Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 36

municipality also in Artemisa province, Xiomara Frómeta was informed that if she kept her 15 year-old daughter in the special school, they’d take away her pension. So the mother decided not to send her daughter to that school anymore. Xiomara tells the story of a social worker who told her that her special food subsidy, meant for dystrophic children, had taken away “because children like her were not going to gain anymore, because the children in her area did not go up in weight,” referring, of course, to her body weight. She also bemoans her serious housing problems, which put both her daughter’s and her own life at risk, despite the fact she has made multiple attempts to talk to different official authorities and institutions for a number of years. The shift from socialism, which was sustained by subsidies that made possible a large amount of welfare, to a savage State capitalism whose attitude is “every man for himself,” has plunged an indeterminate but large number of people into poverty, particularly older people and families that care for disabled relatives. A third case that exemplifies how the poor - for whom it was said the Revolution was fought have been abandoned is that of Heriberta León Morales and her son Yadriel Frómeta, who is 14 and has been diagnosed with moderate mental retardation and severe psychomotor issues. Ever since her son’s early years, Heriberta has asked “to commit him, to receive some help with him, because my nerves are quite shot” and he “is aggressive and I have to care for him all day long. There are days when I can’t even prepare just one meal.” All of her complaints to social workers or other functionaries and institutions have been in vain. She affirms that comments made - that the authorities had found an institution at which to place him and she had refused the offer - are false: “It’s a lie. I’ve been asking for years and they never resolved anything.”This case is even worse because the Municipal Housing Authority in San Antonio de los Baños switched her and her family from their rural home, which was in a dangerous place for her son, to a room in town. It is in deplorable condition and they gave her no resources for repairing it on her own. 36 The inability to create wealth under the system imposed by the Castro brothers makes it impossible to have enough capital to appropriately maintain basic infrastructural demands—services, production and social security. In addition, excessive governmental centralization is made ever worse by concomitant indolence and corruption of many functionaries throughout the chain of command. They dilapidate or disappear a portion of the resources meant for social security, which makes impossible the fulfillment of the declaration in the official report, “Different Children with Equal Rights.” Decentralization, as well as transparency in government and public administration, freedom of the press, emancipation of the Heriberta and Yadriel workforce, and a functioning legal system that favor the generation of individual wealth and proportionate contributions to the national budget, are the things will actually improve the social security system. This and only this, in addition to a political will on the part of our government officials to craft public policies that focus on people and not on partisan political goals and numbers to show off to the world, will eliminate the existence of Cubans who are living in extreme need and who have been abandoned to their fate, as they were in the past and are now.