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Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Cuban Musician Tells It Like It Is

Cuban Musician Tells It Like It Is
September 17, 2013
Haroldo Dilla Alfonso*

HAVANA TIMES — When last Thursday night, at a hotel located on the
Dominican-Haitian border, I heard Cuban musician Roberto Carcasses sing
at a massive concert in Havana organized as a kind of tribute to the
four Cuban agents imprisoned in the United States, the first thing I
thought was that I was losing my sense of hearing and confusing wish
with reality.

The television cameras, all aimed at the stage, didn't afford me a
glimpse at the audience's reaction, not even that of those standing at
the front row: the relatives of the imprisoned agents, high government
officials and a number of young girls who seemed to have been made to
stand there to look happy.

Nor was I able to see the rest of the audience, gathered at the large
public square which was once an elegant promenade and today is a truly
ugly lot with an annoying statue dedicated to Jose Marti. I am sure,
however, that if they were able to hear the artist over the noise, that
they must have felt transported to another world altogether.

In Cuba, for a singer to stand on a stage in a public space, before
thousands of spectators, and ask for political reforms, is simply out of
this world. At the very least, it falls outside the world of
totalitarian spectacles, of vulgar nationalism and pathological
liturgies that the Cuban government has staged for decades –
undecorated, in some cases, and mixing political discourse with both
good and bad music, in others.

Making a suggestive use of the catchy refrain "I've always wanted this",
Carcasses asked for the release of the Cuban Five and Maria (who, I
imagine, stands for anyone unjustly imprisoned), an end to the Cuban
blockades (maintained by both the United States and Cuba), freedom of
information to be able to have an informed opinion and the possibility
of being able to choose the country's president by direct vote.

He did not call for the overthrow of the government, or show any kind of
accommodating attitude towards the United States, or express agreement
with Cuban dissidents, for whom he merely asked for the same rights
supporters of the revolution enjoy – a basic principle of any democratic
system and of common, political sense today.

Carcasses did not present us with a coherent, anti-government political
platform, and this was probably for the best. He limited himself to
saying two or three things that the overwhelming majority of Cubans want
and cannot express, denied the means to do so or the means of making a
living if they did.

His band staged something which is taking place on the island every day:
isolated instances of resistance to the authoritarian government, which
continues to demand loyalty in exchange for poverty, insecurity and
corruption, situations which Cuban government leaders insist on
dismissing as bad civic manners and, in some cases, even mercenary
activities.

This is the reason we must applaud the courageous gesture of Carcasses
and his entourage, who sang for all Cubans, on and outside the island,
right-wing or left-wing, politicized and not.

So far, the foreign press has only reported on the sterile gibberish
spoken by bureaucrats and a number of coercive administrative measures.

I fear these measures will be stepped up, as Cuba's political class
seems intent on demonstrating that unauthorized criticisms will only
meet with repression and violence, exercised by the official media or
with their complicity.

Cuba's political class exercises such violence like an occupation army.
Alongside ruined buildings, measly salaries and hospitals falling apart
at the seams, this violence seems to have become part of Cuba's every
day landscape.
—–
(*) A Havana Times translation of the original published in Spanish by
Cubaencuentro.com.

Source: "Cuban Musician Roberto Carcasses Tells It Like It Is" -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=98842

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