Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Aliyekuwa Rais wa Cuba , Fidel Castro Afariki Dunia

Rais Castro na Mwalimu Julius Nyerere mwaka 1977
Aliyekuwa Rais wa Cuba, Fidel Castro, amefariki dunia akiwa na umri wa miaka 90.  Castro alifariki usiku wa kuamkia leo.  Mdogo wake, Rais Raoul Castro aliwatangazia waCuba kuwa Castro amefariki saa nne na nusu usiku.  Alisema kuwa maiti ya kaka yake itachomwa moto leo (cremation) huko Cuba. Kutakuwa na Misa ya kumkumbuka  Taifa la Cuba itakuwa na siku kadhaa za kuomboleza.
Rais Raoul Castro alivyowantangazia wananchi:
The commander in chief of the Cuban revolution died at 22:29 hours this evening (03:29 GMT Saturday)," he said. "Towards victory, always!" he added, using a revolutionary slogan.
Marehemu Castro anakumbukwa kwa kuwa Dikteta. Alipindua serikali ya Cuba mwaka 1959, na hakutoka madarakani hadi mwaka 2006.  Alimwachia madaraka mdoo wake Raoul.  Castro alifanya mengi kusaidi nchi za Afrika ikiwemo Tanzania. Nchi ya Marekani waliweka vizuizi vingi juu ya Cuba ili kujaribu kumkomesha Castro lakini walishindwa.
Video ya Ziara ya Rais Castro nchini Tanzania kwa hisani ya AP



Saturday, July 25, 2015

Nabii Fidel Castro

Wadau, Kumbe Rais Fidel Castro wa Cuba ni Nabii. Mwaka 1973 alitabiri kuwa Marekani itazungumza na serikali ya  komunisti Cuba wakipata Rais mweusi na Papa anatoka nchi za Marekani ya kusini. Ona Raisi wa Marekani ni mweusi, Papa anatoka Argentina!  Sasa kuna Ubalozi wa Cuba Washington D.C. na US wanatuma Balozi Cuba! Duh! Vita Baridi imekweisha sasa.


Thursday, March 14, 2013

Being Black in Latin America - Book Review by Chambi Chachage


Against Post-Race? A Review of Henry Louis Gates, Jr.’s Book on ‘Black in Latin America’

“All race, all racism, just like politics, is local ” – Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (p. 88)

Prof. Henry Louis Gates Safarini Dominican Republic

Chambi Chachage

Henry Louis Gates, Jr.’s 259-paged book on Black in Latin America, published in 2011 by the New York University Press, is an intriguing travelogue on ‘race’. It has six main chapters, each bearing the name of one of the countries that the author visited as its title. The author began his journey sometime in February 2010 as an attempt at understanding “the many ways in which race and racism are configured differently in Latin America than they have been in the United States” (p. ix). Of particular interest to the author, who chose each of the six countries – Brazil, Mexico, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Cuba – “as representative of a larger phenomenon” (p. 2), is their varied African-cum-Black presence and experience.

Like its accompanying documentary series that is a third in a trilogy, the book is methodologically informed by the “Tri-Continental Approach” that it attributes to Robert Thompson Farris. This approach takes the “points of the Atlantic triangular trade: Africa, the European colonies of the Caribbean and South America, and black America” (pp. 2-3) as the “cardinal points of the Black World” (p. 2). In this regard, of course, one can critique it as privileging, or rather, emphasizing the history of the ‘Black Atlantic’ at the expense of that of the ‘Indian Ocean World’ in making sense of the African presence in the world in the context of slavery, colonialism and racism.

Chapter one on “Brazil: ‘May Exú Give Me The Power of Speech’” is a critique of “Gilberto Freyre’s theory of Brazil as a unique racial democracy” (p. 14); celebration of “compelling cultural products of Pan-African culture in the New World” (p. 16); and affirmation of “Affirmation action – by which [he] mean taking into account ethnicity, class, religion, and gender as criteria for college admission” (p. 56-57).

The Brazil that the author knew before – and no doubt experienced in – his visit is “also a place of contradictions” (p. 16). It “received more Africans” (p. 13) than any other places in the Northern hemisphere yet it was the last country therein “to abolish slavery” and “the first to claim it was free of anti-black racism” (p. 16). The country “remains one of the most racially mixed countries on earth” yet it has “at least 134 categories of ‘blackness’ (Ibid.). Since in “ a sense, this book is a study of the growth and demise of the sugar economy in many of these countries, along with that of coffee and tobacco” (p. 10) and sugar “is the leitmotif of the book” (p. 18), the author traces how it impacted, in varying ways, the expansion of slavery and experience of slaves across time and space thus coloring the construction of race and institutionalization of racism. Even though the answers he got about the difference between slavery in the US and Brazil “were complex” (p. 19) the author seems to acknowledge, on the basis of his interviews and studies, that generally there are places in Brazil that slavers were treated relatively humanely than in others. True as it is this understanding is a fodder for critics who are so adamant that ‘slavery is slavery’, that is, it is simply inhumane.

Chapter two on “Mexico: ‘The Black Grandma in the Closest’” continues Gates, Jr.’s interrogation on why, despite that Latin America received more slaves than the United States of America, blackness generally tended to be buried. Ironically, as the author later discovered, black is located by way of denigration in a popular Mexican lottery card game. As one of his interviewees “explained the history of racial classification within her own family”, Gates, Jr. “nodded in recognition of a larger phenomenon, one that” he had thus “encountered throughout” his “research in Latin America”: “Just as I had in Brazil, I was encountering here in Mexico a society in which traces of black roots were buried in brownness. Blackness was okay, if it was part of a blend, an ingredient that doesn’t exactly disappear but that is only rendered present through a trace, a hint, a telltale sign” (p. 66). The intersection between class and race – and even gender – also features prominently in Mexico as this analysis indicates:

In mixed-race societies, color is used, in part, to mark class. You see it in Africa, in India, in Asia, throughout the Americas. And this fact contains another – something I’ve also seen over and over again: It is very tempting to hide one’s blackness in a mixed-race culture…. From inside a culture that actively works to whiten itself – as Brazil had done and as I learned Mexico had done – claiming African heritage isn’t always easy, especially when your skin color and physical characteristics don’t look African to others (p. 67).

The author also uses the case of Mexico to strongly argue against erasing race as an official category in census among other records since, for him, doing so does not necessarily eradicate racism. In other words, he does not see ‘post-race’, or what may be termed ‘color blindness’, as a way out racism. After getting a pleasant surprise of getting to know that the second president of Mexico in 1829, Vicente Ramón Guerrero Saldaña, descended from Africans the author was thus disappointed after also being told that his well-meaning attempt to create a post-racial society resulted in unintended consequences that continue to inform their ambivalence on blackness:

I had encountered this logic in Brazil and would in Peru as well. The idea about abolishing the recording of color differences, as we might expect, was intended to facilitate the elimination of privileges tied to these color differences…. I recognized the well-meaning spirit behind Guerrero’s actions. He had yearned to create a society beyond race, to act as if race didn’t matter. This same idea gave birth to the idea of racial democracy in Brazil. But denying roots is different from respecting them equally. Guerrero, with the best intentions, inadvertently took an action that helped, over time, to bury his own African ancestry and that aspect of genetic heritage of every Afro-Mexican who followed him (p. 77-78).

But if race is a social construct that is used to institutionalize racism why cling to it?

Chapter three on “Peru: ‘The Blood of the Incas, the Blood of the Mandingas’” has some of the most touching personal testimonies on how people of ‘darker hue’ tend to discover and juggle their blackness. One will read a story of Susan Baca, the “young, but demonstrably talented teenager, unfairly overlooked in a dance competition” because of her blackness but who “had grown into a noble woman who knew her own value – and, in the process, had become a national treasure” (p. 93-94). Therein one will also read the story of Ana and Juana, “proud, happy women doing right by the next generation” (p. 107) that they don’t want to see pick cotton like them. It is in this chapter that one encounters such a strong case for writing as activism against racism:

Seeing El Negro Mama [‘The Stupid Negro’] sent a shock through my bank of anti-black stereotypes. It made Memín Pinguín seem almost tame by comparison… I’d seen some racist things on TV as a child: Buckwheat and Stymie from Our Gang and, of course, Amos and Andy. But I’d never seen anything as racist as El Negro Mama.... ‘Why did it come back?’ I blurted. This story is unbelievable. ‘They said we are attacking free speech.’ she replied. ‘So now, we’re trying to organize an international campaign against El Negro Mama, including institution from the US too, of course.’ I told her she could sign me right up” (p. 112-113).

Chapter four on “The Dominican Republic: ‘Black behind the Ears’” is a sobering analysis of how “over 90 percent of Dominicans possess some degrees of African descent” yet few people “self-identify as black or negro; rather, wide majority of Dominicans – 82 percent most recently in a federal census – designate their race as ‘Indio’” (p. 120). One of the main reasons for this, the travelogue indicates, is the uneasy historical relationship with its neighbor within the Island, Haiti. In line with his focus on sugar the author, in collaboration with his interviewees, also locates these varying racial dynamics and their respective slavery patterns in the historical changes of the political economy that shifted to cattle ranching in the Dominican Republic.

Since Haiti ultimately replaced it as a booming sugar economy when the United States of America occupied both countries after World War I, thousands of Haitians were brought to the Dominican Republic to work on the plantations thus exacerbating the racial animosity between the countries that also had to do with the fact that they were colonized by two different European powers – Spain and France. For the author, however, “the cultural relation and the relation of identity between the Dominican Republic and Spain, at least symbolically, seemed, at times, to have been almost incestuous” (p. 126). It was thus easy for Dominicans to identify more with ‘white’.

Chapter five on “Haiti: ‘From My Ashes I rise; God is My Cause and My Sword’” is a passionate, almost conventional, defense of a nation that “had technically been independent since 1804” but one that “foreign powers never gave it a chance to flourish, free from their interference” and in “fact, all they did was punish, sabotage, and abuse” (p. 175-176) it. Of course the author, in collaboration with one of his interviewees, acknowledges that the reasons for Haiti’s problems are also internal. But for him, as it is for some if not many of us now, the United States of America is one of the main culprits. However, the author makes this curious observation when he laments why Haiti abandoned, wholesale, its political economy of sugar: “If they had just maintained the plantation system, Haiti would have been rich – it would have become one of the world’s richest economies” (p. 173). Interestingly, upon reminding himself of the “pain of slavery”, he thus retracts: “ Only truly inhuman circumstances could have compelled Haitian to abandon their country’s best chances for success, which would have been to maintain their level of sugar production, soon to be assumed by Cuba” (Ibid.). It was a painful, albeit rational, choice that one author thus aptly captures and which explains why we ought not demonize ‘subsistence farmers’:

Following the Revolution, Haitian workers sought an end to the plantation system and the assurance that they would never return to the backbreaking work of sugar cultivation or to the indignities of cane field overseers. As a result, many ex-slaves abandoned the estates, which were almost all in the hands of the state by 1806, and turned to the practice of squatting on vacant lands…. They cultivated subsistence crops and picked and marketed coffee beans from existing bushes according to local needs…. Those ex-slaves who were able to secure title to plots of land by virtue of their military service followed similar economic patterns. In this way, squatters and landowning ex-slaves established subsistence culture as their primary mode of existence while also making possible limited export economy (Mary A. Renda, 2001, on Taking Haiti: MilitaryOccupation and the Culture of U.S. Imperialism, 1915-1940 p. 48).

Chapter six on “Cuba: The Next Cuban Revolution’” is both a critique of the failure of the Cuban Revolution of 1959 to continue its then promising reversal of the effects of institutional racism and the role of the U.S. occupation in blocking a historic social movement for racial equality there. In the case of the latter the author observed that even though “Cuba had successfully banned institutional racism against people based on the color of their skin” (p. 220) he “found an informal racism that is pervasive, internalized by some white people and even by some black people” (p. 221). In the case of the latter Gates, Jr. notes that he “was deeply troubled by how far US intervention reached into the history of Cuba’s race relations” for the “country’s nascent black-equality movement was suppressed before it even had a chance to take root in a nation made independent to a considerable degree by the sacrifices and courage of black men” (p. 187). For him a revolution driven by youth is underway.

Thus the answers to “the most important question that” Gates, Jr.’s “book attempts to explore” i.e. “what does it mean to be ‘black’ in these countries? Who is considered ‘black’ and under what circumstances and by whom in these societies?’ indeed “varied widely across Latin America in ways that will surprise most people in the United States, just as they surprised” (p. 3) him. However, one may be tempted to think that by emphasizing these variations as captured in the epigraph above the author is understating the impact of race constructed as a global category and racism as a worldwide system of oppression. Racism is local. But it is also global. The localization is part of its globalization. And as the author puts it in the case of Cuba after noting in all the countries he visited that generally blacks are poorer: “ If you really think blacks are equal to whites and as capable as they are, don’t you have to question what keeps them in poverty?” (p. 218). Or as he put is slightly differently in Mexico: “Why, in every mixed-race society, is black always on the bottom?” (p. 66)

Monday, April 13, 2009

Ruksa Kwenda Cuba! - Rais Obama

Aisei, Rais Obama kafanya mazito. Baada ya miaka zaidi ya arobaini sasa ni ruksa kusafiri kutoka Marekani kwenda Cuba na kutuma pesa Cuba. Ni makubwa! Cuba si kisiwa kilicho kilomita 140 tu kutoka Marekani. Lakini serikali ya Marekani ilizuia usafiri na biashara kati ya nchi hizo shauri ya Cuba kuwa nchi ya KiComunisti.

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Kutoka CNN.com

Obama to ease Cuba travel restrictions

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Obama administration has decided to loosen restrictions on travel and remittances to Cuba for Cuban-Americans, senior administration officials said Monday.

The changes in Cuban policy will be unveiled before President Obama's trip to the Summit of the Americas.

The White House plans to announce the change later Monday.

The decision represents a significant shift in U.S. policy toward Cuba.

It comes days before Obama leaves for the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago.
Before he was elected, Obama promised to lower some of the barriers in Cuban-American relations.

Provisions attached to a $410 billion supplemental budget Obama signed in March also made it easier for Cuban-Americans to travel to Cuba and to send money to family members on the island. In addition, they facilitated the sale of agricultural and pharmaceutical products to Cuba.
The provisions loosened restrictions enacted by President Bush after he came to office in 2001.

Several members of Congress see broader relations with Cuba as vital to U.S. interests. A group of senators and other supporters unveiled a bill March 31 to lift the 47-year-old travel ban to Cuba.

"I think that we finally reached a new watermark here on this issue," said Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-North Dakota, one of the bill's sponsors.

Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Indiana, another sponsor of the bill, issued a draft report in February that said it was time to reconsider the economic sanctions. Lugar is the ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Leaders of the Congressional Black Caucus also said it is time to change U.S. policy toward Cuba after returning from a meeting in Havana last week with both Fidel Castro and Cuban President Raul Castro.

Other lawmakers, however, remain adamantly opposed to easing sanctions on Cuba, arguing that such a move would only reward and strengthen the Castro regime.

Reps. Chris Smith, R-New Jersey, and Frank Wolf, R-Virginia, last week urged Obama to refrain from easing the trade embargo or travel restrictions until the Cuban government releases all "prisoners of conscience," shows greater respect for freedom of religion and speech and holds "free and fair" elections.

"Over the past 50 years, the Castros and their secret police have been directly responsible for killing thousands of nonviolent, courageous pro-democracy activists and for jailing and torturing tens of thousands of others. And they continue to this day to perpetrate their brutal crimes," Smith said.

Rep. Barbara Lee, D-California, chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said it makes no sense to continue what she characterized as a failed policy.

"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but by any objective standard our current policy toward Cuba just hasn't worked. Simply put, it's time to open dialogue and discussion with Cuba," Lee said in a statement

Monday, September 29, 2008

Haiti waangamizwa na Kimbunga... nani ana jali?


Wadau, naomba niwatolee mfano hai wa jinsi wazungu Marekani walivyo wabaguzi.

Bila shaka mmesikia habari ya jinsi vimbunga vilivyopiga visiwa vya Caribbean hivi karibuni, Kisiwa kilichoathjirika zaidi ni Haiti. Nashangaa hatusikii sana habari hizo. Mamia ya watu wamekufa huko.

Hatusikii kwa sababu Haiti ni taifa la weusi! Kingekuwa kisiwa cha wazungu tungesikia kwenye matangazo maombi ya michango ya kuwapelekea walioathirika misaada. Kungekuwa na airlift ya kuleta mayatima kulelewa hapa Marekani.

Mnakumbuka Tsunami iliyopiga Indonesia? Wale walichangiwa mapesa na kupelekewa misaada kibao.

Sasa ni wiki kadhaa tangu kimbunga kifanye maafa huko Haiti mbona hatusikii kitu? Kuna habari kuwa watu wanakufa shauri ya kukosa maji ya kunywa safi na chakula. Hapa Boston kuna maHaitian wanakusanya misaada ya kupeleka huko lakini ni ndogo sana kulinganisha na kama vile wangefanya kampeni ya kuomba umati wawachangie.

Husikii hata waandishi wa habari wakitangaza habari za Haiti.

Wadau, kisiwa cha Cuba na kiswa cha Haiti si mabli na Marekani. WaCuba wameonewa na Castro (wanavyodai). Wanaruhusiwa kukaa hapa Marekani bila maswali kama wanaweza kufika Marekani. WaHaiti nao wamenyanyaswa na Papa Doc na Baby Doc na wengine. Wengi wakifika Marekani wanarudishwa bila huruma. Hao waCuba ni weupe weupe. WaHaiti ni weusi. Ukienda kwenye kambi ya wakimbizi waHaiti huko Florida kina hali duni sana kulinganisha na cha waCuba!

Wadau, tuwaombee wananchi wa Haiti walioathirika na vimbunga. Mungu awalinde wasiteseke zaidi.
Kwa habari zaidi someni:

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Rais Castro wa Cuba Ajiuzulu!

Cuban President Fidel Castro with his host Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere in Tanzania in 1978. I was there!


Rais Fidel Castro, wa Cuba amejiuzulu urais. Castro aliongoza nchi hiyo kwa miaka hamsini! Alipindiua serikali ya kibepari ya Batista siku ya mwaka mpya mwaka 1958! Castro alikuwa mgonjwa muda mrefu, hajaonekana hadharani kwa miaka miwili sasa. Kulikuwa na uzushi kuwa amefariki dunia, lakini habari hizo si kweli.

Alikuwa adui mkubwa wa Marekani shauri ya siasa zake za Communism. Mdogo wake, Raoul Castro atakuwa rais sasa.

Nakumbuka mwaka 1978, nilimwona laivu. Alikuja Dar es Salaam kumsalimia Mwalimu Nyerere. Wakati huo nasoma Zanaki secondary Form II. Tuliambiwa tukajipange pale Ikulu kumpokea. Alikuwa bado fiti wakati huo. Sasa ni mzee kabisa. Nakumbuka watu walisema eti, Castro alijialika kutembea Tanzania. Sijui walikuwa na maana gani. Tulitolewa haraka darasani na kuambiwa tuwahi Ikulu.

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Kwa habari zaidi soma:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/02/19/world/main3843492.shtml?source=mostpop_story

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jo_74bCqDvop0iQubmaRzy42RadwD8UTE7E00

http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/02/so_fidel_castro_has_finally.html