This is my travel journal, so i will have easy time to remember. It makes me really happy sharing this with all of you ! I hope you will enjoy reading it.

דוברי עברית בלבד, שרות התרגום של גוגל תומך כעת גם בעברית - קישור בהמשך

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Friday, February 20, 2009

Part 8: Cuba

Some Basics
12 Milion people 
origion: 65% european, 10% african, 34% mixed
Area> Israel X 5
Socialist republic with a single communist party
GDP~150 bilion

Rings a bell ?
Ron (Rum), Cuban Cigars, Salsa, Castro, Bay of the pigs, The missile crisis




The start
Why Cuba ? don't really have a good answer. Never wanted to go there
especialy. I was in the neighbourhood and the 1.1.09 celebrations of 50
years for the Cuban revolution sounded like a special occasion, so why
not ?
Well just as i was about to go i met quite a lot pf people that intimidated
me and told me it's interesting, worth going but with the same breath
that they will never go there again. 

I was really anxious, What can be so bad ???
So this time unlike the rest of my travel i decided that a partner might
be a good idea (Money reasons as well, Cuba is extremely expensive with
no reason).

Waited and waited, a but nervous, depressed and bored while i
was on the magnifiscent Mexican carribean and couldn't even enjoy the
ocean with bad weather, the largest clouds i have ever seen in my life
(just a huge gray sheet covering the entire skys) and rain.
As many times before, only when i decided that this is it, gonna do it 
alone and was about to leave the hostel, i saw Isaias (Yeshaiahu)
- Mexican, doing the same so we joined forces.

I have seen him arround, but usually when he was totally borracho
(drunk) day after day all day and thought i don't wanna be anywhere
near him.
But looks can be misleading and he just came back from half a
year of traveling in Europe and celebrated coming back home to cheap
food and alcohol. So finally after a 2 days Marathon of getting ready we
went on our way.

We flew with Cubana airlines, which felt like flying with a bus with
wings on a school trip (or Israelies on their way to vacation in Turkey).
Waiting for an hour in a sauna until all of the Cubans were shouting 
agua (water), someone asking the flight attendent to open the window 
and smoke other said the suitcases fell with the sound of the wheels 
opening, and claping hands like a miracle happend, thanking Cubana for
not crashing the plane.

At the border control hall, cold feeling, too many people with uniforms,
dogs sniffing and an officer barking questions at me wearing a shocked
face to each answer i give and order me to wait for further questioning.
Finally i get in and 100% sure that a man is following me to confirm my
version of the Mexican friend who is waiting for me inside. He even
pointed us to his friends from far which made me feel even more 
uncomfortable.

After an hour more we discover that our stuff with half of the other 
people didn't get there and will maybe come tomorrow (you never 
know as they say) and all the floors are a mess, packed with stuff of the
people who had the same yesterday (including suprising stuff like car 
tires - expensive in Cuba) and this continues like a chain reaction, who
knows maybe still going.

Havana
We land at Havana at the casa (house) we booked in advance, get a cold
army style 5 min brief from our contacts: a Cuban doctor and his wife
that pretty soon allows us to understand the Cuban philospophy
regarding tourists: suck their blood (money) !!!
We are being sent with the neighbour to his house, A ~40 years old 
guy who lives with his mother that mostly sit and stare at everything
we do, value our stuff and interogate us often. All we wanna do is just 
go out and escape this place.

We go out to the street to discover Havana and it is a indeed a 
completely different reality !

The first thing that i ask myself is: what happend here ? did the
americans boomb Havana at any point in history ? 
Crumbling old buildings and no new ones, holes in the roads, sewer in 
the streets, trash all over, no maintenence and poor lighting - Havana 
and Cuba are dark. When the day ends i'm left with a really cold and 
poor feeling, maybe like when i read "We the living" by Aine rand, 
life in the shade of communism.

But on the second day and on, after we got our stuff back and walked a
bit more, i can say there is definetly a charm in Havana and the life
there, but at the same time a big gettho feeling.
And this is typical for my entire time there:

i love it and hate it at the same time.

Different faces of Havana:



The university of Havana (feels like ancient greece)


The crumbling center

 


Our journey will take us next to the far end of cuba (15 hours ride) to
the city of Santiago de cuba and from there through other main cities.
I can say that everything rougly feel the same.

Santiago de cuba
Santiago, the second largest city in Cuba, and is considered to be the
most Cuban with strong involvement in the revolution and the city of
music, the homeland for most of the typical music styles came from
Cuba. Overall feels like just another city...nothing too special besides
numerous places at night with excellent live Salsa bands.

Crazy enough, i bumped into Francesca her friends- english girl (met 
in Mexico a few months before) in the middle of the street so all of 
us teamed up.


All of the local youngsters gather at a street to hang out: Mainly
Regatone, barely Salsa and party is over at midnight !!! ???



Ok, next party...
A little wierd but somehow we manages to find an underground (not
legal) reggae party in a small backyard with the singer rapping 
"Mezuza" and "Shalom" when he hears i'm from Israel (only 2 words 
he knows). 


Not so atractive Cuban girls hungry for tourists (Isaias)


The prehistoric park next to Santiago
Original size reconstructions of Dinasors, the best i have seen in my life.
Feels like really walking there milions of years ago...



Isaias on the foot of the dinasor




A typical ride in Cuba: usually an old guy with a skeleton of a car, 
ignites by wires.


Hanuca
After a little effort i discover and find the only sinagog in Santiago for
the first evening of Hanuca and welcomed warmly.
A small comunity of maybe 100 people (all active in different way), a
reform style ceremonies, led by 2 youngsters (man and a woman) the
only people who understand hebrew and very different from the
traditional style i know with some prayers in Spanish.
Somehow, this community with it's effort to stick together and to keep
their Jewdeism moved me the most so far and maybe gave me the best
feeling i had in a sinagoge in my life.

With extreme generosity they invited me to the holiday dinner although
most of the people are extremely poor and in the end of the meal you
could see some taking the leftovers in bags for later.

The story of the Community and Jews in Cuba is rather "new".
The first Jew to land in Cuba was definetly columbus map maker (a jew
in secret) and now there are theories and some evidence to support

But under Spanish control there is no evidence of Jews on the island, 
probably there undercover in fear of the Spanish inquisition.
Only in the 1920's A firm Jewish community was established in the days
of the Cuban republic (a sattelite country of the US). 
At the peak 15,000 Jews and Cuba, today probably less than 1500.

I was lucky to meet an American Jewish couple who volunteer and
support the Cuban Jewish communities. They brought potatos for
making Levivot for Hanuca. Lary suggested the idea of teaching Hebrew
to the people and i gladly accepted the task.
So the next day with a blackboard, we thought how to read the Hanuca
blessings and their meaning, not sure how but i did it in more or less in
Spanish with such a vivid feeling i haven't had in ages (some told me 
that this is my destiny...who knows, i certainly gave a thought).


Baracoa
Described by Christofer columbus as: "... the most beautiful place in 
the world...I heard the birds sing that they will never ever leave 
this place....".
It's the land of the cocunut (more than any other place i have seen).



The drive to Baracoa - no doubt one of the craziest so far !
We stopped on the way and i just went to get some water. I come back
to find out that the bus has left without me !
No No No this isn't hapenning !

A lady next to me starts shouting like crazy "it went, it went" and
making me even more nervous. People are shouting run to the street
and i run with all of my strength to find nothing again!!!

Like in the movies a biker comes with his bike next to me, handes me a
helmet and say "get on". I get on (a bit scared) and we go pretty slow
with this old old bike and i think to myself: how the hell will we catch
the bus like this and preparing myself to catch a truck.

Eventually he drove through some alleys (real movie like) and dropped
me at the exit of town. A few minutes later the bus comes after Isaias
(that i thought was in a deep drunkness/ hangover) and the rest of 
the people shouted at the driver that wanted to go on.

The city itself looks neglected and (in some parts reminded me jiser a
zarca) and the scars of many Huricans are seen all over. Many people 
lost their houses and the government pays for building of any house 
that is destroyed.

kids playing, running barefoot on stones - riding their "stick horses"


The best chocolate

A typical candy: Cocunut with oranges in a cone for a leaf

Varadero
The cuban version of Cancun, a huge strip with hotels but with an
artificial white sand beach. Isaias was after the ultimate Carribean
beach and was dissapointed 3 times in Cuba.

But we tried to focus on enjoying Havana club rum (Ron), 7 years old
and Cuban cigars with our new friends - russian travelers (first time
i see such). By the way, russians do not need a visa to enter cuba die 
to the close relations and in Havana we even saw a huge Russian battle 
ship showing some muscles in the harbor.

This was also the exact time when the war in Israel started and lucky 
enough i had CNN in Spanish and didn't have to rely on the only 
cencurized national channels avalable.
What can i say ? it looked so bad from there and i really felt what i feel
all the time: Israel is loosing the real battle as always: the media and 
public opinion. 
The local chanels used phrases as: "The bad country Israel" and 
similar and this is exactly the reaction i got from many of the locals
i met. Nervous times to be an Israeli abroad as well. 


Together we all continued back to Havana to the celebrations of the
silvester and the 50 years for the revolution 1.1.09.

A complete dissapointment!

Silvester: water and euren thrown from buildings to the streets and
some fire works, no crazy street parties.

Revolution day: a stage with a hot salsa band but hardly any of the
Cubans dancing. After it was over, back home, no after-parties.

I imagined it to be extremely different ! I guess there was not a real
reason for celebration. Cuban people in my impression are unhappy 
and opressed.

The next day, a sad goodbye to Isaias and of i go to the other end.

The valle of pino nuer - Vineales
where the best tabaco in the world is grown - most amazing views of Cuba.


What is it like ?
As many say it is a big old live museum

- A museum for architecture from many periods from Columbus times
to the early of the century when the Cuban republic was flourishing.
I just walk through the streets of Havana or Colonial cities like Cien
fuegos and admire the jewls i see all over which were ones simple
buildings (not only governmental and cultural) and many times wish
building today could be as atristic as it was in the past.

- The icon of Cuba, a museum for the famous beautiful sweet clasic 
cars from the beginning of the century that are still used with no other
alternative due to the American embargo. Though in the last years
things are changing and many European and Asian cars are seen on
the roads.

- A museum for socialism/communism where many parts of the system
are still being practiced. it is just a radicaly different experience to live
like a cuban. Overall a depressing one but at the same time very educating.

Some aspects of life

Currency and economics

In Cuba there are 2 currencies:
The people's money - moneda nacional CUC used for turism and luxuries.
25 peso=1 CUC , 1.08 US.

Foreigners are not supposed to use the local money. The idea behind of
that is that outsiders shouldn't benefit from socialism in the form of
country subsidies on prices (food, transportation...).

Most of the people earn their salaries in moneda nacional and an
average salary is arround 300 ~12 US. On the other hand most of the
basic products are being heavily subsidised by the government: food,
electricity, water, etc or given as rations. But this leaves room for only
very basic living and poor diet without luxuries.

Managed to get my hand on this form so you can see the low food
prices: (rice=0.5 nacional/kilo, sugar=0.3/kilo...)


Line for bread (rationed and uniform all over)

A T-shirt or a jeans will cost you much like in the US which means a
few months of work (without food) = impossible !!! But on the other,
contradiction hand many of the people i see in the street wear the
best fashion there is. How can it be ?

There are 2 ways to live in comfort in Cuba: have a family abroad to
send money or work with tourism - the main income of Cuba. This puts
a lot of pressure on the tourists and at times makes it extremely not
nice to be in Cuba. 
The new medium-high class is are the people who rent rooms for 
tourists and the new rich people are the Bar tenders.

Transportation
Horse (and bulls) power is still widly used in the rural areas


Local cheap transportation by trucks (for people)


The local gasoline: Octan 83
When one of this cars going next to you suffocate from a big black
smoke cloud (The Cubans are sure their air is so nice and enjoy 
laughing at Mexicans and Mexico city).


Cuban food and hunger
Cuban food is very simple and shallow and most of the diet consists of
the pork steaks, rice and black beans (called christianos (whites) and
morros (blacks) and conserves history in the name: the Spanish-morr
war) and a salad - usually a little chopped cabage.
Most of the restaurants thats serve this typical Cuban food are runned
by the government and subsidized - Dona yuya. It's amazing to see 
huge industrial LG airconditioners (some governmental deal) that 
worth more than the restaurant and whatever it will make in it's 
entire lifetime.

Otherwise there are no other real restaurants besides tourists places.
Of course we tried as much as we could using the local money in order
to save money (otherwise it's like Europe/US prices without any
justification) and to experience the real Cuba.

So the options are food sold through little windows with only small
number of options in the menu: very cheap and very basic, usually
small pizzas (pretty good), basic pasta, bread and pork or just bread
and mayonese. Or many times we just walked in the neighbourhood
asking people for a place to eat and were led secretly (check that the
police is not looking) to some eateries at local houses.

Another option, very suprisingly and relatively new a Cuban fast food
chain (again runned by government) - El rapido. A form of the american
capitalism byting into Cuba.

Overall since i don't eat pork, this really means live on rice and beans 
or Pizza or sometimes only cabage - nothing !!! And pretty fast
even Isaias started to sound like a pork and couldn't think about eating
pork anymore.
So eating in Cuba was always an adventure - a real challenge! it ment
spending a lot of time for finding the next meal, being hungry a lot of
the time and imagining the next meal. Eventually i felt like an animal
and just ate whatever i could whenever i could. And i guess this is
actually part of the Cuban reality which we felt.

In the past, Cuban has known extreme famine periods, especially after
the collapse of the soviet union and the drying of the fountian of funds
and the old generation can tell you about eating banana skins for example.

Pizza at a local stand: only 2.5 ~ 10 cent

Comida creolla (Creollo=Spanish who were born in the new world)
The only place we enjoyed lovely warm hospitality and enjoyed a
hamburger (don't know how - Beef againts the law, but tasted real).


The music
Magnifiscent ad one of the best reasons to go. There is nothing more 
enjoyable that a good live Salsa band and a Mojito. It looks like every 
kid is born with the ability of dancing salsa professionaly.

But salsa is also decaying and clears it's way for the Regatone for the 
young generation, no elegance, volgar dancing and extremely bad content.

Socialism, cult, worship, propaganda
(pictures are stronger than words)
The holy undebatable mortirs of the nation, sometimes it looks like 
there were only 2: Ernesto Che Guevara and Jose Marti, a poet - hero of the 
independence.

Capture the atmosphere with my favorite collection of 
street signs


Dispel batista (the dictator before the revolution)

All for the revolution


Some propaganda

Fidel loves you


The comite for the defense of the revolution
(The citizens take parts at groups like neighbourhood watch in order to
make sure none of the revolution values is being violated).

We will keep and fight to defend socialism

5 Cuban accused by espionage and held in the US

The cuban army
The typical Fidel style uniform and hat, pretty amuzing.

Education
Education is obligatory and fully subsidized by the gvernment. 
The numbers of educated people in Cuba are extremely impressive.
The other side of course is that i haven't seen to many who practice 
their profession or happy about it.

Health system
Health care is fully supported by the government and Cuban doctors 
have an excellent reputation. Many foreighn students (including US - 
met one) come to study medicine in Havana.
Many measures of the health system are comparable or better than
western countries and Cuba also exports doctors to fellow countries as
Venezuela and Bolivia as a source of income.
A cuban doctor will make arround 30$ a month.

People and Tourism
Most of the people i got to meet were not nice and were only after my
money, even things that looked inoccent at the begining were not.
They are called "Jinateros",a rider who sit on a horse - the tourist. 
Wherever i went people were just hasteling and annoying me, which
after a few days really drove me crazy. The pick was one guy who were
just on our tail all the time in Santiago and whenever we went he
managed to find us, lied to us quite often (took some time to understand
that) and mainly annoyed us with bullshit until we just wanted to leave.

In many occasions it looked like people have enjoyment of doing that or
showing us they don't care. Like after waiting for an hour and a half in a
restaurant for out dishes and constant reminders, begings and
demanding for our food before going to the bus made everything slower
with enjoying smiles. They just don't care, they will get the same low
salary and no one will ever fire them (sounds familiar? - Histadrut).

But there is of course another side: up until 2 years ago Cubans were
not allowed to talk to foreighners and still the police gives trouble for
some. This is why there is still a big fear of many to interact with
tourists. Which leaves the space for those who want your money.

Extreme missunfortunate is the big Sex tourism that evloved in Cuba
and tourist taking care of the economic situation. If you want you can 
rent a woman for a few days for pretty cheap. The most shocking think
was walking in the street in Havana when a kid called us saying that his
mother wants to talk to us. We step in and in front of her young kids 
she offers us girls.
Almost every interaction i had with a woman in Cuba went straight 
away to buy me a drink, take me to your country or saying i love you 
in the second sentence.

I will not judge the entire nation, but my experience was generaly
negative and only in my last 2 days it was better, but to little and too
late. 
The best experience was an extremely poor bicycle taxi driver
that i talked to and dined with. After, we were going to the same direction
and he offered me to get a ride with no charge, just for the company,
I couldn't beleive it ??!!

From here and there we became friends and went to his house so he
could change and go and have a bear. The first thing i see is an empty
appartment with an old man without a shirt sleeping on the floor with
no matress - his wife's father. He wakes up, we are laughing and 
smiling, watching baseball together and i'm fascinated with stories 
about the Cuban involvment in the war in Uganda when he was a
soldier. 
Then the guy waked his little boy - one of the most happy kids that i
have seen in my life, playing with a broken doll without hands and hide
and seek with me. We walked to have a bear and after i have seen how
he lives i couldn't accept any of his offers to get rounds of bear though
he sincirely insisted. He gave me a real insight into Cuban life and how
desperate people are. We said goodbye when i gave him all of the 
little presents we bought to give to people (recommended to us before
but actually not needed at all, we just didn't want to give any to the 
bad ones) with a warm feeling in my heart.

A little more: Cuba - a short history
- The first people to discover Cuba were native americans who settled
in Cuba tens of centuries before the arrival of the spaniards. They were
a simple peacefull farmers and hunters and were eventually erradicated
by Spanish slavery and diseases.

- October 12, 1492, Christopher Columbus in his first voyage claimed
the island for Spain, and named it Isla Juana and in the 1511 the first
Spanish settlement was established.
Colonial Cuba was Spanish possession for almost 400 years (1511-1898).
Its economy wasbased on plantation agriculture, mining and the export
of sugar, coffee and tobacco to Europe and later to North America. Like
in many places in the new world a large population of black slaves was
brought to work Cuba.

- During 30 years (1868-1898) a serious of bloody rebelions and wars
fighting for a Cuban independence from spain were won eventually with
the intervention of the US winning the Spanish American war. However
Cuba did not win complete independence and in practice became a
sattelite country of the US which preserved the right to intrvene
militarily in Cuba (and did) and pretty soon amrican economical
interests ruled Cuban economy as well.

- A long period (1902-1959) of great political instability icluding the
rulling of 2 dictators. The last Batista, who was overthrown by the revolution.

- The cuban revolution (1959)
Fidel custro, a young charismatic man began his influence as a critic of
Batista's regime. After a failed revolutionary attack he was captured
but surprisingly released by Batista in order to satisfy the public and
fled to excile in Mexico. In 1956 he reorganized and led a gurilla force
to land in Cuba, together with his brother Raul (president today) and
Che guevarra who joined the effort. In 3 years, the revolutionary forces
overthrown batista with an overhwelming support of the public.
After the dust settled, the revolutionaries turned to transform the state
to a socialist state, nationalizing lands and assets (most US property
~25 Bilion $) causing a large flee of Cubans to the US and turning the
US againts the new government.

- American-Cuban tension

Bay of the pigs: April 1961
Cuban imigrants trained by the CIA (supported by Kennedy) landed in
Cuba hoping to start an overthrow of Castro's regime. In only 3 days
the Cuban forces landed a crushing blow on the American forces.

The new-clear missile crisis: 1962 (almost 3rd world war)
American intelligence discovered the positioning of soviet new-clear missles
on Cuban land.President kennedy ordered a full naval blockade, confronting
with the russians. Minutes before confrontation, the russian president,
Khrushchev, backed up and decided to clear the missles with a promise
to secretly remove the US newclear misslies from Turkey and the middle east.

- Remains of a newclear reactor from the days with the close cooperation
with USSR.
- Involvment in wars in Africa and middle east: Angola, Yemen and Ethiopia.

- The collapse of the soviet union - 1991, loss of funds and economical crush.

- Power change: Due to illness, after 47 years Fidel Castro delivered the
power to his brother Raul.