Fidel Castro-A Black Man’s Guide to Understanding His Death

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By Khary Pestaina

I recently shared this information on my Facebook wall and was asked to share it with a broader audience.

1. 900,000 Slaves were brought to Cuba, 3rd most slaves ever.
2. Cuba practiced slavery until 1886, it was high intensity, high death rate, industrial slavery all the way to the end too…longer than any country in the Western Hemisphere.

3. By 1900, 90% of all Cubans were Black.

4. In the early 20th century, Cuba joined other Latin American countries in purposefully whitening their population by allowing unrestricted immigration from Europe while simultaneously imprisoning, exploiting and killing its black population (blanqueamiento).

5. Until the Cuban revolution, dictators like Machado and Batista oversaw incredibly corrupt an inequal societies which featured over a 1/3rd of the population living in abject poverty and illiteracy, disproportionately black.

6. Until the Cuban revolution, the American Mafia had unlimited access and power in Cuba with the pain of drugs, childhood prostitution felt disproportionately by Cuba’s black society. It was Las Vegas before Las Vegas.

7. Until the Cuban revolution, the burden of penal society rested on the backs of black people in Cuba. Vegas.

8, Today, 65% of Cuba’s population describes itself as white. This number would be even higher, if Miami’s exiles returned. This should highlight the degree of racist attack, Cuba’s black population has been under for over a hundred years.

9. The Revolution led by Castro aimed to erase inequality, remove corruption, and destroy racism. No one knows how successful the social goals of La Revolucion would have been except for interference and embargo by the USA.

10. Cuba, under Castro, was a consistent ally in the fight against global racism and colonialism. Cuban soldiers and doctors were present all over the African and Third World.

11. Cuba, under Castro, successfully erased illiteracy, offered free health care to its citizens, and offered free medical school to any citizens of the western hemisphere.

There is more. Educate yourself about the revolutionary country. They did more than most, and certainly more than the United States in tackling the legacy of slavery. Don’t just count on the American media to bring you information on the significance of this event.

Khary Pestaina is a History expert and educator. His is also a radio host, business owner and prolific social commentator.
http://www.theblackhomeschool.com/2...-black-mans-guide-to-understanding-his-death/
 
I'm glad you posted this because I was trying to explain some of this to a few patrons at my job. :cool: Thanks.
 
Ask any Black Cuban (over 75% of the island's pop.) the folks that risked death by boat/raft to get here...Look closely at Fidel's inner circle or the new Cuban elite/CCP, that looks alot like the old elite...

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I just like Castro as a leader. I don't care who hates him. There are motherfuckers in this country that would kill me for going down a dirt road in the wrong town.
America is not clean and righteous in its actions. One example: Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The two bombings, which killed at least 129,000 people, remain the only use of nuclear weapons for warfare in history.
 
I just like Castro as a leader. I don't care who hates him. There are motherfuckers in this country that would kill me for going down a dirt road in the wrong town.
America is not clean and righteous in its actions. One example: Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The two bombings, which killed at least 129,000 people, remain the only use of nuclear weapons for warfare in history.
Agree on Castro,but fuck those Japs they struck first
 
Agree on Castro,but fuck those Japs they struck first
You know it's crazy how many people still believe the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were a response to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The attack happened in 1941 the bombings happened in 1945 damn near four whole years later.

The truth is the bombings were not necessary nor did they push Japan to sureender. It was only when Russia joined the war on Japan did Japan surrender. Japan was ready to surrender three months before the bombings but they wanted to gurantee the safety of their emperor who was like a God to them. The US and her allies would not agree to Japan terms they was talking that unconditional surrender shit.
 
Agree on Castro,but fuck those Japs they struck first
Not really, the U.S. was fucking around in the Asian arena. Laughed at Japan wanting it's version of a Monroe Doctrine. As usual, U.S. history only talks about the group pushing back like they just decided out the clear blue to go at the U.S.

As for Castro, I wonder what would have been had the U.S. not had a fucking embargo on them for decades. Just foul shit. :smh:
 
As for Castro, I wonder what would have been had the U.S. not had a fucking embargo on them for decades. Just foul shit. :smh:

IMO if the US never launched an embargo more Latin Americans would have followed suit. Many would have allowed the USSR to set up military bases.

This changes everything since it would likely give Russia complete control over the world's cocaine market. With that money they could have possibly won the arms race or at least made enough to maintain their empire.

The War on Drugs would have started ten years earlier, but it would have been remained inside the US. The military would never have destroyed the coca crops because it could spark a nuclear war. More likely, dealers and smugglers would be executed for treason.

Hispanics would be looked at as communist sympathizers the same way Arabs are looked at as terrorists today. because of this Trump's border wall would have been successfully built back in the 1960's and heavily guarded ever since.
 
You know it's crazy how many people still believe the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were a response to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The attack happened in 1941 the bombings happened in 1945 damn near four whole years later.

The truth is the bombings were not necessary nor did they push Japan to sureender. It was only when Russia joined the war on Japan did Japan surrender. Japan was ready to surrender three months before the bombings but they wanted to gurantee the safety of their emperor who was like a God to them. The US and her allies would not agree to Japan terms they was talking that unconditional surrender shit.
Thanks bro. The US just wanted to signal their superior nuclear power to the world.
 
Opinion Research Business (ORB) poll conducted August 12–19, 2007, estimated 1,033,000 violent deaths due to the Iraq War. The range given was 946,000 to 1,120,000 deaths. A nationally representative sample of approximately 2,000 Iraqi adults answered whether any members of their household (living under their roof) were killed due to the Iraq War. 22% of the respondents had lost one or more household members. ORB reported that "48% died from a gunshot wound, 20% from the impact of a car bomb, 9% from aerial bombardment, 6% as a result of an accident and 6% from another blast/ordnance.

They wanted one man.
 
IMO if the US never launched an embargo more Latin Americans would have followed suit. Many would have allowed the USSR to set up military bases.

This changes everything since it would likely give Russia complete control over the world's cocaine market. With that money they could have possibly won the arms race or at least made enough to maintain their empire.

The War on Drugs would have started ten years earlier, but it would have been remained inside the US. The military would never have destroyed the coca crops because it could spark a nuclear war. More likely, dealers and smugglers would be executed for treason.

Hispanics would be looked at as communist sympathizers the same way Arabs are looked at as terrorists today. because of this Trump's border wall would have been successfully built back in the 1960's and heavily guarded ever since.
interesting...
 
Ummm.
Before you declare Cuba "The Black Man's Paradise", you might wanna check out this documentary:
"Black in Latin America ( Episode 2 ) Cuba The Next Revolution".


Very illuminating...
:idea:
 
IMO if the US never launched an embargo more Latin Americans would have followed suit. Many would have allowed the USSR to set up military bases.

This changes everything since it would likely give Russia complete control over the world's cocaine market. With that money they could have possibly won the arms race or at least made enough to maintain their empire.

The War on Drugs would have started ten years earlier, but it would have been remained inside the US. The military would never have destroyed the coca crops because it could spark a nuclear war. More likely, dealers and smugglers would be executed for treason.

Hispanics would be looked at as communist sympathizers the same way Arabs are looked at as terrorists today. because of this Trump's border wall would have been successfully built back in the 1960's and heavily guarded ever since.

Now that's an interesting perspective.

That still means they could have lifted the embargo in 1991 after the fall of the Soviet Union.
 
so cuba bad or good for blacks?

If it was bad then they wouldn't have been an enemy of the US for 50 years.

Prisoner in Paradise An Interview with Assata Shakur by Evelyn C. White

(Originally published in Essence Magazine in 90s)

As Assata Shakur writes in her poetic 1987 memoir, "Assata: An Autobiography," her name means "she who struggles" and the "the thankful." Although she has been exiled in Cuba for nearly two decades, the former JoAnne Chesimard continues to fight by speaking out against inequality and oppression.

Our conversation took place on a sun-drenched afternoon in Havana. With her glistening dreadlocks hanging to mid-spine, Assata came wearing mauve-colored cotton shorts and a beige T-shirt with a black design. Around her long elegant neck was a golden Ankh, the ancient Egyptian symbol of life. On her feet, she wore a pair of Asics sneakers-the shoes that cushion her stride as she jogs through the streets of the palm lined island that has become her home. "Yes, we see her running," Cuban children respond gleefully when asked about Assata. "Ella es muy hermosa (She is very beautiful)."

Beautiful, that is not what the feds thought in 1977 when Assata was convicted of being the accomplice to the murder of a White New Jersey state trooper. During the 1973 shoot-out, in which the officer and Black activist Zayd Shakur (no relation) were slain, Assata Shakur took two bullets. One nearly ripped off her right arm. The other shattered her clavicle and remains lodged near her heart.

The all-White jury gave short shrift to forensics experts who testified that Assata massive injuries could have only been sustained while her hands were in a position of surrender. They ignored the absence of gun residue on her fingers-there was no evidence she had fired a weapon. She was sentenced to life imprisonment plus 30 years ("for refusing to stand when the judge read the sentence" Assata explains).

Two years after her conviction, Assata masterminded one of the most daring prison escapes in U.S. History. Noting that details about her escape could be detrimental to people who are currently incarcerated, Assata declined to elaborate on exactly how she slipped out of the maximum security wing of the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey in 1979.

She is similarly reticent about the years she spent underground before being granted political asylum in Cuba in the early eighties. On the topic of her escape, she simply offers these words with determination and pride: "I was like Houdini. I plotted day and night. There was no way I was going to spend the rest of my life in prison for something I didn't do."

What do you want people to know about your life now?

Assata Shakur: I'm still very active in political work. I'm putting finishing touches on another book. I talk about gender relations, Rap music, crime and so forth, in a question-and-answer format. I ask my own question and then answer myself (laughs) so the book is a bit shizy. But it's the form that I thought would best get across the points I want to make.

What has life been like for you in Cuba?

It's been good. It was hard at the beginning because I had to adjust to another culture and learn another language. I had to adjust to living in a Third World country, which means that things people in the U.S. take for granted-like hot running water whenever you turn on the tap-are not always available here. But it's been a growing and happy experience for me in many ways. Another thing I've been able to do in Cuba is rest. You live such an intense life in the States. And my life has been more intense than most (laughs). Being in Cuba has allowed me to live in a society that is not at war with itself. There is a sense of community. It's a given in Cuba that, if you fall down, the person next to you is going to help you get up. How do you relax?

I run. I live here on an island surrounded by all this water and I'm a lousy swimmer (laughs). It's pitiful. I've started to crochet again, which is something I learned in prison. I'm going to be a grandmother soon, so with the crochet, I can make gifts for my daughter and the baby. I'm totally into this grandmother thing. I'm starting to paint and write fiction. I'm in a more creative stage of life. There's something about approaching 50 that's very liberating. Political struggle has always been a 24-hour-a-day job for me. I felt I could never take time out for myself. Now I feel I owe it to myself to develop in ways I've been putting off all my life. I'm crafting a vision of my life that involves creativity. And Cuban society allows me to do this. I know it's harder in the U.S. where so many people are just grateful to have a job.

What types of jobs have you had in Cuba?

I've worked in different study centers as a translator. But I've tried as much as possible to avoid the standard nine-to-five thing. I've tried to organize my life so that I can move around, change the rhythm and the tempo. I'm invited to give lots of presentations to people who come here. I talk about human-rights violations and political prisoners in the United States.

Do the Cuban people know your life story?

No, the average Cuban does not. And I really prefer to be kind of anonymous. Because when people know your whole history, they have a tendency to relate to you differently and maybe put you up on a pedestal. I want people to just be normal with me. I just want to live my life.

When Cubans ask about your background how do you respond?

I tell the truth. I say I'm a political prisoner from the United States who is living here in exile. That's not uncommon. There are many people here from Chile, Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador and other places who have been granted political asylum. Cubans understand that theirs is a country that provides sanctuary for people fleeing oppression. As a nation, they are very proud of this stance. They don't care how much the U.S. government badgers or attacks them. Cuba has its own moral system and priorities. That's what keeps it going, the belief that the country can control its own destiny.

Is there anything you've discovered about yourself that has surprised you since coming to Cuba?

Becoming aware of my own vulnerability and sensitivity and being able to express those feelings has been a surprise. In the States, I always had to be tough and ready to take care of business. Here I can look at sides of me that are more delicate and fragile. That was kind of a shock to me. I think that, like many sisters, I was raised to be a Superwoman. I am a serious woman, and I want to be taken seriously, but here I don't have to live up to that Superwoman myth. I can cry and be human and lean on people who take care of me. That can be very liberating.

What do you think will happen to you if Fidel Castro is overthrown?

If the U.S. succeeds in destroying the revolution, my status will be like that of most Cubans: I'll be up a creek without a paddle. It will be devastating for people worldwide who believe in justice. It's a threat I live with every day, because the U.S. doesn't recognize the laws of Cuba. They can kidnap anybody and bring them back to the States to face the so-called justice system. There's no telling what the U.S. government will do to me. I'm in constant danger; I guess I've gotten used to it.

How do you mange to stay connected with the United States?

I stay connected in my head. I'm spiritually and psychologically connected to African-Americans. They are my people, and that will never change. And I'm truly blessed, because many of my friends come to Cuba. They like it here-they can relax and not worry about drive-by shootings or getting raped. I meet all kinds of people. I'm a news freak; I read books, magazine, listen to tapes, anything I get my hands on. And a lot of contemporary American culture makes its way to this county. Cuba is not some gray, isolated backwater. This is a happening place.

Do you think you will ever return home?

I don't know. I think it will be hard. It's funny. People ask me if I miss the States. I miss African Americans. But not the U.S. government or all the things they put me through. I miss African American culture, our speech, dance and cooking. I miss friends and family. If it weren't for visits from old friends and other African Americans I meet who come to Cuba, I'd probably be in some kind of time warp. I learn so much from my sisters and brothers who come here. I get recharged and energized and reminded of how beautiful we are as a people. African people just shine. And people come telling the truth. When I ask how thing are in the States, they don't give me the okeydoke. They say, "Honey, things are hard." It reminds me I have to keep struggling.

 
Man, there are some reaches there and plenty of Castro romanticized propaganda like any other government tyrant leader.
Why were Cuban doctors in Africa? Ask Castro how much $$$ he made for himself off of sending cuban doctors to Africa.
When is the next boat to Cuba?
Cuba was a communist country, of course it is a threat to the US, considering the distance, etc
WTF planet y'all on? Cuba is fucking Cuba they have shitty overrated cigars, and they have decent baseball players considering all of them play fucking baseball there.
We talking cuba? LOFL
 
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Watch this documentary on Cuba in Africa and learn something the mods and HNIC seem to not know enough to see why Fidel Castro should be a sticky. Hopefully some can learn something from watching these. They are very informative.





thank you for this! good to get some context to some claims made on here about how active Cuba was in Africa's struggle...:thumbsup:
 
On a side note, Cubans in America (as well as Jews with Israel) seem to have been able to dictate American policy in a way that AAs have been unable (or uninterested) to do in regards to Africa. Okay i know its not quite the same as the links are weaker but i really think apartheid would have ended much earlier if the diaspora, particularly in the USA had done more. Cuban Americans make up less than 1% of the population. Jews make up 3% i think. AAs make up 13%.

So in that respect- though i dont agree with the AIPAC and the Florida "mafia" kudos to them for organising themselves to make their voices heard.
 
On a side note, Cubans in America (as well as Jews with Israel) seem to have been able to dictate American policy in a way that AAs have been unable (or uninterested) to do in regards to Africa. Okay i know its not quite the same as the links are weaker but i really think apartheid would have ended much earlier if the diaspora, particularly in the USA had done more. Cuban Americans make up less than 1% of the population. Jews make up 3% i think. AAs make up 13%.

So in that respect- though i dont agree with the AIPAC and the Florida "mafia" kudos to them for organising themselves to make their voices heard.

Must AA have none or limited links to Africa, outside a T-shirt, some corny slogan, or a medallion, and could care less about Africa. A big reach to expect AA to give two shits about a place they don't give two shits about them in America.
 
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