[act-ma] 12/06 Organizing from the grass-roots in revolutionary Cuba: The Experience in one working-class community
July 26th Coalition
info at july26.org
Fri Nov 27 07:03:04 PST 2015
*Organizing from the grass-roots in revolutionary Cuba: *
*The Experience in one working-class community*
**
*Maritza López* and *Hildelisa Leal,* community organizers from Balcón
Arimao/La Lisa, are also trained popular educators working on issues of
race and gender empowerment, and activists in Cuba's Neighborhood
Network of Afrodescendants.
Sunday Dec 66:30 PM
Encuentro 5
9A Hamilton Place (near Park St. T)
Sponsored by the July 26^th Coalition www.july26.org
The speakers will be in town to attend the following conference at Harvard
Symposium: “Afrodescendants: Fifteen Years after Santiago. Achievements
and Challenges” Dec. 4 and 5
http://hutchinscenter.fas.harvard.edu/Afrodescendants
Printable leaflet available at
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/4379021/Leaflet%20Organizing%20from%20the%20grass%20roots%20w%20picture.doc
The following article gives background on their work.
CasaComunitaria “Pablo Freyre” (Balcón Arimao, La Lisa),July 13-15, 2012
Maritza López McBean isthe leading organizer at the /“Pablo Freyre”
Community House/ in Balcón Arimao, district of La Lisa,a working class
neighborhood on the periphery of Havana.The Balcón Arimao Casa
Comunitaria was the location of a three day workshop held last July,
organized and led by community membersto highlight issues of race and
racism in Cuba. The workshop had a two-pronged focus: The 1912 founding
and subsequent violent government suppression of the Partido
Independiente de Color (Independent Party of Color) as a major marker in
Afro-Cuban history, and the particular challenges faced by Afro-Cuban
women throughout Cuban history and since the triumph of the revolution
in 1959.“Many over there (in the US) think that these topics only get to
be debated in ‘official’ institutions like the UNEAC (National Union of
Cuban Writers and Artists)”, said López McBean.
As to how the decision was made to hold a three-dayworkshop on that
subject, she explains: “The theme was proposed, as it is for all such
activities at the Casa Comunitaria, to our own organizing committee made
up of the most diverse community residents. (…)One of the neighbors had
brought up an article from the /Militant/ (May 24, 2012 issue), a
newspaper being regularly received at the Casa Comunitaria,covering the
debate on the Independent Party of Color at a conference organized by
the UNEAC. She had mentioned it to her grandson –living in the US– who
asked her if the topic gets broader coverage in Cuba, and she had not
known what to answer. That has been the major reason why, at the
Organizing Committee, we decided to address the discussion of the
Independent Party of Color together with that of the challenges faced by
Afro-Cuban women in the next workshop.”
In all three days, numerous presenters (all of them Afro-Cuban, and the
vast majority of them, women) addressed issues of both marginalization
and empowerment in the long struggle for equality and rights waged by
Afro-Cuban men and women. One entire day was dedicated to education
about and discussion of the rich historical lessons to be drawn from the
founding and annihilation of the Independent Party of Color. Other
panels centered on the past and present challenges faced by Black Cuban
womenin the spheres of work, cultural representation,gender equality and
sexual orientation, and of legal protections, among others. In the
presentations, some panelists drew from their historical expertise,
while others spoke from ample personal experience. Among them were
historians, a psychologist, a chef, a sports instructor, gay activists,
cultural promoters, a journalist, a hairdresser, and a lawyer. The vast
majority came from either Balcón Arimao or similar communities.
From 10AM to 3PM over the three days, the Casa Comunitariawas at
overflow, with 30 to 40 people occupying all the available chairs in the
meeting area, while many others listened from the outside, clustered
near the front door. Lively discussions with the audience followed each
panel presentation and tended to continue, informally in smaller groups,
for much longer. The audience was predominantly local, with children,
young people, and many adults and elderly members. An offering of food,
drinks, and live music was provided by community residents. “The fight
against racial discrimination is a topic that, for various reasons, had
not been part of the public debate, and even though it had not been
forgotten, it is very necessary, first because of the moral consequences
it has, and also because the enemy is always ready to attack us from the
flanks offered by our insufficiencies,” says López Mcbean.
Balcón Arimao is located on the periphery of the historical working
class neighborhood of La Lisa, far from the architecturaltourist
attractions of Old Havana, and from the vibrant cultural, commercial,and
social life ofVedado and other such areas in the city. Part of a string
of emerging communities at the fringes of older and more established
urban neighborhoods, Balcón Arimao suffers from many of the material and
social problems of settlements where temporary emergency housing –in
many instances for people displaced by hurricanes– have become permanent
places of residence, with neither the advantages of an organically
cohesive community, nor the benefits of previously planned urban
development.Housing is deficient, streets are in bad shape, and there is
a lack of sufficient recreational areas, and of environmental education
and care. Today, its over 20,000 residents still rely on the same water
and sanitation systems put in place for the 2,000 residents Balcón
Arimao had in 1947. Although all of them have amply benefited from the
openings for cultural, educational and material advancement, and from
theradical equalizing racial and gender thrust of the Cuban Revolution,
the weight of historic disadvantages are made more acute by the
hardships of material constrains,and the yet unresolved challenges faced
by the revolution.These communities still have proportionally higher
indicators for crime, domestic violence, prostitution, and school dropouts.
As epicenter for community action, the Casa Comunitaria exemplifies the
way neighborhoods such as Balcón Arimao can organize themselves to
confront those challenges, and of the various layers of broader support
provided for that task by state institutions, political structures, and
nongovernmental organizations. All initiatives of the Casa Comunitaria
are both /run/ and /led/ by the residents.Their activistswork with all
branches of the local government to promote the necessary change, in
many instances having had to learn to push against the accumulated power
of local religious leaders,official cultural promoters, andpolitical
leaders who –according to Maritza López– may be“very revolutionary but
are stuck in their particular ways of doing things.”The Casa activists
act in tandem with the area’s /Popular Councils/ (the most grass-roots
structures in Cuba’s political system).Through nongovernmental
institutions like the/Martin Luther King Center/, they have sought and
received training in promoting more “horizontal” forms of leadership in
neighborhood-based initiatives, and have become part of a network of
similar such undertakings in other parts of Havana and across Cuba. From
national programs set up by leading Cuban urban planners at the /Grupo
para el Desarrollo Integral de la Ciudad/ (Group for integral
Development of the City), they have received training in linkage of
local government resources, technical knowledge and expertise of urban
planners and advisors, and organized members of the community, to
address issues of improved housing and public areas. From the /Pedro
Kouri Institute of Tropical Diseases/, they are advised on how to set up
and run their own prevention campaigns. The network is broad and varied.
The Casa Comunitaria in Balcón Arimao is the natural space for
neighborhood formal activities, from children’s after-school programs to
classes of the local /Older Adult University/, among many others.It is
also where community members routinely meet to discuss issues of concern
that are not readily taken up by other local institutions—likeyouth
delinquency,prostitution, racism, and homophobia.Events like this
three-day workshop are emblematic of a capacity of average Cubans for
collective actions towards educating and organizing themselves to face
their challenges.
*Activists from the /Casa Comunitaria/ who will be in Boston December 5-7*
**
*Nombre*: */Damayanti Matos Abreu/*
--------------------
*Nombre*, */MSc. Hildelisa Leal Díaz.Jubilada/*.
Licenciada en Ciencias Biológicas. Máster en Didáctica de la Biología.
Educadora Popular. Permacultora. Coordinadora de la Red Barrial
Afrodescendiente.Profesora Auxiliar de la Universidad de las Ciencias
Pedagógicas: “Enrique José Varona”. Colaboradora del Centro Memorial
Martin Luther King. Colaboradora Grupo de Reflexión y Solidaridad “Oscar
Arnulfo Romero”. Colaboradora de los Talleres de Transformación Integral
del Barrio de La Habana. Coautora. Biología 4 Parte. Libro de texto 10
grado. Ed. Pueblo y Educación. 2003Concepción y Metodología de la
educación popular. Cuaderno de trabajo. Editorial Caminos.
2003Colaboración en la selección de textos y confección de la guía para
coordinadores de la FEPAD*, de los módulos Concepción y metodología de
la educación popular, Trabajo comunitario, Trabajo grupal y Género.
CMLK. 2002-2011Coordinadora de Procesos de Formación desde la educación
popular.
*País de residencia.*Cuba.
--------------------------------
*Nombre*: */Maritza López McBean/*
Estudiante de Licenciatura en Ciencias de la Religión. Instituto
Superior Ecuménico de Ciencias de la Religión, “Rafael Cepeda”.
Seminario Socio teológico de Matanzas.
TrabajadoraSocial. Especialista Principal del Taller de Transformación
Integral del Barrio, Consejo Popular Balcón Arimao. Directora Casa
Comunitaria “Paulo Freire”. Coordinadora de la Red Barrial
Afrodescendiente. Colaboradora del Centro Memorial Martin Luther King.
Grupo de Reflexión y Solidaridad “Oscar Arnulfo Romero”. Coordinadora de
la Red de educadores populares de La Habana, Nodo Lisa, Playa,
Marianao.Colaboración en la selección de textos y confección de la guía
para coordinadores de la FEPAD*, de los módulos Concepción y
metodología de la educación popular, Trabajo comunitario, Trabajo grupal
y Comunicación. CMLK. 2002-2011
Coordinadora de Procesos de Formación desde la educación popular.
*País de residencia.*Cuba.
FEPAD: Formación de educadores populares acompañados a distancia.
Modalidad diferente de formación. Curso a distancia no orientado a
personas individuales, sino a grupos. Una modalidad pedagógica para auto
conducir procesos de aprendizaje, pero con la compañía novedosa del
equipo de educación popular del Centro Memorial Martin Luther King.
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