Rosa María Rodríguez Torrado, Translator: T
The eye you see is not
the eye because you see it,
it is the eye because it sees you.
Antonio Machado (Proverbios y Cantares)
In Cuba, we often visit homes where their residents hang, on the inside
of the main door, the image of an eye. It is a symbol associated with
African-originated religions, such as one that shows a tongue traversed
by a dagger.
There are several eyes on our country and its citizens; Foreign and
native eyes, focused on the civil society that emerges and on the
changes that are urgently needed in all aspects of national life. I
don't mean to lean on beliefs to illustrate my point of view about these
themes: they have just been ingrained in our reality for decades now and
call many people's attention.
At present, the authorities are immersed in the implementation of their
"procedures for good intentions," a plan that they refer to as "an
updating program" of its model, and in which they enumerate what they
understand still needs to be accomplished—solely on the economic front;
Nothing to put at risk their sacrificed and historical status—without a
specification on how to achieve it, nor the steps and deadlines for its
application. Cuban television reporters show us, via their informative
audiovisuals, the representatives of the higher hierarchy of government
involved in constant reprimands against their municipal and provincial
cadres, who have either not advanced in the process or have hardly done
so. How to put forward what, up until now, has been taboo, could very
well be one of the questions.
In assemblies of "moral table-slammings" and "shouted, public
scoldings," it seems evident that not only frustration abounds, but also
despair. As they have built a government based on the "price of
propaganda" and on looking for the straw in the American and, in
general, all other capitalist countries' eye. But they disregarded
looking into their own country, and, today, in spite of the quality of
life enjoyed in Cuba up until 1959, and of the human potential it
possesses, we are like a discordant Polyphemus, lacking in freedoms and
democracy in full modern times and looking clumsily to reestablish a
more just order to rescue our rights and all the constitutional
guarantees we enjoyed when they came to power. Ambiguous procedures are
not needed: What is needed is that they acknowledge they were wrong and
that they revert what they changed for the worst with the purpose of
subjecting society and cling to power forever.
Their constant preaching is not fair, nor is the fact that they refuse
to acknowledge their role in the economic, political and social mess
that, for decades now, has lacerated Cuba. After so many years of
programs and suggestions from the part of the Cuban political
opposition, it becomes clear to us today how they have been
incorporating some of those ideas in the fore-mentioned pamphlet, even
when they don't know this opposition and condemn it to illegality. But
this time around, the authorities appear to have a real will to hop on
the train of much-needed reforms. We are going from an almost paralyzed
"gradualism" with which they lulled us, to a galloping transition that
seems to be conditioned by the illness of the Venezuelan president, even
when they don't admit it.
But a real process of reform in Cuba, if it is to last, must ensure an
authentic state of law and cement itself in the acknowledgement and
legitimacy of political options. Even if they traverse our tongue with a
dagger, we must continue in our insistence on these fundamental premises
for the health of our nations, and in keeping "our eye" focused on our
national life. Because there is still much to do.
Translated by T.
August 9 2011
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