Cuba –
High Fidelity and the two Ernestos
Khaled Diab
Cuba
looks to the outsider like the island where time stood still – or, at least,
where it moved in a different trajectory.
It is a fabled isle where the fabric of modern legend is woven. It went
from being the infamous playground of the rich and famous to the legendary
battlefield of revolutionaries, a small land with a mysterious pulling power
for the larger-than-life: from Ernest Hemingway to Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara.
Part I – Havana
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March 2007
Havana is a city with a lot of rhythm, a large soul and a touch of the blues about it. Its streets are a symphony of sound and a cacophony of colours and loud banter. Tall, short, fat or thin – bright colours and bare skin is the norm. In Cuba, a knee-length skirt is considered long and the louder your clothes, the better. On the afternoon we arrived, the grey clouds and rain had bled some of the town’s intensity away. But the following days we would see it in all its sunny, cracked splendour.
Havana is all about tempo: laid back, friendly,
mixed in with an undertone of sadness and melancholy. Amid all the sunshine and
hustle, looms the ghosts and phantoms of a lost time reflected in the crumbling
facades of once-beautiful buildings – many now hardly fit for human habitation,
yet inhabited nonetheless. Peering through doorways and catching glimpses in
windows of brightly dressed people set starkly against the dark grimness of
disintegrating walls.
One of the most enjoyable pastimes we
discovered in Cuba was finding a public square and sitting down to watch the
locals entertain themselves. Bars and restaurants are still few and far between
and most Cubans can’t afford them anyway. But theirs is very much an outdoor
culture, and a bench, a group of friends and a bottle of rum was were the simple
ingredients for fun. At one such park/square, in Havana, there were uniformed
office workers and revolutionary ‘social workers’ congregated for lunch and a
chin-wag; a goat-drawn carriage full of ecstatic young kids; and a group of
friends sharing a few laughs and a bottle of Havana Club. Two old ladies – one
fat, the other exceedingly thin with horn-rimmed glasses – sat immersed in
their own tales, oblivious to the commotion around them. Three old men dressed
in cloth caps and stern frowns sat discussing the state of the world.
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In fact, Cuba is conducive to chatting and
chilling out with people – and, with a bit of imagination and patience,
language proved to be no major barrier. From the educated Mexican mother and daughter
we met in our casa, to the friendly curator of Cuba’s only Arab social
centre, to the Belgian travellers we met en route, to the Cuban
friends we made in other cities, people were generally keen to converse.
Music is a prominent part of the city’s
identity and it sometimes felt like Buena Vista Social Club were on every
street corner, particularly in the more touristy and restored Vieja district.
In the poorer areas, Cuban youth have discovered the wonders of reggaeton and
then there is the traditional casa de la trova. Cubans have no compunctions
about playing their music at full blast and sharing their mood with the rest of
the street. Although it might drive me mad if I lived there, it gave each road
its own particular groove. Another advantage is that people who cannot afford
their own stereos can still have access to music.
Reputation and legend had prepared me for a
Latin beauty pageant. “To live in Havana was to live in a factory that turned
out human beauty on a conveyor belt,” I read in Graham Greene’s satirical
novel, Our man in Havana. Although there were certainly beautiful women
and good-looking men of a wide variety of complexions, the standard of beauty
did not strike me as being quite so exceptional as Greene’s imagination would
have us believe.
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Perhaps, like so much of the countries other
industrial infrastructure, the beauty factory has fallen into disrepair or ruin!
Alternatively, the revolution’s smashing of Cuba’s pleasure, gambling and sex
industry meant that more Cubans could get on with their lives without having to
capitalise on their physical endowments.
“Sexual exchange was not only the chief commerce
of the city, but the whole raison d’etre of a man’s life,” Greene’s
novel observes. However, there are signs that Cuba’s ‘chief commerce’ is
starting to rear its ugly beautiful head again. At bars and restaurants across
the country, we saw attractive young Cuban women (and sometimes a few men) with
their ‘rich’ foreign sugar daddies (and mummies). One particular foursome we
encountered in Santiago de Cuba so revolted Katleen that we had a long debate
about what could reasonably be done to staunch the tide.
Published just one year before Fidel Castro’s
triumphant takeover of the country and a few years before the Bay of Pigs
debacle and the Cuban missile crisis, the novel reflects the uncertainty
surrounding the ‘old’ Cuba’s demise and Batista’s final hours, as well as
delivering a satirical condemnation of the Cold War, capitalism and communism.
And its main characters hilariously invented intelligence of communist military
installations in the rebellious Oriente province of the country proved amusingly
prescient. While Mr Wormold had the communists building a secret weapon which
looked suspiciously like a vacuum cleaner nozzle, the real revolutionaries were
crowded on a small pleasure cruiser from Mexico called the Granma. Catholicism
had apparently brought Mr Wormold’s daughter closer to Cuba than himself. But
Communism is the notionally dominant faith today.
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Despite the corruption and social inequality of
old Cuba, pre-revolutionary Havana has a certain mystique about it – which
lives on in the people, the dilapidated automobiles, the music and the vibe. It
was amusing throwback to have lunch on the old-world Hotel Anglaterra’s
street-side terrace with a salsa band playing in the background. It was vaguely
thrilling having mojitos (the best we tasted in Cuba) and looking out to sea on
the hilltop terrace at the legendary neo-colonial Hotel
Nacional – where political intrigues have played out and statesmen and
artists, such as Winston Churchill, Nat King Cole and Ava Gardner once stayed.
Outside the hotel is a big square with hundreds of black flags flying and
revolutionary slogans everywhere, as if to demonstrate that the times had
a-changed. It is right by the US Interests Section and anti-American rallies
are held there regularly! Unfortunately, with Castro at death’s door, we did
not acquire the novel experience (for outsiders) of listening to one of his
marathon eight-hour oratories.
In the Vieja district, we got immaculately
restored glimpses of the old Cuba. The beautiful and colourful Spanish colonial
villas, the stunning arcades, beautiful Cordoba-style patios and the expansive
and imposing squares. At a hotel there, we saw the room where Ernest Hemingway
first stayed when he arrived in Cuba.
Not far away is the imposing Cathedral of San
Francisco di Assisi, which is a spectacular example of Baroque excess. Adjoined
to the church is what was once a convent and the garden houses a statue of
Mother Teresa of Calcuta (for some inexplicable reason). On the second floor,
there was an interesting photo exhibition, with some fantastic black and white
shots of Havana and its people. Unfortunately, the cathedral’s tower was closed
due to its poor state of repair and so we didn’t get the chance to enjoy the
vista it affords of the old city.
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Music and the food of loveOne intriguing spot to have lunch or drinks is
the rooftop terrace of the Santa Isabel overlooking the Plaza de Armas. On the
empty roof, we enjoyed the romance of solitude and the view over the oldest
fort in Cuba and some of its oldest buildings. The panorama inspired us to
reflect over the plight of the country, the revolution, the poverty, the past,
the present and the future.
More humble lunches can be had at the many food
stands frequented by Cubans. One popular local lunch are ‘pizzas’ which are
basically some bread with a bit of tomato paste slapped on. This basic snack
appeared during the ‘periodo especial’ when the country went hungry
following the collapse of the Soviet Union. A tastier Havanan lunch is
stir-fried rice with ham.
One evening, we sipped on aperitifs on the
magnificent and dazzling Plaza Vieja. The conversation flowed with the music
which bounced off the 16th-century square’s impressive acoustics and
the descending sun cast its orange hue across giving Katleen’s face a fetching
glow.
Habana is about the only city in Cuba which has
anything resembling an eating scene. The Hanoi serves good Cuban fare
accompanied by an entertaining band. For fans on Asian food, be warned no
Vietnamese food is served here, despite the name. Numerous places are named
Hanoi in Cuba and this seems to stem from solidarity with another country that
has suffered America’s wrath.
Since there does not seem to be a country you
can visit without finding a Lebanese, Al Medina, Havana’s classiest Arab
restaurant was owned by a Lebanese. However, the food did not taste completely
Levantine, but its tranquil, candle-lit courtyard provided a pleasant backdrop
to our meal.
But our favourite dining experience was Los Nardos,
overlooking The Capitol. This is mainly because, unlike most other restaurants
you’re likely to come across in Cuba, it is frequented mostly by locals – an
emerging hip middle class. The service is also incredibly efficient and the
food is good.
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Havana’s Capitolio Nacional is a poignant
symbol of the old, US-dominated Cuba. It looks remarkably like its Washington
cousin, except that it is smaller and more ornate than the Capitol. Inside is
one of the three largest indoor bronze statues in the world, the female
embodiment of the Republic. Having seen Abraham Lincoln’s enormous bronzed
figure in Washington, there only remains the giant Buddha in Japan to complete
the list. The building has an imposing dome and thousands of square metres of
intricate marble floors. Inside, quality contemporary Cuban art is for sale.
Unfortunately, since we didn’t return to the capital at the end of our stay, we
didn’t end up buying any.
The impressive Museum of Fine Arts is near the
fictional abode of Graham Greene’s Mr Wormold, on the Avenida de Belgica, which
marks the western extent of the Vieja district. In retrospect, we shouldn’t
have started on the first floor with the dull colonial art, made up of hundreds
of metres of portraits of ugly aristocrats – although there were some
interesting pieces of religious art and some landscapes – because it meant that
we had to rush through the last sections of the far more impressive modern art
section. Wilfredo Lam’s painting were remarkable and I wasn’t surprised to
learn that he is Cuba’s most celebrated modern artist. There was surprisingly
little overtly revolutionary art in the museum and Che Guevara was the iconic
image of revolution here, as everywhere in Cuba, rather than Castro.
The Revolution Museum, like the revolution
itself, has fallen on hard times. It is housed in the crumbling former
presidential palace. Having seen the magnificence of the Fine Arts museum, I
had expected something similarly striking, particularly since that is one
expects of a revolutionary dictatorship. It was almost as if no one could be
bothered to go through the pretence of being passionate about the ‘marvellous achievements’
of the revolution (education and health care count as the revolution’s most
shining accomplishments). In place of real photos were photocopies of
photocopies but the place was a goldmine of revolutionary memorabilia,
including the vehicles used in the daring campaign of 1959. In fact, by the
time we’d finished the circuit, we decided we’d learnt more than we’d ever
wanted to know about the revolution.
One peculiar thing about the museum and the
rest of Cuba is the relative absence of Castro’s image. Coming from a region
where one knows a thing or two about dictators, I had expected to find the big
man to be watching over his flock everywhere. Whether this has always been the
case or whether even his likeness has been removed from the public eye to
prepare the population for the handover of de facto power to Raul as
Fidel barely stays this side of life. The iconic image that is ubiquitous, like
some sort of communist Christ figure or revolutionary messiah, is the
silhouette of Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara, which is painted affectionately on
people’s houses and walls everywhere. There are also photos of the
revolutionary ‘rock star’ in every conceivable pose: playing chess, fishing,
reading, meeting world leaders, such as Nasser, while always smoking a fat
Havana cigar.
Next time: Trinidad, Santiago de Cuba, Baracoa
and Santa Clara.
ă2007
K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website is the
copyright of Khaled Diab.