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Where the Dictatorship Nests / Lilianne Ruiz

Lilianne Ruiz, Translator: Unstated

When in Cuba we say "the system" we are referring to a circumstance

which, even though we recognize it as abnormal, arbitrary and unnatural

— the condition of being on an Island and being subjected to a

"political-ideological " experiment, as well as the terror —

can be, for many, unbearable.

There are many families of professionals who retire to their

home life. They manage — God only knows how — to maintain a standard of

living that they find acceptable and good. They don't recognize the

abnormal situation other than when they think they should earn more

money and have more comforts, increasingly retired and amoral. Because

in Cuba it seems that the native character lacks some essential,

something they had in Tunisia, thanks to solidarity with the tragedy of

another people came out and protested and demanded real change. Change

of government and of political orientation, a change toward democracy.

We all have our limits. The limits of fear and the instinct of preservation.

What is more disheartening is to see some who can contrast the "system,"

leaving frequently for abroad, or having more information, and all they

care about is earning more money and maintaining their comfortable

lifestyle. They're indifferent to the rest of the issue.

A friend of K, who lives a few blocks from the house where Laura Pollan

lived, has a son she doesn't allow outside — naturally — during the acts

of repudiation against the Ladies in White. She's doing the right thing

because the people who gather to scream under direction can reach

dangerous extremes, but the important thing is that she also, from an

instinct of preservation, stays behind the door, recognizing what's

wrong when she says to K, "I have to see what they do to the Ladies in

White," and this scandalizes her although later she bites her tongue.

The workers of the repressive organs take as a given the current

government and that things won't change in Cuba. Such that the

government counts on the complicity of everyone, including — as much as

I hate it — my own complicity!

Within the Cuban jails, throughout these 53 years, there have been acts

of sadism — physical and psychological torture — executions by the

regime's gunmen, State Security agents, workers in the Ministry of the

Interior; all of them "good revolutionaries." Of the same as the

"heroes" of those melodramas in the style of "The Silence That Had to

Be," those with which "the people" have identified.

One of the things that characterizes opponents in a totalitarian system

is the need to act as visibly as possible. So the purpose of these

tortures doesn't seem to have been to find out hidden things. The sense

of torture in Cuba is to demoralize the opponents of the regime, make

them doubt their sense of strength and force them to withdraw.

The ways in which they exercise cruelty against another human being,

legitimated by a government that persecutes the political opposition,

can't comfort us in its differences: what happened in under the

Pinochet regime, which the Cuban people were so sensitive to, never

should have happened, and what happened and is happening in Cuba under

the current regime — to which they have given the name revolution, and

that confuses many — should not be happening.

There are many witnesses. Those whom they've taken and the

resisters in who describe it as a martyrdom of every single day,

to destroy you as a person, demoralize you, a living death, violate all

your rights with frightening arbitrariness, as well as extreme

situations which I've heard from Hugo Damián Prieto Blanco who continues

fighting; from Ányer Antonio Blanco Rodríguez, so young and yet so old

like the Iron Marti; the doctor Oscar Elias Biscet who despite all he

suffered in prison for defending the of this people,

violated every day in its 30 articles, gave me a lesson in forgiveness

and Christian love to its ultimate consequences that destroyed my sleep.

The dilemma of every Cuban could be to obey, making ourselves immoral,

or to resist, recovering something more than our voice. The State

represses because it doesn't look kindly on the resisters, the

dissidents, in a "world" (system) of great ideas that claim to have been

constructed "by and for the good of humanity and the disadvantaged." It

would be a good title for a book of testimonies: How 'the good' have

executed and inflicted pain.

Armando Valladares told in his eyewitness book of political imprisonment

in Cuba, which he called "Against All Hope," that after being beaten and

seeing how some of his companions were bayoneted to death, he came to

find that they had poured buckets of excrement and urine on them.

The world was scandalized by the revelations of torture from the Abu

Graib prison, but the world has had the testimony of Valladares for

years and there hasn't been sufficient international denunciation to

liberate Cuba.

Do they believe that these guys who govern Cuba, , Iran, North

Korea, Syria, wouldn't give society something in exchange, while to stay

in power they commit crimes against humanity?

The native citizen, or of any place in the world, that lets their

conscience be bribed with a school or a free is no more worthy

than those who sell their silence for a sum of money.

The excuse that the prison is closed and the bosses pretend to be decent

people and they say it's a lie that Cuba violated human rights, is

another way of bribing the conscience with being too lazy to find the truth.

This morning (assuming I can post this soon) we learned that on the eve

of the first anniversary of the "Patriotic Union of Cuba" (UNPACU), Jose

Daniel Ferrer's house is being assaulted by the political . Jose

Daniel Ferrer is the leader of this organization that undertakes

peaceful protests, in the streets of Santiago de Cuba, against the

government and for the Release of the political prisoners. As the

telephone company is state-owned, the telephone lines of UNPACU members

have been disabled. So there is no communication.

I am not satisfied with sitting here, writing the same thing one more

time that almost the whole world already knows and when I finish this

oration I'm going to season the , I being no less indolent that

those people who hear news about repression in Ciba and don't do

anything and "season the beans" as if nothing was happening.

We Cubans need to become moral subjects, whose consciences hurt when we

see any kind of abuse and who set aside fear of death or believing in

God, it hurts us when it happens to others as if it were happening to

us. It is in our "Cuban" egotism — resident on the Island or in exile —

where the dictatorship nests.

Are the zombies within the walls worse than the mere spectator zombies

who live all over the world and know a closer approximation of what it

is to live in Freedom?

August 28 2012

http://translatingcuba.com/where-the-dictatorship-nests-lilianne-ruiz/

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