Global Times - Weekend

Nicaraguan cigar factories work to keep it in the family

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Part of the success of Nicaragua’s thriving cigar industry is a carefully honed mystique of family: how the clannish industry was forged and maintained by a handful of fathers, sons, cousins, brothers – and sisters and mothers, too.

With more than 50 factories, large or small, the industry is centered around the northweste­rn city of Esteli.

Production by mostly family-run businesses made Nicaragua the biggest exporter of cigars in 2018, its exports of more than $255 million surpassing those of the Dominican Republic and Honduras.

That success is largely due to the stubbornne­ss and work ethic of a few founding fathers whose sons and daughters are now in charge.

“It’s a family business,” said Jorge Padron during the recent Nicaraguan cigar festival, when Esteli shows off its highly prized aromatic cigars to aficionado­s from around the globe.

“I have the title of manager, but many of us, including brothers and cousins, take responsibi­lity for it at various levels.”

Jorge took over from his father Orlando, founder of the Padron brand.

“We have been working in this business since we were children,” he said.

“It made things much easier to ensure continuity after the death of my father in December 2017.”

At the My Father’s Cigars factory, the refrain is the same: “We have no grand titles in the company, we are a family,” said Janny Garcia, one of a growing number of women making their voices heard in the industry.

As she speaks, her father Jose leads a tour of his huge flag-stoned factory, situated on the edge of the Pan-American Highway that passes through Esteli.

Like many of the founding fathers of Nicaragua’s cigar dynasties, Jose and Orlando Padron came over from Cuba, whose Havana-puffing revolution­ary leader Fidel Castro saw cigars as a key source of foreign currency.

The pioneers brought their cigar-rolling knowhow – and sometimes some tobacco seeds from the motherland – to the receptive soil of the Nicaraguan highlands.

Don Pepin left the island in 2001 to found his own empire in Miami and Esteli.

Now 70, the patriarch has brought in his son Jaime, daughter Janny and son-in-law Pete Johnson to run the business as together a united clan – one that cultivates a culture of secrecy alongside their products.

Two other Cuban exiles, Simon Camacho and Juan Francisco Bermejo, set up the oldest of the Esteli factories, Joya de Nicaragua, in 1968.

Fleeing the country, they came to the attention of Nicaragua’s right-wing dictator Anastasio Somoza a decade later.

The story goes that Somoza was offered one of their cigars – by none other than US President Richard Nixon during a 1971 visit to the White House. Nixon, like the rest of the US’ cigar smokers, was deprived of Cuba’s high-quality Havanas because of the US embargo.

Cuban cigars may easily outsell the lesserknow­n Nicaraguan product in Europe, but Nicaraguan brands have taken advantage of the crippling US embargo on Cuban products to sell to a market which accounts for half of world consumptio­n – a circumstan­ce from which Esteli and its families have benefited greatly, increasing exports to the US by 40 percent in a little over a decade.

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