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Citizen Insomnia / Luis Felipe Rojas

Luis Felipe Rojas, Translator: Raul G.

As I write this post, the "#FestivalCLIC" (or 'Click Festival') is

underway in Havana–a citizen undertaking to try and channel information

between Cubans in the island. May Cuba connect to the world, and the

world connect to Cuba, or as the graffiti-artist El Sexto says: "Gimme

Cable", alluding to the lack of connectivity.

I was not able to attend this event in Havana due to transportation

inefficiency and other atmospheric pressures. I would have liked to

comment about alternative publications which I have felt very close to

within the past couple of years.

For some weeks now, a restless cyber-activist has been drowning our

phones with messages which contain news and reports about the most

current happenings in regards to Cuba. His name is Alfredo Viso, and he

is a former Cuban who now resides in New Jersey.

Through an option provided by Cubacel (somewhat similar to 'SMS to

Cuba'), Viso created an account with which he communicates with us, and

at the same time, we can respond to him through an SMS for the price of

0.9 cents CUC. We could not do it any other way. Another very

interesting resource is a service which allows you to leave a voice

message in a mailbox. It's free and you can talk for 1 minute. From

Cuba, one can call the number: 11914388003514, after the signal we

identify ourselves, we leave a message, and if necessary, we dial again,

identify ourselves again, and continue our denouncement. From there,

numerous friends take on the task of distributing it throughout the

.

What happens is that, even with his hyper-activity, Alfredo Viso cannot

do it all. He needs other hands to join him in solidarity to send us all

news about Cuba. That's what he is asking, that the solidarity multiply

itself towards the inside. "May the initiatives rain down", he told me

the other night through a message of 140 characters.

The mentioned "Click Festival" has already been accused of being an

antecedent of an invasion of the island: the same old resentments, the

same arguments. A few days ago, they had prohibited Viso the possibility

of continuing to send message from his cell phone to Cuba, so he was

doing it from his computer.

The same machinery of censorship, the same mower of new ideas, the same

nineteenth-century argument of feeling that we are going to be invaded,

used to leave citizens out of place and later sentence them with the

accustomed impunity.

Translated by Raul G.

24 June 2012

http://translatingcuba.com/?p=19395

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