Times Colonist

CUBA Centre of attraction

Havana’s Malecon is seen as a gathering place to socialize, rest from everyday cares

- Story by MIMI WHITEFIELD Photos by MATIAS J. OCNER

HAVANA, Cuba

Herman Portocarer­o, a former diplomat in Cuba, refers to the seaside Malecon, the wall and promenade that run along Havana’s coastline facing north toward the United States, as “the last rampart of the Cold War, a frontier between two worlds.”

“You sit on it, watching the ocean, and become part of the history of the world,” the former EU and Belgian diplomat writes in his book Havana Without Makeup.

Many Cubans refer to the wall more prosaicall­y as the sofa, a giant outdoor gathering place to socialize, share a bottle of rum with friends, fall in love, check emails, take a rest from everyday cares, fish with buddies who may or may not be catching anything, or just watch the endless parade of humanity that floats past.

It is here that Cubans staged the “Maleconazo” protest during the austere period known as the special period and launched themselves into the waves to head north toward the United States during the rafter crisis of 1994. Through the years, the Malecon has been the scene of countless marches, including the entry of Fidel Castro and other rebels into the city after a triumphal journey across the island following the 1959 Cuban Revolution.

Constructi­on of the Malecon, which was originally called Avenida del Golfo, first began in 1901, only to be suspended and started up again in the 1920s and then again in the 1930s. In Cuba, it often seems as if all roads lead to the Malecon.

It is here along the Malecon, which runs from La Punta at the foot of El Prado west to La Chorrera fortress, that the U.S. Embassy sits.

Towering above the wall and the seaside highway is the iconic Hotel Nacional, where everyone from American gangsters, Hollywood stars of yesteryear, presidents from around the world and Winston Churchill have stayed.

Despite the symbolism of the Malecon as “the last stand against the other side, the ultimate frontier,” says Portocarer­o, “on Saturday nights we choose to ignore it.

“So we turn toward the city and just have a good time.”

In addition to the endless possibilit­ies for people-watching from a perch on the Malecon, nature in all its glory or wrath, from fiery sunsets to gargantuan waves that come crashing over the wall when a cold front moves in, is on display.

Sometimes it’s just an entertaini­ng meteorolog­ical phenomenon, a cause for endless selfies or playing chicken with the waves. During a cold front last November, girls staged an impromptu dance in the waves and cars skidded through the mist even though portions of the seaside highway had been closed.

In Waiting for Snow in Havana, Carlos Eire’s memoir of his boyhood in Havana, he recalls piling into the family car with his friends when the salty waves were high to be “swallowed by the breakers.” Car surfing, they called it.

But other times, the waves are too strong, sometimes 20 to 30 feet high, and they penetrate blocks inland, causing flooding. Cubans sometimes say it means that Yemaya, the orisha or goddess of the ocean in the Santeria religion and the patroness of sailors, is angry.

Last year, Cuba experience­d 11 cold fronts, three in January alone — making the first month of 2018 the coldest January since 2011.

Just before Christmas this year, the waves also came crashing over the seawall and the water penetrated blocks inland, damaging businesses and homes near the Malecon.

When Hurricane Irma hit Cuba’s north coast in September 2017, waves more than 30 feet high swamped buildings along the Malecon, stripping away their paint, breaking windows and causing some collapses.

Among ideas that have been discussed to cut down on flooding are raising the height of the wall to 1.25 metres above the sidewalk and constructi­ng seawalls off the coast.

New buildings must be constructe­d of more water-resistant materials, and while retaining the architectu­ral integrity of older buildings, ground levels also must be raised and such spaces be used only for commercial, not residentia­l, purposes.

One of the best vantage points to see the sweep of the Malecon is from across the bay in Regla.

Thousands of Cubans flock to the Church of Nuestra Senora de Regla, which sits just above the ferry dock, every Sept. 7 to venerate La Santisima Virgen de Regla, a black Madonna also associated with Yemaya, on her feast day.

On other days, entreprene­urial Cubans sit outside the church selling flowers or offering to read visitors’ fortunes or perform ritual cleansings.

Because of long life expectanci­es, a low birth rate and outmigrati­on by younger Cubans, the island has the oldest population in the Americas.

More than 20 per cent of the population is 60 years or older.

Average life expectancy for a Cuban is 78.45 years — 80.45 years for women and 76.5 years for men.

But Cuban leaders know the future belongs to the young.

In his Jan. 1 speech commemorat­ing the 60th anniversar­y of the Cuban Revolution, Raul Castro, the 87-year-old head of the Communist Party of Cuba, said: “The revolution­ary process is not circumscri­bed to the biological lifetime of those who have initiated it, but to the will and commitment of the young people who ensure its continuity.

“The new generation­s have the duty to ensure that the Cuban Revolution is forever a revolution of young people.”

Whether that message resonates with Cuba’s younger generation remains to be seen.

As the government commemorat­es 60 years of the Castro revolution, the capital city of Havana is celebratin­g the 500th anniversar­y of its founding.

On Nov. 16, 1519, Diego Velazquez establishe­d Havana in its current location.

Since the 1982 designatio­n of Old Havana and its fortificat­ions as a UNESCO World Heritage site, the Office of the City Historian has slowly been refurbishi­ng the centuries-old architectu­ral gems of the old city.

But in recognitio­n of the 500th anniversar­y, other projects and initiative­s have kicked into high gear or are nearing completion.

The final touches of the restoratio­n of El Capitolio will be completed this year.

Although permanent commission­s of the National Assembly of People’s Power have already moved into offices in the building, the legislativ­e chamber is too small to accommodat­e all 605 National Assembly deputies, so the number of deputies will have to be reduced at some time in the future or the National Assembly will continue meeting in the Convention Palace on the outskirts of Havana.

Other projects range from completion of new hotels and setting up a Railway Museum of Cuba in Old Havana to restoring the first meeting place of Cuba’s House of Representa­tives and launching the capital city’s first bicycle-sharing operation.

The city also will be holding the 13th Havana Biennial along the Malecon and Paseo del Prado in 2019.

Although Cuba missed its 2018 target of five million internatio­nal visitors, welcoming instead 4.75 million, tourism officials hope the Biennial and other events associated with the 500th anniversar­y of the city will help boost internatio­nal arrivals in 2019 to 5.1 million.

 ??  ?? During the fall and winter, cold fronts often drench Havana’s Malecon with high waves.
During the fall and winter, cold fronts often drench Havana’s Malecon with high waves.
 ??  ?? In Old Havana, students stop for snacks after school …
In Old Havana, students stop for snacks after school …
 ??  ?? … while boys use a basketball for an impromptu soccer game nearby.
… while boys use a basketball for an impromptu soccer game nearby.
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 ??  ?? Fishermen try their luck off the Malecon, a favourite spot with Havana’s anglers.
Fishermen try their luck off the Malecon, a favourite spot with Havana’s anglers.
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