the situation. Being outside the country, you
can compare to other societies where basic rights have been secured.
The Castros’ are old now, too old to dictate anything, and is time for a
big change. Cuban society is strangled by false promises, excuses,
tired of waiting and hopelessness. The youth of today are nothing like
mine who still had something to relate to.
My childhood was fine, I think. We were poor but I went to school
everyday, everyone was considered as equals, my parents had a paying
job. Some children had more and some had less, but less here means near
to nothing — no toys, no shoes to wear to school — and more means that
you have had family members abroad who were able to send you some money
or were a part of the military oligarchy and relatives of “war heroes”.
The military still control almost everything on the island. In my case
we basically lived off our relatives in the USA. The 1990s were the
hardest period for Cuban society after the disintegration of USSR.
NI: You were born in post-revolution era. How communist is Cuba now?
OS: Well I grew up with the idea of a little island but
with huge pride, that everyone in the world paid attention to us. They
make sure you are aware of this, and teach in constantly in schools. In
every kindergarten, hospital, school, state-owned job (100% of jobs are
from the state) you would see photos of Fidel Castro, Che Guevara,
Camilo Cienfuegos, even Raul rarely.
I was born in the mid-80s so I remember very little. Cuba was a
communist paradise, everyone had the same furniture, same food on the
table, same shirts and shoes, you were able to pay for holidays and
life was as good as it can be. If you kept your own ideas quiet
everything seemed functional and perfect. My parents had this perception
of a perfect society and then there was the breakup of the USSR and you
realised how weak the Cuban economy really was, how the system never
managed to sustain itself or its people, how there was no backup plan.
NI: Do you consider Cuba’s Revolution a success story?
OS: The Cuban Revolution failed the Cuban nation. The
propaganda of the Cuban revolution sounds very good to the ears of any
leftist pseudo-Communist idealist: free education, free health care and
tons of advances in the field, equality between women and men. The price
for everything is hunger, oppression, poverty. I’m not being dramatic, I
know there are many countries worse off and I shouldn’t be comparing
Cuba with Sweden, not in a million years. But the lack of basic rights
and the death of the civil society… the idea of thriving, not just
surviving, and being able build your own path, or even just fix the roof
of your house is something crucial in any society. I learned a lot when
I got out. Human rights is considered a very sensitive topic because it
is the language of the dissents, and the revolution should not be
questioned in these terms. You should not question it at all, better
talk low — maybe your neighbour works for the political police — that
was how I grew up: be quiet, don’t question out loud. In the end you
shut up, adapt or leave the country.
NI: Tell us your story. Why did you leave Cuba?
OS: So I left, I’m married and have a child living in
eastern Europe. I wasn’t obsessed by leaving, like many people I knew.
There were two kinds of people, those who wanted to leave whenever
possible, and those who were comfortable with the idea of the revolution
and supported its inner values while compromising their conscience.
NI: It said the former leader of Cuba, Fidel Castro, is the
prime target for foreign intelligence agencies. The CIA have reportedly
tried to assassinate Castro over five hundred times. This is an amazing
story. What is your take on this?
OS: I think there is other side of the story as well.
Pride has been planted in me since childhood. Propaganda is very violent
and sources of information in Cuba are censored when it comes to the
“attempts” you mention.
For myself, as for many others, it was very disrespectful how Raul did
not wait for Obama at the airport. Are we still playing a game to see
who is toughest? Raul is supposed to represent the nation, not his own
ideology. The Cold War is over. Great for Castro that he survived those
assassination attempts, but this is all part of the myth. With time you
realise that there are no untouchable icons, no unreachable leaders, no
inhuman presidents.
NI: You mention the Obama visit. As the first US President visiting Cuba since 1928, does this matter? If so, why?
OS: Cuba needs hope. The economy should flourish,
people should have better opportunities and be able to build their own
paths and not only focus on putting food on the table. Cuban people
should be able to plan, build, grow. Havana is literally falling to
pieces…. it is heartbreaking. If the USA is willing to make any progress
for the better, they must be welcome.
Everyone should listen to the speech President Obama gave. I wasn’t sure
about his position, I always thought he was maybe too charismatic, like
a weapon for gaining people favours. But this was perfect.
NI: In an unprecedented joint news conference by both leaders
they went head to head on human rights and economic sanctions. President
Raul Castro gave chilling answers about political prisoners and other
sensitive subjects. How did you perceive this?
OS: Well it was a disaster. It appeared staged, Raul
did not listen to the questions. He coughed when issues such as
political prisoners and human rights were on the table. Raul doesn’t
know how to answer to these social issues. A list of political prisoners
exists. These prisoners were abused with violence. Some of them died in
jail and some through hunger strikes.
NI: President Obama talked about Human Rights and Universal
norms of humanity. Yet Guantanamo Bay Prison is located in Cuba. This
hypocrisy has been seized on by the Cuban authorities. What is your
take?
OS: The Cuban people should not suffer out of politics
and policies regarding issues such as the Guantanamo Bay Prison. Cubans
are always reminded of these matters but I think it is also wise to look
around, above, under, not just backwards. Politicians cannot play hide
and seek — showing Guantanamo or other US hypocrisies — while the
ordinary citizens in the country are suffering.