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U.S.
government denies theater group permit to travel to
Cuba
BY ANTONIO
PANEQUE BRIZUELA—Granma daily staff writer—
THE U.S. Treasury Department has refused a permit
to the Rainbow Theatre group to travel to Cuba,
where they were to perform during the 12th
International Theater Festival in Havana, which
begins today, September 15.
In a message to the event’s organizers, Carlos
Barón, the group’s artistic director, expressed with
deep regret and anger that "the U.S. Treasury
Department has denied us a permit to travel to Cuba
and thus share with all of you during the upcoming
International Theater Festival in Havana."
The members of that U.S. theater group, which
includes students, professors, technicians and
professionals, many of them former students of San
Francisco State University, acknowledged "the value
of your invitation," and explained that that
institution of higher learning in California was "willing
to help us 100% with the expenses of traveling to
Cuba; both the university’s administration,
beginning with the president, and the student
council were pleased and proud that we were going to
represent our university and the multicultural
theater of San Francisco."
"We would like to wish you the very best success
during the upcoming Festival," the message continued,
"and to tell you that we will persist in working
toward relations of peace and mutual artistic
collaboration with the entire world, beginning with
Cuba. We also wish to tell you that we will use this
opportunity to educate ourselves and then educate
others about this hateful ban on travel to Cuba,
which, of course, is manifested as another example
of the harmful influence of the economic,
intellectual and human embargo of Cuba."
The Festival’s inaugural event was set to begin
at 7:30 p.m. on September 15, under the slogan "Theater
in defense of humanity," with a passacaglia parading
from El Quijote Park at 23rd and J to the José Martí
Anti-Imperialist Tribunal, where several Cuban
theater companies and Les Grandes Personnes company
from France plan to evoke the mythical Cervantes
character. |