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Showing posts with label Fidel Castro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fidel Castro. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2016

'Cuba si! Castro no!' But now, it's "Cuba si, Fidel Castro no more!" Observations on a day that so many people in South Florida thought might never come in their lifetimes





I grew-up in South Florida in the 1970's hearing people say one thing more than anything else that ever made an impression on ever-observant me.

It was a phrase that many people said with conviction, borne of bitter and heartbreaking personal experience -of having their or their family's life torn upside-down.
Or ruined.

But for others, like many Democrats and liberal politicians or news reporters I came to personally know in 1970's and 1980's Miami while involved with Dade County and national Democratic Party officials and campaigns at a very high ;level, it was said it out of cautious political expediency. 
The unspoken reason was clear - they knew they MUST at all times be sensitive to the concerns of so many people concentrated in one area who felt this particular pain and sentiment so deeply in their heart and their head, lest those pols become eviscerated come election-time.
That phrase, of course, was 'Cuba si! Castro no!' 

But now, today, it's "Cuba si, Castro no more!"

But this morning's news about the death of the Cuban dictator Fidel Castro came far too late for so many childhood friends of mine's parents and grandparents, too late for so many of my own former teachers, coaches, teammates, employers, barbers, auto mechanics, and neighbors in North Miami Beach I knew, admired and was influenced by in ways large and small.


People who desperately hoped, no prayed, that a day like today would someday come while they were still alive and could, perhaps, get at least one last chance to return to visit or live in the land of their birth, with some measure of happiness and satisfaction. 
But to no avail.
The Communist tyrant Fidel Castro and his bureaucracy of fear and destruction always lived to fight and rule for another day, another year.

Another year of not being able to walk the streets, sidewalks, neighborhoods, beaches or open spaces of their youth, ones that they could still so clearly see in their heads when they closed their eyes, but which, increasingly, may've only existed as memories, never to be seen again in person.


And today was a fateful day that my own father never saw before he died almost five years ago this Christmas, who worked for so long with so many wonderful Cuban-born men and women I came to know, trust and respect over the years since my family first moved to Miami in August of 1968.

People who, while brave on the outside, always deeply felt a hole in their soul that people not in their unique situation could never hope to fully understand or explain away.
As so many told me in their own words, how can it be a "phantom pain" when you know that Cuba is still there, so close by?

Yes, it's that geographic proximity that burned, that element that made even recounting happy memories back in Cuba soon turn into tears.

How many hundreds and hundreds of times have I witnessed that?
Too, too many.... 

































: Fidel Castro is dead https://t.co/dK2h8YLgX3">https://t.co/dK2h8YLgX3</p>— Lizette Alvarez (@LizetteNYT) https://twitter.com/LizetteNYT/status/802717605446504449">November 27, 2016

https://t.co/vRmOLOq8qv">pic.twitter.com/vRmOLOq8qv</a>— James Taranto (@jamestaranto) https://twitter.com/jamestaranto/status/802696943558426624">November 27, 2016










https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cubans?src=hash">#Cubans react to death of Fidel Castro in streets of Little Havana. https://twitter.com/hashtag/FidelCastro?src=hash">#FidelCastro https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cuba?src=hash">#Cuba</a> https://twitter.com/hashtag/Miami?src=hash">#Miami https://t.co/ma7CcxKgH3">https://t.co/ma7CcxKgH3</p>— MaryAnn Martinez (@maryannreports) https://twitter.com/maryannreports/status/802520357794181120">November 26, 2016






https://t.co/n5XRSH9QOj">pic.twitter.com/n5XRSH9QOj</a>— Kyra Gurney (@KyraGurney) https://twitter.com/KyraGurney/status/802556887132729345">November 26, 2016






</p>— Jennine Capó Crucet (@crucet) https://twitter.com/crucet/status/802639249250091008">November 26, 2016



SVT (Sveriges Television) Sweden

De firar Castros bortgång

Carina Bergfeldt, USA-korrespondent på plats i Little Havana, Miami, Florida
Publicerad:26 november 2016 12.00
Uppdaterad:26 november 2016 12.27
http://www.svt.se/nyheter/utrikes/de-firar-castros-bortgang






kl 18 och kl 19.30. https://t.co/w5mcZkUj8w">pic.twitter.com/w5mcZkUj8w</a>— Carina Bergfeldt (@carinabergfeldt) https://twitter.com/carinabergfeldt/status/802542046816780288">November 26, 2016

: New admin + the world must seize this opportunity 2 redouble their commitment 2 the people of https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cuba?src=hash">#Cuba</a> https://t.co/Ydw9N02oyI">https://t.co/Ydw9N02oyI</p>— Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (@RosLehtinen) https://twitter.com/RosLehtinen/status/802657042594865154">November 26, 2016




used MIG-29 combat pilots to kill unarmed civilians https://twitter.com/hashtag/Brotherstotherescue?src=hash">#Brotherstotherescue back in 1996. https://twitter.com/hashtag/cuba?src=hash">#cuba</a>— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) https://twitter.com/marcorubio/status/802547948043108352">November 26, 2016


https://t.co/Tm0JoCcT3P">pic.twitter.com/Tm0JoCcT3P</a>— Casey Michel (@cjcmichel) https://twitter.com/cjcmichel/status/802525988076650496">November 26, 2016


</p>— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802468735483310081">November 26, 2016


</p>— Doug Hanks (@doug_hanks) https://twitter.com/doug_hanks/status/802567527276642305">November 26, 2016






https://t.co/9gAebeawTn">https://t.co/9gAebeawTn</p>— SalenaZito (@SalenaZito) https://twitter.com/SalenaZito/status/802345096427503617">November 26, 2016



https://t.co/X38h2C4ZLu">https://t.co/X38h2C4ZLu</p>— George Bennett (@gbennettpost) https://twitter.com/gbennettpost/status/802498245037420545">November 26, 2016

. He looked old then, I'm surprised he lasted so long. Evil man, good riddance.— Richard Brookhiser (@RBrookhiser) https://twitter.com/RBrookhiser/status/802538215106351104">November 26, 2016


... https://twitter.com/JanHelin">@JanHelin&mdash; HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802477270195720192">November 26, 2016




</p>— MariaElena Fernandez (@writerchica) https://twitter.com/writerchica/status/802402837321789440">November 26, 2016

https://twitter.com/hashtag/Welcome?src=hash">#Welcome, Carina! Head to https://twitter.com/VersaillesMiami">@VersaillesMiami, interview https://twitter.com/GlennaOn10">@GlennaOn10. Can explain it all in a way https://twitter.com/hashtag/Sweden?src=hash">#Sweden understands. :-)— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802466372710232064">November 26, 2016





https://twitter.com/JanHelin">@JanHelin The scene in https://twitter.com/hashtag/Miami?src=hash">#Miami LIVE as it celebrates the death of the Cuban tyrant, https://twitter.com/hashtag/FidelCastro?src=hash">#FidelCastro: https://t.co/AeQhgmrQHi">https://t.co/AeQhgmrQHi</p>— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802409924827475968">November 26, 2016
https://twitter.com/GlennaOn10">@GlennaOn10 https://twitter.com/WPLGLocal10">@WPLGLocal10 Or was it https://twitter.com/hashtag/Miami?src=hash">#Miami Mayor Tomas Regalado? Tired... not used to pulling all-niters any more! :-)— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802459773048332288">November 26, 2016


is capturing outside https://twitter.com/VersaillesMiami">@VersaillesMiami live on https://twitter.com/WPLGLocal10">@WPLGLocal10 right now is truly compelling https://t.co/GDaFSqZXVn">https://t.co/GDaFSqZXVn</p>— Billy Corben (@BillyCorben) https://twitter.com/BillyCorben/status/802433125775212544">November 26, 2016


</p>— MariaElena Fernandez (@writerchica) https://twitter.com/writerchica/status/802391476185350144">November 26, 2016

People outside of https://twitter.com/hashtag/SoFL?src=hash">#SoFL</a> might think you are exaggerating via pots & pans theme. Nope! We know it's the truth!  :-)— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802393190380736512">November 26, 2016


</p>— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802460197952307201">November 26, 2016


</p>— HallandaleBeachBlog (@hbbtruth) https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/802461624011542528">November 26, 2016




Tuesday, May 11, 2010

PJTV.com video re Babalú Blog: Miami Libre: Cuban Bloggers Document Castro's Daily Atrocities; South Florida as media backwater

In my email in-box today came the daily email I get from PJTV.com and today it's of particular interest to South Florida, a video titled: "Miami Libre: Cuban Bloggers Document Castro's Daily Atrocities."

It consists of a 17-minute video with Dr. Helen Smith, of www.drhelen.blogspot.com interviewing the team behind
Babalú Blog, http://babalublog.com/ at Cuban Crafters, discussing their intent and motivations behind the Miami-based blog, as well as the efforts of other Cuban-Americans and Cubans like Yoani Sánchez of the Generation Y blog, to lift the veil on what's going on with Fidel & Company's island prison. http://www.desdecuba.com/generationy/

See the video at http://www.pjtv.com/v/3531
Registration is required but it's quick and free.

After you see it, you'll probably think the same thing that I did.
The same sort of thing I so often think after watching a compelling segment on CBS News Sunday Morning, or reading about something on the Internet or in a magazine: Isn't this precisely the sort of thing that should've already been run on a local Miami-area TV station?

Something that should've been run on their weekend public policy programming?
Despite all the current media blather that exists about media organizations getting hyper-local or using technology to keep readers, and to tell compelling stories in a more interesting and interactive way, compared to efforts elsewhere in the country, local South Florida newspapers and TV stations do what can only be described as a piss-poor job of incorporating technology in illuminating local news issues, or in giving South Florida a fresh perspective on someone or something locally that creates ripple effects elsewhere, whether positive or negative.

Here in South Florida, that grandiose talk about getting hyper-local is, indeed,
nothing but media hyperbole, as the curious lack of news media present at public policy events I regularly attend, week-after-week, month-after-month, only confirms this belief and our very sad reality of living in a journalism backwater.
Why such a consistent serious lack of effort?

This interesting PJTV.com video on
Babalú Blog is but the latest example that reminds those discerning news consumers and public policy types among us of South Florida's media backwardness, but there are plenty of other examples that I've observed in the past and plan on bringing to your attention. (And examples that many of you have shared with me, too.)
Examples that I've written about in my notebooks but have never actually posted, usually out of frustration.
Trust me, there's a lot of gold in that "Draft" vault, though I suppose you all will be the ultimate judge of that.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Cuba to be focus of Turner Classic Movies Monday night, November 9th

Cuba to be focus of Turner Classic Movies
Monday night, November 9th.


"Before the revolution it was an exotic travel
destination
and our 5-film lineup takes you to
another place and time..."

Mystery, melodrama, myths and suspense...

8 p.m.
Topaz (1969)
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock, 142 minutes
A French agent is sent to Cuba to spy for the
CIA.




10:30 p.m. Our Man in Havana (1960)
Directed by Carol Reed, 107 minutes
A salesman in Cuba takes up spying to support
his spendthrift daughter.




12:30 a.m. Cuba (1979)
Directed by Richard Lester, 122 minutes
A British mercenary meets an old love while
training anti-Castro forces in Cuba.




2:45 a.m. Pier 5, Havana (1959)
Directed by Edward L. Cahn, 68 minutes
An American in Cuba tries to thwart a bombing
plot aimed at Castro.

4:00 a.m. We Were Strangers (1949)
Directed by John Huston, 106 minutes
A Cuban American returns to his homeland
during the Revolution and becomes involved
in an assassination attempt.