There is no
monolithic position among cuban-americans"
"Every time the embargo, travel restrictions or
any other issue related to Cuba comes up, it is the
same small group of people who are consulted and
interviewed," she said. "We want everybody to know
that, among Cuban-Americans, there are many
different positions. I would dare say that a
majority in the Cuban-American academic community
disagrees with U.S. policy toward Cuba."
Enough is enough.
That is the unmistakable message conveyed in an
open letter signed by more than 100 prominent Cuban-American
scholars, writers and artists -11 of them from New
York -, published today in The Miami Herald as a
full-page ad, said NY Daily News.
The letter is right on target when it calls U.S.
policy toward Cuba "a political and moral failure
for almost half a century."
Coming a few weeks before a Bush administration
panel, the clearly interventionist Commission for
Assistance to a Free Cuba, makes its second report
and tightens even further restrictions on travel to
Cuba. The document, a categorical, even angry
denunciation of Washington's obsolete Cuba policy,
is sure to cause a stir in the Cuban-American
community.
"The purpose is to start a public debate about
these issues," said Dr. Lillian Manzor, a University
of Miami associate professor of Latino and Latin
American Literature and one of the academics who
signed the letter.
But the signatories, who have formed a national
group, Emergency Network of Cuban American Scholars
and Artists for Change in U.S.-Cuba Policy (ENCASA/US-CUBA),
also have another, more ambitious, goal. The group
seeks to reverse a U.S. policy that, for almost 50
years, has had as its centerpiece an economic
embargo whose cruelty to the people of Cuba is
legendary.
"We have organized ourselves to voice our outrage
at a policy that is inhumane, unjust, ill-conceived,
hypocritical and contrary to American ideals," the
letter says.
Manzor, 49, who left Cuba in 1968, is one of the
group's founders. She says that it is important to
let everyone know that there is no monolithic
position among Cuban-Americans.
"Every time the embargo, travel restrictions or
any other issue related to Cuba comes up, it is the
same small group of people who are consulted and
interviewed," she said. "We want everybody to know
that, among Cuban-Americans, there are many
different positions. I would dare say that a
majority in the Cuban-American academic community
disagrees with U.S. policy toward Cuba."
The letter puts it this way: "For too long, this
debate has been dominated by one sector of our
community. We are determined that no longer will
others in our community speak for us as they
continue to insist on taking this country down a
misguided path that has served neither the best
interests of the U.S. nor those of the Cuban people."
The letter is bound to resonate loudly from
Washington to Miami given the nature of its
signatories. Most of them are professors affiliated
with 60 universities, including some of the nation's
leading institutions. The rest are artists, writers,
curators, playwrights, poets, novelists, attorneys
and editors, many of them very well known.
Among the signatories there are professors from
CUNY, SUNY, Columbia University and NYU.
"The Cuban nation has a long and proud record of
struggle for self-determination and defense of its
sovereignty," the letter states. "For more than 500
years, Cubans have rejected and defeated colonialism,
military interventions and foreign influences. The
policy embraced by the Bush administration and
spelled out in the 2004 Commission Report ignores
and misreads Cuban history.
"Moreover, the policy attempts to negate the
Cuban people's right to self-determination and
sovereignty by implying that the U.S. should have a
major role in determining Cuba's future. Cuba's
present and future must be determined by the Cuban
people, not by the U.S." Enough is enough.