viernes, 1 de noviembre de 2013

In 2020 we will have street lighting

"In 2020 we will have street lighting" / Gladys Linares

Posted on October 31, 2013



HAVANA, Cuba, October, www.cubanet.org — At the end of the '80s a

neighbor whose name escapes me stuck a sign on his bike basket that

said: "Friend of Perestroika." One day I heard they had searched his

house and taken him prisoner. That caused a lot of talk among the

neighbors, because he was a Communist Revolutionary. That was the first

time I'd heard of perestroika.



Also at that time a colleague of my husband, who had studied in the USSR

and returned home with a Russian wife, spoke with great enthusiasm about

the reforms, perestroika and glasnost. Because of this he had problems

with the political police and lost his job. Later we didn't know how

that managed to get out of the country.



It was hard to get news about those events. Soviet magazines such as

Sputnik, which might have information about them, stopped circulating.

On the other hand, a great number of Cuban students and workers who were

in the USSR didn't return home for fear of being controlled by State

Security, which tried to avoid, at all costs, the expansion of these new

ideas. Many of them stayed in Europe later managed to settle in the

United States. They were called "red worms."



As these transformations occurred in the USSR, relations between the

Cuban government and the socialist camp were deteriorating. With the

fall of the Berlin Wall, at the end of 1989, most Cubans were excited

because we were so eager for political change.



In those days, the opposition was growing, and taking off from the

disappearance of Communism in Eastern Europe, engaged in a strategy of

peaceful struggle to eliminate Communism in Cuba and to establish a

democratic society with a market economy.



For more than twenty years, the Cuban people have confronted an economic

and moral crisis. Despite this, it is very important to see how new

generations look at the future from a different perspective, and are no

longer silent about what they think.



With respect to this, the economist and opponent wrote, "The transition

that is already taking place is the most important one, that is, in the

hearts and minds of Cubans, frustrated and disillusioned with so many

broken promises."



A few days ago, a friend told me: "I'm not psychic, and predicting the

date of change is difficult, but it is good to set short-term goals.

That's what encourages us to move forward and not lose momentum, so I

like to imagine that by 2020 this dictatorship will be over."



After thinking a bit, she continues, "When that happens, we will not

have to steal to eat because our wages will be enough to live decently.

We will travel along well-maintained streets, and at night we won't have

to be afraid to go out because they will be lit. The transportation

problems will be resolved, perhaps with trains or, why not, with

electric trams, that will circulate round the cities.



"I'll take a stroll around the shops," she adds, "which will have nice

things in beautifully decorated windows. There will always be sales that

the poor can take advantage of, and we will even be able to buy with

easy payment. The houses and buildings and will be repaired and painted,

and Havana will be even more beautiful than before 1959.



"In 2020 we will be better off than now, because anything is better than

this. From time to time there will be real elections where we elect the

president from among several candidates from different parties.



"My son, who lives in Miami, will come to see me more often, and, as in

the past, we will have good relations with the U.S., where a large part

of the Cuban people live. Some will come back and some wont." She

concludes, "Change will not be easy, but we will achieve it, and we will

be here to see it."



By Gladys Linares



From Cubanet, 30 October 2013



Source: ""In 2020 we will have street lighting" / Gladys Linares |

Translating Cuba" -

http://translatingcuba.com/in-2020-we-will-have-street-lighting-gladys-linares/

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