Identidades in English No 2, May 2014 | Page 22

and groups, and acting conscientiously in their incessant search for balance and stability inherent in all civilized societies. By using that educational monopoly, the regime has derailed “civic education” and “the teaching of values” as a way to affirm the mind and spirit of young people regarding a series of ideological principles and social behaviors very conveniently designed to protect its political control. There is one and only one source of limited information for society, in general, and young people, in particular. This results in a doubly negative effect: it creates a very narrow set of ethical, cultural and political goals for people and, on the other hand, paralyzes their ability to carry out very essential research, initiatives and debates essential to youth and extremely necessary for individual and collective growth. The fact that generations of young people have been born and educated under a suppressive regime in which there is not a strong and dynamic civil society has meant they have been denied an irreplaceable social and influential space in which to learn and participate. This space, based on diversity and legitimation, and the promotion and defense of private, group and social interests, is one of the most important places in which communities can develop and find balance. In addition, it also strengthens citizens’ sense of responsibility and their awareness of their rights. By nature, young people are restless, dynamic, and pluralistic. They have a tendency to enthusiastically embrace diversity, which ensures that any current attempt to impose models, preconceived canons or closed, unchangeable structures on them from on high will result in their natural and spontaneous rejection of them. This is a form of rebelliousness they are channeling through ways and attitudes circumstances permit. There are not civil or legal spaces in Cuba for expressing their concerns, criticisms or unconformities; political, social and civil organizations are 22 controlled by and dependent upon the State via a corporate structure that in fact corrupts and annuls all these corporative institutions, which represent the interests of their members. All this is further complemented by an extensive system of surveillance, coercion and repression whose responsibility it is to prevent and eliminate any independent expression and gravely endanger the aspirations and social participation of those who are dissatisfied or challenge the status quo. Reaction and response Beyond the urgent need for more economic and political freedom, which any objective analysis of Cuban reality would reveal, the above described elements and phenomena make it so that Cuban young people are not in a position to openly and frontally demand these changes and transformations. Why? Because they lack the most minimal freedom with which to develop socioeconomically and any clear sense of the very necessary civic and intellectual referents they need to be able to participate in a conscientious and committed manner in society and politics. Any individual or groups wishing to do so must have these to engage our time’s most complex political and social processes of interaction. Far from being able to confront the problems and challenges, these existential and intellectual lacunae enable dual morality, evasion and escapism to prevail among young people when they need to channel their desires, needs and frustrations. It is often the case that young people’s use of alternative and illegal spaces not only contradicts and denies the regime’s imposed values, but also the more positively, universally acknowledged ones. This results from a poor, deficient education and is one of the factors that increase the lamentable moral and existential disarray that affects so many Cuban young people today. Phenomena such as alcoholism, prostitution, religious fanaticism, marginality, criminal behavior,