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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, December 1, 2016
The Left’s Fidelity to Castro-ation — Slavoj Žižek
In the last decades, Cuban “socialism” continued to live only because it didn’t yet notice it was already dead.
( November 30, 2016, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) I am critical of Cuba not because I am anti-Communist but because I remain a Communist.
We all remember the classic scene from cartoons: a cat walks over the
precipice and magically goes on, floating in the air—it falls down only
when it looks down and becomes aware that it has no ground under its
feet. In the same way, one can say that, in the last decades, Cuban
“socialism” continued to live only because it didn’t yet notice it was
already dead.
It is clear that Fidel Castro was different from the usual figure of a
Communist leader, and that Cuban revolution itself was something unique.
Its specificity is best rendered by the duality of Fidel and Che
Guevara: Fidel, the actual Leader, supreme authority of the State,
versus Che, the eternal revolutionary rebel who could not resign himself
to just running a State. Is this not something like a Soviet Union in
an alternative past in which Leon Trotsky would not have been rejected
as the arch-traitor? Imagine that, in the mid-1920s, Trotsky were to
emigrate and renounce Soviet citizenship in order to incite permanent
revolution around the world, and then die in the highlands of Papua New
Guinea soon afterwards. After his death, Stalin would have elevated
Trotsky into a cult, and monuments celebrating their friendship, along
with iconic t-shirts, would proliferate all around the USSR.
One gets tired of the conflicting stories of the economic failure and
human rights abuses in Cuba, as well as of the twins of education and
healthcare that are always trotted out by the friends of the revolution.
One gets tired even of the really great story of how a small country
can resist the biggest superpower (yes, with the help of the other
superpower).
The saddest thing about today’s Cuba is a feature clearly rendered by
the crime novels of Cuba’s literary icon Leonardo Padura, which features
detective Mario Conde and are set in today’s Havana. Padura’s
atmosphere is the one not so much of poverty and oppression as of missed
chances, of living in a part of the world to a large extent bypassed by
the tremendous economic and social changes of the last decades.
All of the above mentioned stories do not change the sad fact that the
Cuban revolution did not produce a social model relevant for the
eventual Communist future. I visited Cuba a decade ago, and on that
visit I found people who proudly showed me houses in decay as a proof of
their fidelity to the revolutionary “Event”: “Look, everything is
falling apart, we live in poverty, but we are ready to endure it rather
than to betray the Revolution!” When renunciations themselves are
experienced as proof of authenticity, we get what in psychoanalysis is
called the logic of castration. The whole Cuban politico-ideological
identity rests on the fidelity to castration—no wonder that the Leader
is called Fidel Castro!
The true tragedy is that the very remaining authenticity of the Cuban
revolution made it possible for the Castro brothers’ government to drag
on endlessly and meaninglessly, deprived of the last vestiges of an
emancipatory potential. The image of Cuba one gets from someone like
Pedro Juan Gutierrez (in his “dirty Havana trilogy”) is telltale. The
Cuban common reality is the truth of the revolutionary Sublime: the
daily life of struggle for survival, of the escape into violent
promiscuous sex, of seizing the day without any future-oriented
projects.
In his big public speech in August 2009, Raúl Castro lambasted those who
just shout “Death to the U.S. imperialism! Long live the revolution!”
instead of engaging in difficult and patient work. All the blame for the
Cuban misery (a fertile land that nonetheless imports 80 percent of its
food) cannot be put on the U.S. embargo: There are idle people on the
one side, empty land on the other side, and one has just to start
working the fields.
Obviously this is true, but Raúl Castro forgets to include into the
picture he was describing his own position: If people don’t work the
fields, it is obviously not because they are lazy but because the system
of economy is not able to convince them to work. Instead of
reprimanding ordinary people, he should have applied the old Stalinist
motto according to which the mobile of progress in Socialism is
self-critique, and exert a radical critique of the system he and Fidel
personify. Here, again, evil is in the very critical gaze which
perceives evil all around.
So what about pro-Castro Western Leftists who despise what Cubans
themselves call “gusanos/worms,” those Cubans who emigrated to find a
better life? With all sympathy for the Cuban revolution, what right does
a typical middle-class Western Leftist, like too many readers of In
These Times, have to despise a Cuban who decided to leave Cuba not only
because of political disenchantment but also because of poverty? In the
same vein, I myself remember from the early 1990s dozens of Western
Leftists who proudly threw in my face how, for them, that Yugoslavia (as
imagined by Tito) still exists, and reproached me for betraying the
unique chance of maintaining Yugoslavia.
To that charge, I answered: I am not yet ready to lead my life so that
it will not disappoint the dreams of Western Leftists. Gilles Deleuze
wrote somewhere: “Si vous etes pris dans le reve de l’atre vous etez
foutu!”—If you are caught in the dream of the other you’re ruined. Cuban
people paid the price for being caught into the Western leftists’
dream.
The gradual openings of Cuban economy towards a capitalist market are
compromises that do not resolve the deadlock but, rather, drag on the
predominant inertia. After the impending fall of Chavismo in Venezuela,
Cuba has three choices: to continue to vegetate in a mixture of
Communist party regime and pragmatic concessions to the market; to
embrace fully the Chinese model (wild capitalism with party rule); to
simply abandon Socialism and, in this way, admit the full defeat of the
Revolution.
Whatever will happen, the saddest prospect is that, under the banner of
democratization, all the small but important achievements of the
Revolution, from healthcare to education, will be undone, and the Cubans
who escaped to the United States will enforce a violent
re-privatization. There is a small hope that this extreme fallback will
be prevented and a reasonable compromise negotiated.
So what is the overall result of the Cuban revolution? What comes to my
mind is Arthur Miller’s experience on the Malecon (Havana’s Caribbean
ocean-front boardwalk) where two guys were sitting at a bench near him,
obviously poor and in need of a shave, and engaged in a vivid
discussion. A taxi then pulled up to the curb in front of them and a
lovely young woman stepped out with two brown paper bags full of
groceries. She was juggling the bags to get her money purse open, and a
tulip was waving dangerously close to snapping its stem. One of the men
got up and took hold of one of the bags to steady it, while the other
joined him to steady the other bag, and Miller wondered if they were
about to grab the bags and run. Nothing like this happened—instead, one
of them gently held the tulip stem between forefinger and thumb until
she could get the bags secured in her arms. She thanked with a certain
formal dignity and walked off. Miller’s comment:
I’m not quite sure why, but I thought this transaction remarkable. It
was not only the gallantry of these impoverished men that was
impressive, but that the woman seemed to regard it as her due and not at
all extraordinary. Needless to say, she offered no tip, nor did they
seem to expect any, her comparative wealth notwithstanding.
Having protested for years the government’s jailing and silencing of
writers and dissidents, I wondered whether despite everything, including
the system’s economic failure, a heartening species of human solidarity
had been created, possibly out of the relative symmetry of poverty and
the uniform futility inherent in the system from which few could raise
their heads short of sailing away. (Arthur Miller, “A Visit with
Castro,” The Nation, December 24 2003)
At this, the most elementary level, our future will be decided. The
reality that global capitalism cannot generate is precisely such
“heartening species of human solidarity,” to use Miller’s phrase. So to
conclude in the spirit of de mortuis nihil nisi bonum (nothing that is
not good should be said about the dead), this scene on Malecon is
perhaps the nicest thing I can remember about Castro.
Slavoj Žižek,
a Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst, is a senior researcher at
the the Institute for Humanities, Birkbeck College, University of
London. He has also been a visiting professor at more than 10
universities around the world. Žižek is the author of many books,
including Living in the End Times, First As Tragedy, Then As Farce, The
Year of Dreaming Dangerously and Trouble in Paradise.