To Live in a Tenement, Without Hope / Leon Padron Azcuy
Posted on September 1, 2013
Havana , August, www.cubanet.org – Over a year ago, the Havana news
channel reporter, Graciela Resquejo, tried to report the terrible living
conditions, life-threatening, in which many families live in the solar —
tenement — at No. 12 Jesus Maria between San Ignacio and Inquisidor, in
Old Havana.
But to no avail. That report was censored by political commissars of
Cuban television.
Resquejo apologized days later to neighbors and urged them to
relentlessly pressure the institutions responsible for housing, so that
one day they might get out of this hell.
The solar at No. 12 Jesus Maria is a disaster. Its tenants live in fear
of a collapse, or the spread of disease, because when it rains, the
water penetrates the roofs and walls, leading to a steady drip, even
hours after the sky clears. Nor do they have drinking water, which comes
through a pipe installed between sewer pipes, and rats and cockroaches
swarm everywhere.
Neighbors have appealed, time and again, to the government. But the
problem persists in every session of the Popular Power. Finally they
went to the Department of Citizens Support of the Central Committee of
the Communist Party, who toss the ball back to the municipality.
One of the biggest frustrations of tenants, was in 2007, when they were
assigned to some old offices in a four-story building near the tenement.
They only had to wait until the bathrooms and kitchens were put in. But
while waiting for the arrangements, the government itself gave these
offices to other victims who had lost their homes because of a cyclone.
Back to square one.
Year after year, this miserable citadel of San Ignacio Street waits for
the fulfillment of the promises of the authorities. But promises are
always empty .
One of the neighbors of the tenement, whose husband recently had a heart
operation, said, "The authorities remember us every time a hurricane
comes," adding, "their cynicism knows no bounds, at times we've been
asked to find our own shelters, on others they've taken us to a
multipurpose room at Avenida del Puerto, and as soon as the weather
improves, we returned to our citadel, ignoring the building collapses
that happen when the sun comes out."
A young woman who works as a waitress at the pizzeria at 264 Prado and
who has lived in the tenement for seventeen years said, "We are not
asking for a palace in Miramar or Vedado, we want at least a roof with
better conditions, but we are always victims of deceit and manipulation."
The nine families the No 12 Jesús María tenement, living without hope,
victims of government neglect .
Leonpadron10@gmail.com
Source: "To Live in a Tenement, Without Hope / Leon Padron Azcuy |
Translating Cuba" -
http://translatingcuba.com/to-live-in-a-tenement-without-hope-leon-padron-azcuy/
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