Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Havana’s Dispossessed

Havana's Dispossessed
July 23, 2013
Photo Feature by Ernesto Gonzalez Diaz

HAVANA TIMES — Like any other city in the world, Havana is not without
under-privileged individuals living in abject poverty who barely manage
to survive every day, particularly near the end of their days.

Some are victims of alcohol and drug abuse, who lost practically all
touch with reality at a young age.

Others are people with physical or mental disabilities who have had no
choice but to work hard in order to survive, like the elderly woman who
uses a walking frame, seen outside of Havana's luxurious and exclusive
Floridita bar selling peanuts.

Though fortunately in Cuba we don't see children selling things on the
street in order to survive, we do come across many elderly people
selling newspapers, people who, after many years of hard work, are
forced to get up before sunrise every day in order to make ends meet
somehow.

We must acknowledge the many things that have been done in Cuba to help
the disabled, children, young people and the elderly. These things,
however, are apparently not enough.

I believe that our society, whose population shows an increasingly
marked trend towards aging, must work to try and guarantee a decorous
life for the elderly.

It must also try and help those who, for one reason or another, bring
harm upon themselves at a young age, through alcohol or drug abuse, and
to offer those who suffer mental illnesses the needed treatment, as well
as an opportunity to reinsert themselves into a society – a society
which, we hope, will become more just every day.

A society by everyone and for everyone, as our national independence
hero Jose Marti once proclaimed.

Source: "Photo Feature on Havana's Dispossessed" -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=96840

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