New book explores LGBT gains in Cuba
By
Deirdre Griswold
Published Jun 24, 2009 4:16 PM
Type the words “Cuba Day against Homophobia” into Google’s
search engine and you will find video clips and news stories about a festival
on May 16 of this year in Havana and many other Cuban cities that raised public
consciousness about the rights and contributions of lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people.
Mariela Castro Espín, director of the National Center of Sex Education
(CENESEX), presided over the opening of the day’s events with a parade,
followed by a panel on “Sexual Diversity in the Cuban Family.”
Castro is the daughter of Cuban President Raúl Castro and of Vilma
Espín, who headed the Cuban Federation of Women until her death.
Many of the marchers waved rainbow flags—a universal symbol for the
beauty of sexual diversity.
Further evidence of the support that Cuba’s Communist leaders are giving
the campaign against homophobia came that day from Ricardo Alarcón,
president of the Cuban National Assembly, who told Prensa Latina, Cuba’s
national press agency: “The essence of socialism is the inclusion rather
than exclusion of people for their sexual orientation or religion.”
The ceremonies started at the headquarters of the Union of Writers and Artists
and the Pabellón Cuba, in the center of Havana. Talks, book displays,
expositions, film showings and concerts were held throughout the day, all free
and open to the public.
In Cuba the campaign against homophobia has access to all the mass media and is
an ongoing educational effort, not just a one-day affair. This information may
surprise many people in the United States, who get very little news from the
corporate media here about the great social progress that has been made in Cuba
as a result of its revolution.
However, readers of Workers World newspaper were fortunate enough to learn a
great deal about Cuba’s campaign to rectify old prejudices through the
series of articles called Lavender & Red. Appearing in these pages over
several years, it was written by the widely read Marxist and transgender author
Leslie Feinberg. Feinberg is also a managing editor of this newspaper. A total
of 25 articles in the series dealt with the development of Cuba’s
enlightened position on LGBT rights.
These articles have now been edited into a new book, “Rainbow Solidarity
in Defense of Cuba,” which is being released this month by World View
Forum.
The book is divided into sections: Pre-revolutionary Cuba; Early Years of the
Revolution; Dealing with the AIDS Crisis; Popular Education; and Unfettered
Thought. It draws on many sources, from early conquistadors to modern-day
chroniclers of the LGBT movement in Cuba, to show how far the Caribbean island
has come in the struggle against colonialism, imperialism, exploitation and all
the forms that oppression takes.
It deals with Hollywood’s false images of gay life in Cuba; the Mariel
boatlift; CENESEX and sex education; Cuba’s successful and humane
treatment of the HIV-AIDS epidemic; “Strawberry and Chocolate,”
“Gay Cuba” and other ground-breaking Cuban films; the campaign in
the U.S. for Rainbow Solidarity with the Cuban Five, and much more.
Feinberg concludes the book with an appeal to the LGBT movement in the United
States, where the government has tried to strangle the Cuban Revolution from
its very first days:
“In order to move forward toward their own liberation, the LGBT and other
progressive movements in the U.S. and other capitalist countries have to combat
anti-communism—which is, in the long run, a loyalty oath to
capitalism—and develop a powerful anti-imperialist current that can
extend its solidarity to Cuba and all countries fighting for their sovereignty
and self-determination against finance capital.”
“Rainbow Solidarity” can be ordered online from www.leftbooks.com.
It will be widely distributed to bookstores and libraries by the Independent
Publishers Group.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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