Cultural exchanges with Cuba are mostly one-way affairs
"Cultural exchange" is the ill-advised policy concocted by Bill Clinton 
and cancelled by him when Castro shot the three planes from the 
humanitarian organization Brothers to The Rescue in international waters
 on February 24, 1996.  Obama has forced this "one way" - to Castro's advantage only - policy again.  Fabiola Santiago's article below, brilliantly spills
 the beans about what is actually going on.  I recommend its reading for
 educational reasons as to the seemingly innocent, politically correct 
means used by the enemies of the U.S. (Cuba among them) to gradually 
break down our free system.  It shows how easy it is to infiltrate our 
nation with the acquaicense of even POTUS.  Obama should know better . .
 ..  Unless he is aware and it's what he wants and consistent with his ideology.  Needless
 to say the problems that Obama is causing for the law abiding 
pro-America Cuban American exile community with the influx of Castro's 
people positioning, using violence and intimidation taking over Miami to expand their political and economic influence is not a nice "cultural exchange".  One more reason to get him out of the White House before he succeeds with his goals.
Agustin Blazquez, producer/director
AB INDEPENDENT PRODUCTIONS
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From: Qbnchzhd@aol.com [mailto:Qbnchzhd@aol.com] 
Sent: Saturday, October 08, 2011 11:38 PM
To: Qbnchzhd@aol.com
Subject: Cultural exchanges with Cuba are mostly one-way affairs
Sent: Saturday, October 08, 2011 11:38 PM
To: Qbnchzhd@aol.com
Subject: Cultural exchanges with Cuba are mostly one-way affairs
Posted on Fri, Oct. 07, 2011 
Cultural exchanges with Cuba are mostly one-way affairs
Fabiola Santiago
fsantiago@MiamiHerald.com 
There’s little novelty in Cubans from the island traveling to Miami to play their music, show their films, exhibit their art and read their literary works. 
Culture from the island is imported as routinely as it is from New York, and this week alone I’ve been invited to the art opening in Coral Gables of an artist from Pinar del Río and a dinner with a visiting Cuban art dealer. 
The policy under which the cultural elite of Cuba readily get U.S. visas is called “a cultural exchange program,” but that’s a bit of a misnomer, as it implies a two-way deal. 
Cuba
 doesn’t issue visas as freely to the Cuban cultural elite on this side 
of the Florida Straits, so it’s quite unusual to see a Cuban-American 
performing or showcasing his or her craft in Havana. It happens in some circles and with some carefully chosen intellectuals, but from here-to-there is rare. 
Freedom
 rings on this side, thankfully, and for the most part the presence of 
Cubans from the island among us is illuminating and informative, if not 
always in the ways those involved intended. 
When
 you live in a free society, it’s easier to distinguish the real thing 
from the opportunist (he just wants to sell his paintings and run; he 
claims to not know anything about social issues, particularly Las Damas 
de Blanco, the brave Ladies in White who peacefully march every Sunday 
in Havana and are attacked by pro-government mobs). 
And
 it’s priceless to witness an artist using euphemisms and jargon 
acceptable to the Cuban government in her artist statement and in 
conversations with left-leaning Americans — then in private with Miami 
Cubans, after a couple of drinks on South Beach, blurting out: “We can’t
 wait for that degenerate old man to die.” And from there, letting it 
all hang out, the sweet taste of freedom flowing with the mojitos. 
Interesting
 exchanges all, but now here comes an opportunity for the Cuban 
government to shamelessly export its best propaganda tool camouflaged as
 culture. 
Later
 this month arrives La Colmenita Children’s Theater to stage the play 
Abracadabra. According to a promotional press release , the play 
advocates against the “injustice” of the jailing of Cuban spies in the 
United States, known as “The Cuban Five” — one of them released Friday —
 and calls for the end of the U.S. embargo against Cuba. 
The children’s tour has been scheduled to coincide with a United Nations vote on the embargo Oct. 25. 
News
 of the play — the tale of a teacher and students whose flight of fancy 
is inspired by the “freedom-loving” spies — arrives in my mailbox in a 
press release from clueless public relations specialist Karen Lowe. 
She pitches coverage of La Colmenita, The Little Beehive, and its U.S. tour – shows in Washington D.C. and San Francisco, none so far scheduled for Miami – by pointing out the newsy Miami connections to the spies. 
She
 cites the downing of a Cuban airliner in 1976 in which 73 people were 
killed, attributed to a Cuban exile who has long denied involvement, and
 notes that the founders of La Colmenita are the mother and brother of a
 man on that flight. She doesn’t say that another brother, a filmmaker, 
showed his movie recently at the Miami Film Festival, or that another 
brother was working at Miami’s America TV. 
Nor does she offer that these are the same children trotted out in Havana
 to celebrate Fidel Castro’s birthday, to uplift the comandante’s 
spirits when he’s sick, and, whenever there’s any sign of true change, 
to peddle the view that the regime is one great big timba party with 
lots of love for children and culture. 
Any
 tactic is valid to sustain the nearly 53-year-old dictatorship. No 
qualms about using children to pull at the heart strings of 
international public opinion, although if you’re an optimist, you might 
be inclined to say that this is another sign of a mortally wounded 
fiefdom. 
Just
 watch the little children, their bodies trained to sing and dance to 
the rhythm of Cuba’s fraudulent revolution, advocating for the release 
of cretins and the lifting of an embargo that doesn’t really exist when 
several planes fly to Cuba daily loaded with American goods, when 
shipping companies send parcels and dollars to the tune of millions a 
year, and when artists return to Cuba with their pockets full of 
American cash. 
Under
 the “cultural exchange” rules, there’s not supposed to be any payment, 
but all artists are paid, only the money is called a living stipend. 
Sure. 
The only thing embargoed in Cuba is truth. 
As
 for the cultural exchange program, it will be a treasure the day writer
 Yoani Sanchez is allowed by the Cuban government to travel here and 
claim her journalism prize at Columbia University, or to read from her new book about life in Cuba. And it will be even truer the day Cubans on the island get to hear singer Willy Chirino’s voice ring in Havana’s Karl Marx Theater: “ Oxígeno!” 
Oxygen!
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© 2011 Miami Herald Media Company. All Rights Reserved.Etiquetas: cuba travel

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