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Subject: Cuba's
blacks drop behind as economy leans on exiles' money TRACEY EATON
Date: Wednesday,
August 14, 2002 10:09 PM
http://www.dallasnews.com/world/cuba/stories/081102dnsuncubarace.7fe77.html
Cuba's blacks drop
behind as economy leans on exiles' money
08/11/2002
By TRACEY EATON /
The Dallas Morning News
HAVANA – Elsa Chon
is 60, with gray-flecked hair and a kind face, and these
are her golden
years.
But she measures
life by the month.
Each month brings
her a $3.81 retirement pension, plus the usual government
rations – 6 pounds
of rice, a pound of beans, 8 ounces of cooking oil, some
sugar, coffee and
cigarettes.
"You think I
can live well on that?" she asked. "The truth is, I can't. It's
impossible."
Mrs. Chon is among
the island's many blacks who are struggling to make it in
a changing economy
where U.S. dollars, not Cuban pesos, are the currency of
choice.
In trying to wrest
the island from economic crisis, Cuba legalized possession
of dollars in 1993,
but experts say that in doing so, the government
unwittingly put
blacks and other mixed-race Cubans at a disadvantage.
That's because
blacks have a much harder time getting their hands on dollars.
Legalization of the
dollar meant that Cuban exiles could begin to openly send
their relatives
money. But that helped whites more than blacks since most
Cuban-Americans, 84
percent, are white.
Today, exiles send
their relatives an estimated $700 million to $800 million
– a windfall in
cash-strapped Cuba, which received just $68 million in
foreign economic
aid in 1997, U.S. officials say.
Seed money
Whites use the cash
remittances not only for food and other necessities, but
to get ahead. They
fix up their homes and rent them to tourists. They repair
old jalopies and
turn them into unofficial taxis. They convert living rooms
to restaurants.
Many blacks who
don't have relatives abroad look for jobs where they can make
dollars – such as
the tourism industry, the country's biggest dollar-earner.
But even then,
because of discrimination and other factors, they say, jobs
are hard to get.
As a result, black
Cubans have fallen behind whites economically since 1993,
undermining Fidel
Castro's dream of creating a raceless society, said
Alejandro de la
Fuente, a University of Pittsburgh history professor who has
studied race in
Cuba.
"The evidence
is all anecdotal," he said. "But it is overwhelming, and all of
it points in the
same direction."
Dollars are vital
in Cuba because many essentials – socks, underwear, shirts,
shoes, dishes –
simply aren't available for pesos. Other items – including
diapers, toilet
paper, toothpaste, soap – are distributed to the populace,
but Cubans say the
supplies don't last.
Not only that, what
can be had for dollars is usually of much higher quality.
The government
grudgingly embraced the dollar after its chief sponsor, the
former Soviet
Union, collapsed in 1989, ending aid of nearly $6 billion a
year.
And it made tourism
its main cash source, building scores of hotels and
restaurants to lure
sun-loving travelers.
Jobs in tourism
became among the most coveted. But both blacks and whites
complain that
applicants with government or family connections are sometimes
pushed ahead of
better or equally qualified candidates.
Money can also make
a difference. The job that seemed unattainable can often
be had for a bribe,
some Cubans say. Payments of $100 to $500 go to
employment agency
workers and tourism school instructors.
"Where am I
going to get $500?" asked Alexis, 34, a black electrician from
the eastern town of
Baracoa. "I don't have any relatives in Miami. I'll
probably never see
$500 in my entire life."
He and others also
say employment agencies favor whites and light-skinned
blacks, an
accusation officials deny.
An estimated 11
percent of Cubans are black, 51 percent are of mixed race, 37
percent are white
and 1 percent are Chinese, the CIA reports.
Imported bias
Whites were favored
when the government first began developing tourism in the
early '90s, said
Marta Rojas, a respected Afro-Cuban author.
The government
allowed foreign partners from such countries as Spain to have
control over whom
they hired, and many chose whites, she said.
Authorities moved
to correct the inequities, setting up racially diverse
labor pools and
requiring hotels and restaurants to pick workers from those
pools, Ms. Rojas
said.
Cubans are at odds
over whether the strategy worked.
Critics say the
hiring system still isn't perfect and racism isn't gone.
Even so, black
Cubans are much better off than they were before the
revolution, poet
Nancy Morejon said.
As a black child
growing up in pre-revolutionary Cuba, she said, she imagined
toiling away in
some low-paying job for the rest of her years.
Instead, rebels
swept the country in 1959, and blacks began moving up the
ladder.
Ms. Morejon, 57,
got a university education, started writing poetry and this
year won Cuba's
national prize for literature.
Castro loyalists
say the socialist government has always supported blacks and
that hasn't
changed.
"Before Fidel
came along, the situation was much worse," said Gabriel Molina,
editor of Granma
International, a Communist Party newspaper. "I would have
had a different
life without the revolution."
Mr. Molina pulled
out a 1949 black-and-white photo of Mr. Castro posing with
a university
committee to fight racism.
"Fidel has
defended Afro-Cubans for his entire life," the 68-year-old editor
said.
The Castro
government passed laws outlawing discrimination just months after
the rebels took
power.
"Virtue,
personal merit, heroism and generosity should be the measure of men,
not skin
color," Mr. Castro said then.
In the decades that
followed, Cuban blacks progressed more than they had in
the previous four
centuries, some say.
"Blacks had to
wait 400 years to achieve some dignity," said Alberto Jones, a
Cuban-American
activist who has studied the race issue.
Some of the most
striking achievements came in education. And by 1981, blacks
were on a par with
whites in obtaining high school diplomas.
Advances in
education led to better careers for blacks and mulattos, said Mr.
de la Fuente,
author of the book, A Nation for All: Race, Inequality, and
Politics in
Twentieth-Century Cuba.
"This was not
merely rhetoric," he wrote in a briefing paper. "For the most
part, the
government's social policies were color-blind and did open
significant
opportunities for all sectors of the population, regardless of
race."
Many blacks decided
to go into medicine, and by the 1990s, the nation of just
11 million people
had more black doctors than the United States.
The secret weapon
Blacks clearly
benefited the most from the revolution, experts say. And that
has led some to
call them Mr. Castro's "secret weapon," his source of
unconditional political
support.
But now that
dollars are the currency of favor, some blacks question that
assumption and say
they are rethinking their allegiance.
"Blacks don't
have access to dollars and have to work a lot harder to
survive," said
Ramon Humberto Colas, an Afro-Cuban dissident who recently
settled in South
Florida. "It's true that blacks in Cuba have the same rights
as whites. But in
practice, it doesn't work that way."
As he sees it, the
government demands blacks' political support while
persecuting them at
the same time.
Police, for
instance, continually associate blacks with crime and what the
authorities call
"dangerousness," a vague yet punishable offense, Mr. Colas
said. And they
often single out blacks on the streets, stopping them for no
apparent reason and
checking their identification papers.
It's a vicious
cycle, Mr. de la Fuente said. Many blacks are shut out from
tourism, the
economy's most dynamic sector, "on the grounds that they are
unfit and
inferior." So they adopt other survival strategies, such as selling
bootleg cigars,
knock-off CDs or marijuana.
Critics then say
these strategies are proof of blacks' "inferiority,
laziness, lack of
morality and propensity to commit criminal acts," the
professor says.
"Racism is
thus a self-fulfilling prophecy."
Castro supporters
say racism is not a problem in Cuba.
Even so, they say
officials have taken steps to aid the poorest and most
disadvantaged
blacks.
One way they're
doing that is by opening schools for social workers in many
cities. Most of the
students are blacks who didn't have the grades to get
into college and
don't receive dollars from abroad or from state-run
enterprises.
But if they work
for two years at the schools – studying and doing community
work – they're
given a direct pass to study law, medicine, hotel management
and other
professions at college.
The Cuban
government ought to be recognized for its efforts, said Mr. de la
Fuente, saying most
of the negative economic trends affecting blacks were
"clearly
unintended and beyond government control."
As some see it,
young unemployed blacks are the most likely to protest
against the
government if economic conditions grow worse.
Most of the asylum
seekers who hijacked a bus and crashed it into the gates
of the Mexican
embassy in February appeared to be young blacks, witnesses
said later.
Cuban authorities
arrested the men, calling them delinquents and saying that
almost all had
previous criminal records.
The problem, some
say, is that despite Mr. Castro's quest for a raceless
society, blacks
have never caught up to whites.
Many live in the
same dilapidated tenement houses that have stood for more
than 200 years.
Inside one house,
Mrs. Chon, the retiree, said she gets by as best she can,
selling cigarettes
and homemade tomato sauce to neighbors.
She also collects
her late husband's $3.81 pension – much lower than the
average $10-a-month
wage.
Still, she hangs on
to it.
"No way am I
getting married again. Not even if I were crazy. I'd lose my
pension."
E-mail
teaton@dallasnews.com