Identidades in English No 2, May 2014 | Page 11

Why Am I Not at LASA? Letter to Latin American Studies Association Manuel Cuesta Morúa* hy am I not at LASA? I am not at LASA because my country, Cuba, persists in the realm of abnormalities and incongruities. Cuba, for example, has boasted the largest number of representatives at LASA conferences, yet has represented the lowest degree of pluralism within its panels and papers. Cuba - the country inspiring the utmost passions throughout the Western hemisphere - is the nation that least tolerates the diversity of passions stirring within its boundaries. Indeed, in Cuba - as it was commonly said in Latin America years ago the law only exists for one’s enemies. W Cuba — perspectives that tend to be critical — and to make it known in the very same space that had for years had been considered the sole dominion of official thought. It seemed that the government had begun to accept normalcy, at least in so far as a conversation among different Cubans all living in the same national space. Nonetheless, the State's response to this civilized exchange of differing passions within Cuba was intolerance. Such a response threatens to reverse the very right to difference, which is the way forward for Cuba's transition to normal. Thus we see that government uses - and abuses - the law, for its benefit. It is for these three reasons that I cannot participate in this year’s LASA conference. Last year was the last time that "Official Cuba" achieved monopoly over the paradigms that framed discussions about Cuba, from within Cuba, in an event of this magnitude. In 2013, I was able to participate in this prestigious gathering of ideas (for the first time), along with two dear colleagues. It was our opportunity to reveal (also for the first time) the existence of independent thinking within Which law? The one that stems from power, not authority. On January 26th, 2014, I was arrested for trying to organize an Alternative Forum to the Second CELAC Summit. Why this Alternative Forum? To be able to talk about the Constitutive Declaration of that sub-hemispheric space that brings together Heads of State from Latin America and the Caribbean - as would be the case with any summit anywhere around the world. What does the CELAC Constitutive Declaration say? 11