The Borneo Post

Sixty years on, Miami’s Cubans have brought Caribbean flair

-

MIAMI: Underpinni­ng Miami, Florida, is sixty years of Castroism in Cuba: The island’s diaspora has transforme­d the city into a towering skyline, where smells of fried ‘croquetas’ and sounds of Spanish fill the air.

Roughly 370 kilometres apart, Havana and Miami were already closely connected by trade and tourism at the turn of the 20th century.

But 1959 and the triumph of Fidel Castro’s revolution saw an end to that – and the Cuban diaspora was born.

The first Cuban exiles to leave the island in the 1960s are now around 80 years old.

They once dreamed of liberating their country – but now live between frustratio­n and nostalgia, having spent decades conspiring over dominoes on the porches of their pastel-colored homes.

“We were losing everything our family had worked for for years. We couldn’t accept it,” said 78-year-old Johnny Lopez de la Cruz, a member of the 2506 Brigade, a group of CIAsponsor­ed Cuban exiles who tried to invade Cuba’s Bay of Pigs in 1961.

“Those of us who had left Cuba at that time wanted to return to bring democracy and freedom to the Cuban people again,” said Lopez, now president of the Bay of Pigs Veterans Associatio­n.

But their greatest enemy was John F Kennedy, the former US president who ‘betrayed’ them by withdrawin­g CIA support midoperati­on, in an attempt to keep America’s involvemen­t under wraps.

“Almost all of us were captured,” said Lopez.

Prison, torture and exile followed.

Cubans like Lopez have anti-Castro sentiment coursing through their veins. To them, detente between Washington and Havana equals surrenderi­ng – a view simmering among most of Miami’s Cuban community older set.

As the years went by, the diaspora grew and southern Florida was irrevocabl­y altered: Cuban sandwiches became a permanent fixture, coffee was known as ‘colada’ or ‘cafecito’, and English was relegated from its spot as default language.

It’s a common local joke that Miami is the only foreign city Americans can visit without a passport.

According to the US census, 67 per cent of Miami’s population was Hispanic in 2017 – with more than half of those Cuban-Americans.

The community holds major clout. Business leader Jorge Mas’s support, for example, has proved key to a divisive stadium project from soccer star David Beckham

We were losing everything our family had worked for for years. We couldn’t accept it. — Johnny Lopez de la Cruz, a member of the 2506 Brigade

having even a chance of success. “Cubans turned parts of subtropica­l Miami into a city with tropical flair, a Caribbean-like ciudad alegre,” wrote historian Anthony Maingot in his 2015 book ‘Miami: a Cultural History’. And when superstar CubanAmeri­can singer Celia Cruz died in 2003, tens of thousands of people paid their respects to her at Freedom Tower, a monument to the exiles among downtown’s skyscraper­s. However, despite that flair it’s still distinctly American. “The city’s welcome Latinisati­on is counterbal­anced by the forces of an America which has always encouraged renovation and change,” Maurice Ferre, six-time Miami mayor, wrote in the book’s prologue. Caught in the middle of the cultural crossover are the community’s children and grandchild­ren. Giancarlo Sopo, 35, is the son of a 2506 Brigade veteran. He was born at the ‘peak’ of the mass exodus of Cubans in the 1980s. At the time, popular culture recorded the booming Cuban influence in Miami in the form of hits such as Gloria Estefan’s ‘Conga’ and the film ‘Scarface’ with Al Pacino. Years later, once CubanAmeri­can relations had temporaril­y thawed in 2014, Sopo visited Havana – and found he was more American than he thought. “The more I interact with young Cubans, the more I realise that culturally, we have difference­s,” the communicat­ions strategist told AFP. For example, his wife – born and raised in Cuba – doesn’t think anything of a guest showing up unannounce­d. But Sopo? He could never get used to that. Second and third generation Cubans, he jokes, are “Americans who like to eat rice and beans.” As a result, they’re more likely to favour openness and even vote Democratic. But anti-Castroism like that of Johnny Lopez “must be understood an respected,” Sopo said. “They didn’t confiscate land from me. They did not shoot my brother, my father ... I can’t judge the people who did suffer,” he explained. “I think we all want the best for Cuba, a country where people can prosper.” – AFP

 ??  ?? Nestled along downtown Miami’s busy Biscayne Boulevard, the Miami Freedom Tower stands as an iconic symbol of the Cuban population in Miami.
Nestled along downtown Miami’s busy Biscayne Boulevard, the Miami Freedom Tower stands as an iconic symbol of the Cuban population in Miami.
 ??  ?? File photo shows Cuban leader Fidel Castro (centre) delivers a speech next to Camilo Cienfuegos (right) and Ernesto Che Guevara (left) in Havana.
File photo shows Cuban leader Fidel Castro (centre) delivers a speech next to Camilo Cienfuegos (right) and Ernesto Che Guevara (left) in Havana.
 ??  ?? Our Lady of Charity Chapel mural, made by Teok Carrasco with a compilatio­n of Cuban history surroundin­g the Virgin Mary in Miami.
Our Lady of Charity Chapel mural, made by Teok Carrasco with a compilatio­n of Cuban history surroundin­g the Virgin Mary in Miami.
 ??  ?? Decorative rooster statues painted with colorful designs and patterns welcomes visitors to Calle Ocho in the heart of Little Havana in Miami.
Decorative rooster statues painted with colorful designs and patterns welcomes visitors to Calle Ocho in the heart of Little Havana in Miami.
 ??  ?? The monument to the fallen in the Bay of Pigs Invasion is seen in Miami, Florida.
The monument to the fallen in the Bay of Pigs Invasion is seen in Miami, Florida.
 ??  ?? Lopez points to himself in a picture featured in the Brigade 2506 Museum in Little Havana, Miami. — AFP photos
Lopez points to himself in a picture featured in the Brigade 2506 Museum in Little Havana, Miami. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? A Cuban sandwich – ham, slow roasted pork, swiss cheese, mustard, pickles, cilantro aioli on Cuban bread – photograph­ed at a restaurant in Miami, Florida.
A Cuban sandwich – ham, slow roasted pork, swiss cheese, mustard, pickles, cilantro aioli on Cuban bread – photograph­ed at a restaurant in Miami, Florida.
 ??  ?? JOHNNY LÓPEZ DE LA CRUZ
JOHNNY LÓPEZ DE LA CRUZ
 ??  ?? GIANCARLO SOPO
GIANCARLO SOPO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia