Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 23

The enormous challenge to the present and future of Cuba was reaffirmed at the Forum: extremely high levels of marginalization and exclusion, present throughout the country and the Caribbean, where thousands of citizens - mostly Afro-descendants - live like illegal pariahs in their own country, are deprived of basic services, and are subject to the permanent threat of repression. Their existence is one of pitiful abandonment. Forum participants agreed that this enormous problem of inequality and despair is distinctly absent in the authorities’ socioeconomic reorganization plans as well as in plans of some exile groups that seek to benefit from the current crisis and the eventual transition. Nor does this problem appear in the image that Cuba offers some representatives in the internal opposition. The idea that is was time to openly and honestly acknowledge the overwhelming nature of those problems was ratified; that it was time to promote the long awaited project of civic and economic empowerment for traditional and current victims of inequality, marginalization and exclusion, or run the risk of these traumas and shortcomings further complicate what is already going to be a difficult democratic reconstruction. The presenters reiterated the so often mentioned need to economically empower Cuban Afro-descendants in order to guarantee equality and social equilibrium, which something that is ever present in the official rhetoric and propaganda, but non-existent in the complexity of our everyday lives. Argentine professor and Africanist Omer Freixa, who presented during the afternoon session, offered a comprehensive review appraisal of the presence and legacy of Africans and their descendants in his country, as well as how their “invisibilization” has followed prevailing historical patterns. Professor, plastic artist, and critic, José Clemente Gascón, spoke at length about the presence, images, and traditions of Afro-descendants in Cuban plastic art - both historically and contemporarily. The session on Saturday, December 13th, was initiated by Robert Castell, who spoke about the psychosocial and experiential impact of the extensive religious syncretism that has characterized Cuban society since early in its history. Eleanor Calvo and Juan A. Madrazo described many characteristics of Cuba’s current socioeconomic reality, as they have done at a number of different international events. After that, Leonardo Calvo updated people about the specifics of and challenges facing the debate on race in Cuba, according to the pronouncements made by critic and essayist Roberto Zurbano about the shortcomings and gaps in official - supposedly serious - attempts to address racial equality, including anti-racist campaigns. During discussion, much was said of the worry shared by many of those present regarding the weak intervention of official projects to foment society-wide debate about about interracial relations and patterns of inequality within the context of Cuba’s present-day complex socioeconomic situation. In this respect, one of the issues raised was about the recent inaugural meeting against racial discrimination sponsored by ARAAC [Regional Afro-Descendant Articulation of Latin American and the Caribbean]: the gathering was problematic because it made no room for the kind of work conducted at the Forum, including proposed solutions to the enormous rifts and shortcomings from which society still suffers. Calvo insisted that only truly independent antiracist organizations, the reclaiming of identity, Afro-descendant self-esteem, and connections to global efforts to promote the values and rights of Afro-descendants and minorities will bring about substantial and qualitative change in the way in which the problem of racism - whose underpinnings go back to the beginning of our history, and which gets further complicated with each silence and manipulation - is addressed and transformed. Cuban Afro-descendants, who bear the heavy burden of so much aggregated inequality and injustice, are called to regain their civic, political, and media voices in this process of transition to democracy. This would mean a very different kind of social interrelationship for all those who are called to be political and social actors, ones who act with responsibility and integrity, to ad- 23