Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Cuba’s Ladies in White

Cuba's Ladies in White
December 16, 2014
Martin Guevara*

HAVANA TIMES — Paradoxes are the sap of life, the semen behind human
development. Our capacity for contradiction has made us rational beings,
animals that can experience guilt, before and after acting, beyond the
here and now. It has made us bugs that, aware of how insignificant their
existence is, can no longer stuff themselves, have a morning quickie,
sip wine or even blink without thinking about what will come next, as we
might be able to do if we were bears, orcas or lizards.

Resistance to growth, that which denies us self-discovery, has guided us
– less expertly than one would expect, true, but, when all is said and
done, we move about through light and shadow. One thing, however, is a
paradox, a profound contradiction that can reveal the hidden, occult,
enigmatic point where two apparently irreconcilable positions meet, and
mockery, an insult to people's common sense, intelligence and integrity
is quite another.

These days, the government of Cuba, saddled by the eternal Castros, is
hoping to secure a new patron through its habitual, whorish tactics.
This time around, it is determined, beseeching none other than the
United States, that dark, spider-covered monster, to desist from its
cruel and ineffective economic blockade policy and the Helms Burton Act.
It is even begging Europe to soften its "common position", and the most
appropriate way they have found to show the world they are becoming more
democratic and tolerant was to give peaceful protesters a good beating
(humiliation included) and to detain more than 70 people in Havana alone.

At a time when people expected a sign of good will to come in support of
Cuba's aspirations, they beat and detained the Ladies in White and those
who accompanied them to celebrate a day that invokes nothing other than
human rights, in a way that would be inexplicable in any decent society.

At this stage in the game, I am not overly surprised by the way the
dinosaurs roar and claw at people – I can understand that, while they
are laying the eggs of the reptiles to come, they pretty up the
landscape with a thin veneer of polish and beat the occasional
trouble-maker with a club to iron out any difference. Which is why my
question is rather aimed at people of good will:

Why aren't more people denouncing these atrocities? Are we condoning the
assault, beating, repression, imprisonment and intimidation of a group
of women dressed in white who demand what they wish to demand in a
peaceful manner?

What would the Cuban newspapers say if this were taking place in a
different country, with a group of women or the mothers of
revolutionaries who had suffered reprisals?

What's more, these women and their husbands stand at the opposite end of
violence, owing to their convictions, and they are the exact opposite of
those who harass them, true henchmen and prison guards.

What button do we have to push so that these beatings, these abuses,
will prompt the firm and uncompromising defense of those assaulted? What
needs to be turned on in the anger-meter of those who love, not the
revolution, of course, or Fidel Castro, whose rules they would not be
able to stand for more than 24 hours, but rum, music and the sex they
can procure in their trips to Cuba, so that they will condemn this
outrage once and for all?

Three years ago, when Laura Pollan died in circumstances that have not
been cleared up, I wrote that we had no need of sharing the person's
ideology to feel empathy towards them in light of the abuses they suffer.

As Che Guevara wrote in his farewell letter to his children: "Always
retain the ability to feel, in the deepest recesses of your being, any
injustice against anyone, wherever it takes place. That is the most
commendable quality of a revolutionary."

That is what I say to them: feel the injustice, for god's sake!

Source: Cuba's Ladies in White - Havana Times.org -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=107940

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