Miami Herald (Sunday)

‘Si Cuba está en la calle, Miami también’: Thousands rally for end to Cuban dictatorsh­ip

- BY MARIE-ROSE SHEINERMAN msheinerma­n@miamiheral­d.com

Howard died of heart failure in West Palm Beach on July 11, his son said. He was 83.

Howard was vice president of the former Southeast Bank in Miami and managed the daily operations of the Liberty City

Chants of “Patria y Vida” and “Libertad” — rallying cries in solidarity with protesters against the authoritar­ian government in Cuba — filled the streets outside the Freedom Tower on Biscayne Blvd on Saturday as around 3,000 people gathered for a rally at the Miami landmark and police were forced to block off the street.

Draped in Cuban and

American flags, the crowd joined in singing “Patria y Vida” — Homeland and Life, an anthem for Cuban freedom — that manipulate­s a famous slogan of the Cuban government: “Patria o Muerte,” Homeland or Death. Some chanted, “El pueblo unido jamás será vencido” — “a people united can never be divided.”

“We’re here to remember the thousands that we have lost through the years in search of freedom,” said musician Jencarlos Canela, a Hialeah native and son of Cuban immigrants.

Grammy-winning Cuban singer Albita opened the rally with soulful renditions of both the “Star Spangled Banner” and the Cuban National Anthem, as thousands gathered before the stage, clutching their hearts, mouthing along and waving both Cuban and American flags.

The protest, organized by Inspire American, an organizati­on dedicated to promoting democracy in Cuba and ousting the current regime, advertised a star-studded lineup of Cuban American personalit­ies, including Estefan, Canela, singer-songwriter Lissette Álvarez, musician Willy Chirino and others.

But despite the musician-heavy list of speakers and the sounds of protesters joining in song, Canela stressed, “This is not a concert.”

“Cuba is not alone!” activist Rosa María Payá shouted toward the crowd

branch from 1970 to 1976 before moving with his family to West Palm Beach in 1980.

By 1981, Howard was president of the Blackowned Palm Beach Lakes Bank and, in 1987, he started the Palm Beach County, Black Business Investment Corporatio­n. He served as the BBIC’s executive director until his retirement in May 2018.

“The standard dad set is how he continuous­ly led,” his son said. “When you talked to dad you knew exactly what you were going to get, what you needed to hear at the moment. His advice was always sound and he always did it out of love, never about what he was going to get out of the situation. He did that with us, his family, his children, and he did that out in the community.”

HELPING THE BLACK BUSINESS COMMUNITY

When Howard retired in 2018, several Black business leaders paid tribute. Howard had helped secure business loans and provided opportunit­ies to help others open new ventures like barbershop­s, mortuaries, restaurant­s and constructi­on firms, among them.

“Whatever comes before us, you name it and we try do it,” Howard told The Palm Beach Post in 2018. “We want to encourage entreprene­urship in the Black community.”

According to the Palm Beach Post, at the time, under Howard’s leadership, the Black

Business Investment Corporatio­n in the county provided guarantees to loans made by local commercial banks ranging from a fraction of the loan to 100% of the amount.

During its history, to that point, the non-profit Howard steered worked with more than 12,000 clients with some type of business service and helped with $31 million worth of loans, according to the Palm Beach Post. “The BBIC remains a vibrant participan­t in the businesses created by Palm Beach County’s Black residents,” the paper wrote.

Howard’s goal for the BBIC was to overcome the “no’s” traditiona­l banks often had for Black applicants and he tapped his experience working for Southeast and Palm Beach Lakes banks.

One of those businesses he helped, Shuler Memorial Chapel, is still in business and is providing the services for Howard’s funeral.

“As I was announcing to people that my father had passed they would go into their story of how ‘I have my job because of your dad. My business is thriving.’ The printer who is printing programs for his funeral said, ‘Your dad did so much. This is all on us. How many do you need?’ That is his impact in the community,” his son John Jr. said.

Owner Barbara Shuler had sought the BBIC’s help with a loan to expand her business. When an expanded Atlantic Avenue location opened in 2002, “Shaft” composer Isaac Hayes reportedly sang at its opening.

“The dream was, in order to be more selfsuffic­ient, we need to have businesses of our own,” Shuler told the Post in 2018. “It’s not just education and voting rights. It’s about owning a business that can take you to unlimited unknowns. John believes in that and he promotes that idea. It’s part of the dream of Martin Luther King Jr. And John took on the economic aspect of that dream by helping others.”

HOWARD’S BACKGROUND

Howard was born in Perry, Florida, on Nov. 16, 1937. When he was 10, his family relocated to Jacksonvil­le, where he graduated from high school at 16 and also excelled in baseball and football.

Howard studied business administra­tion at Syracuse University in New York and further learned his craft at the Florida School of Banking at the University of Florida. And, in the mid-70s, after already establishi­ng his career at Southeast Bank, he earned his master’s in business administra­tion from the University of Miami.

Though the baseball career didn’t survive the injury to his hand, he served with the U.S. Army as a military intelligen­ce agent. While stationed at the Army base in Fort Hood, Texas, around 1967, he met Christine Melton, who would become his wife of more than 50 years.

The couple moved to Miami when Howard took his job with Southeast Bank.

“The impact my dad had always made was to be sure that he was there. What I mean by that, is, dad made sure that he got the education and the understand­ing of what was needed and he never hesitated to share his knowledge,” his son John Jr. said.

“His goal, his mission, was to make sure he helped others. When it came to the community he was always fair. He always stressed that to me about being fair for folks. He made sure he got to the intelligen­ce level so that he was in that position where he could help others,” his son said.

“I am a junior so I have always been ‘ John Howard’s son.’ And that’s always been very powerful for me.”

SURVIVORS, SERVICES

Howard’s survivors include his wife Christine Howard; children John Mack Redish, Jasper “Tate” Johnson, John Henry Howard Jr., William Arthur Jahmeir Howard and Valeria Johnson; eight grandchild­ren and four great-grandchild­ren; his sister Naomi Cummings and brother Louis C. Howard Sr.

The wake will be 5 p.m.-7 p.m. Monday at Shuler’s Memorial Chapel, 5301 N. Australian Ave., West Palm Beach. A memorial service is at 11 am. Tuesday, July 20, at Palm Beach State College — Dennis P. Gallon Campus, 15845 Southern Blvd., Loxahatche­e Groves.

The family asks that donations in Howard’s memory may be made to the American Heart Associatio­n and American Stroke Associatio­n’s tribute programs via http://www2.heart.org/ goto/JohnHoward­Sr.

Howard Cohen: 305-376-3619, @HowardCohe­n

 ?? Courtesy Howard family ?? John Howard Sr. became president of the Black-owned Palm Beach Lakes Bank in 1981.
Courtesy Howard family John Howard Sr. became president of the Black-owned Palm Beach Lakes Bank in 1981.

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