THE ONLY CUBA I HAVE EVER KNOWN
Editor's note: First Person is a
series of personal essays exploring identity and personal points of view that
shape who we are. Katia Hetter is a writer/producer for CNN Digital.
(CNN) -- This holiday season, I
am heading to the only Cuba I've ever known. To Nochebuena dinner with my
cousin's roast pork, her mother-in-law's flan, platanos maduros, yucca and a
salad.
Nochebuena is a Latino
celebration of Christmas Eve, and it's a big night for us. There will be
quick-fire Spanish, varying degrees of English and jokes in the way I've only
ever heard my Cuban relatives parry back and forth. Many presents will be
opened, and everyone will act like we all got each other the perfect gift.
I'm flying not to Havana but to
Miami, where my grandparents and other relatives came years after Fidel Castro
took over Cuba, when it became clear there would be no free speech for anyone
but him.
The stadiums were filling with
"trials" against the enemies of the state, friends were disappearing
and my mother, despite her government job, knew her unwillingness to stay quiet
while people suffered would get her in trouble. So she went into exile in 1961,
and she's never been back.
Years later my grandparents
followed their grown children -- my mother and uncle -- to the United States.
When they applied to leave the country, Cuban government officials did an
inventory of the contents of their home. Both their home and all of their
things would be confiscated by the government on the day they departed.
The morning she left, my abuelita
was washing the dishes in their apartment before she and my grandfather left
for the airport. Suddenly she stopped. "Let Fidel do the dishes," she
said. I have never seen that apartment.
Family traditions
When we land Tuesday in Miami, my
mother and uncle will meet us at the airport and rush us to Havana Harry's or
some coffee stand where I can get a real Cuban coffee -- none of this Starbucks
silliness. There's a hint of Cuba in the taste. And Cuban and U.S. flags will
be everywhere.
I don't care about South Beach or
Art Basel or Coconut Grove. Every bit of Cuba I get is gleaned from pictures,
music, stories people tell me and these trips to see Miami family, where I get
hints of my ancestry in the food and jokes and presents. I soak it up on every
visit.
I've never seen the sleepy,
agricultural town of Pinar del Rio where my mother was born and lived until her
teenage years. I've never seen where she went to high school after they moved
to Havana or the beaches where she swam in the summertime and where one friend
dangling his foot over a pier lost it to a shark.
I don't know where she had her
first piano recital. When she plays my favorite Cuban music on the piano, all
too rarely, for some reason the notes make me cry. Maybe it's the hints of her
life before me.
The Christmas heat in Miami must
be similar to what they feel in Cuba, only a short flight to the south. I will
pack my summer clothes and a bathing suit for my daughter.
Around midday on Christmas Eve
some of us will head to El Palacio de Los Jugos for lunch and Cuban sandwiches.
I will get my favorite Materva soda, too sweet for me now but still worth the
memory. My cousin, whose Nochebuena pork would make Martha Stewart cry, likes
to tease us to not to fill up at lunch.
But we will be fine. Dinner won't
be until much later -- our family is always late -- and we all want her
cooking.
Filling in the gaps
My definition of beauty isn't
blond hair or blue eyes or any classic American stereotype. It's my
black-haired Cuban cousins, who look so refined and elegant. They hug me, the
baby of my generation and the half-American with the brown hair, so hard.
They remind me to come back. To
Miami, not to Cuba.
I've only seen pictures of the
tobacco trucks. My mother was taught to drive by the drivers at the tobacco
trucking company where my grandfather worked, and it's why she still drives a
car like she means business. Another hint of Cuba on those long road trips.
I welcome the news of thawing
American relations with Cuba and easing of travel restrictions. But I am tired
of the ads for religious charity trips to Cuba and all-inclusive beach resorts
where tourists get pampered while my people, once removed, depend on charity
for the most basic medical supplies.
I am tired of the reasons for the
sadness in my older relatives' eyes.
I don't want to hear any more
stereotypes about who my people are or tourists talking about going to visit
Cuba "before it changes." As Miriam Zoila Perez has written, I don't
want to hear about your Cuban vacation.
I simply want to buy a plane
ticket and go there myself. I want to go to my mother's hometown and see where
she was born without crying the entire trip. I want to put those hints
together, fill in the gaps and see for the first time, where I am from.
********************************************
INCIDENTLY....
Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama is taking some heat from Republicans on Capitol Hill for reestablishing diplomatic relations with Cuba, but a CNN/ORC poll released Tuesday shows he has the public's backing.
About six in 10 Americans favor diplomatic relations with Cuba and two-thirds want the travel restrictions to the island lifted, according to the poll of 1,011 Americans conducted after Obama announced a landmark deal with Cuba to relax sanctions and ease some travel restrictions.
Regardless, Americans continue to have an unfavorable view of Cuba's former leader Fidel Castro, with 81% holding a negative opinion of the former leader and brother of the country's current president.
********************************************
INCIDENTLY....
Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama is taking some heat from Republicans on Capitol Hill for reestablishing diplomatic relations with Cuba, but a CNN/ORC poll released Tuesday shows he has the public's backing.
About six in 10 Americans favor diplomatic relations with Cuba and two-thirds want the travel restrictions to the island lifted, according to the poll of 1,011 Americans conducted after Obama announced a landmark deal with Cuba to relax sanctions and ease some travel restrictions.
Regardless, Americans continue to have an unfavorable view of Cuba's former leader Fidel Castro, with 81% holding a negative opinion of the former leader and brother of the country's current president.
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