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Human Rights in Cuba
A missed shot on the wrong flank
Pedro de la Hoz
THE December 1 edition of Miami’s El Nuevo
Herald published a full report on an "African-American
Statement in Support of Civil Rights in Cuba," which
accuses our country of currently being a racist
society, drawing on an alleged increase in civil and
human rights abuses of Cuban activists with the
courage to raise their voices against the island’s
racist system. It stated that "those isolated and
courageous defenders of civil rights have been
subjected to unprovoked violence, intimidation on
the part of the authorities and imprisonment."
The documents had been hastily circulated a few
hours before to procure signatures that would give
visibility to something cooked up by Carlos Moore,
an individual of Cuban origin who, for years now,
has presented himself as a "specialist on racial
issues" and has made a living in the United States
and Brazil at the cost of manipulating Cuban
realities. Prior to its publication, Moore had
managed to con a respectable activist from the
African-Brazilian movement, making him believe that
legal action taken by the Cuban authorities against
one of the beneficiaries of funds from the anti-Cuba
policies of various U.S. administrations, was
because the subject is black. He kidded other people
who received the statement into believing the same
story.
Someone of the prestige of the African-American
poet and playwright Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones)
commented on the communiqué as follows: "Moore has
been promoting this type of vicious provocations
since the 60s… Apparently certain African Americans
who signed his petition are unaware of Moore’s
historical pull."
James Early, another outstanding figure who has
traveled to Cuba on many occasions and who works in
the Smithsonian Institute, stated that he did not
trust Moore’s motives for involving himself in the
issue of race in Cuba and stressed that "the letter
is not in line with what I and other African-American
activists found in our recent visit from September
14 to 22, during which we had frank and open
conversations with Cuban citizens and government
officials." Early also noted that "Cuban citizens
and their political representatives are discussing
how to improve their socialist revolution."
So eloquent is the letter in the method it uses
to distort racial issues, that one of its
signatories addressed the media on Monday, December
7. Makani Themba-Nixon, director of the Praxis
Project, asked for his name to be withdrawn from the
documents, on the grounds that the accusatory letter
against Cuba "is being manipulated to help to
detract legitimacy from the important social project
that is underway in that nation."
A group of Cuban intellectuals, solely directed
by our consciences and in a personal capacity, came
together to share our point of view on the issue
with African-American colleagues. Because this is
about airing, in all seriousness and with arguments,
human rights in our country, and about making it
known that the statement issued in the United States
is a missed shot on the wrong flank.
Translated by Granma International
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