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Socialist Alternative  
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 More options Jul 7 2007, 11:00 am
From: Socialist Alternative <socialist.alternat...@socialism.org.tt>
Date: Sat, 07 Jul 2007 11:00:59 -0400
Local: Sat, Jul 7 2007 11:00 am
Subject: Havana rights
Plans to legalise gay marriage and offer sex change operations free of
charge mean Cuba is set to become the most socially liberal country in
the Americas.

The street scene was entertaining, as always. Promenading down the
colonial walkway known as the Prado was a cross-section of the city's
humanity; a respectable old couple walking arm in arm, a bored-looking
policeman smoking a Soy Popular, two young lovers holding hands with
eyes only for each other, a Lycra-clad girl with eyes only for tourists,
and a teenage boy with a big grin selling fake branded cigars: "Where
you from, my friend? I work in the cigar factory. I do you good price."

And then, to complete the scene, a dozen transvestites came into view,
singing: "All we are saying, is give peace a chance." No one batted an
eyelid. Not me. Not the old couple. Not even the policeman.

This was Havana in October 2004. But it could have been any major city
in socialist Cuba in recent years. After the severe anti-homosexual
discrimination of the 1960s and 70s, Cuba's lesbian, gay and transgender
community is set to be given something more important than a chance: the
right to marry and enjoy full equality under the law.

"We have to abolish any form of discrimination against those persons,"
Ricardo Alarcon, president of Cuba's national assembly, said recently.
"We have to redefine the concept of marriage. Socialism should be a
society that does not exclude anybody."

The national assembly is also currently debating a proposal which will
give transsexuals the right to have sex change operations. Like all
medical procedures performed on the island, they will be carried out
free of charge by the world class Cuban health service.

This official change of heart did not come out of the blue, and neither
did the earlier repression. Machista culture has deep roots in all Latin
American and Caribbean countries that suffered under slavery and
colonialism. In Jamaica, for example, homosexuality is punishable with a
prison sentence, and some clubs and bars even display notices reading
"Adam and Eve, yes. Adam and Steve, no".

Cuba, being a secular country, avoided the anti-homosexual religious
overtones of its neighbours. However, repression of homosexuals
continued after the 1959 revolution under the umbrella of a dogmatic
interpretation of Marxism. It is a tribute to the humanistic essence of
the Cuban Revolution that its leadership was able to face up to its
mistakes and change course. Cuba is now set to become the most socially
liberal country in the Americas.

In 1979, homosexual relations were legalised. Fourteen years later, a
critically acclaimed film, Strawberry and Chocolate, was released in
Cuba which immediately created waves within society. The film was about
the friendship between a gay man and a straight Communist party
militant, and included the now famous line: "I'm part of this country,
like it or not. And I have the right to work for its future." Since
then, openly gay men and lesbians have featured more prominently on TV
and the stage, and in literature.

There are also gay rights campaigners in Cuba. The most influential
amongst them is Mariela Castro. For years, Ms Castro has used her
position as head of the national sex education centre to highlight
homophobic discrimination and to work with government departments,
universities, mass organisations and the police to change attitudes and
practices. She also happens to be the daughter of acting president Raul
Castro and the niece of Fidel.

Another set of people who can claim some credit for Cuba's enlightened
approach is the international left and solidarity campaigns. While the
pressure for equal rights came principally from within Cuban society,
there is little doubt that the government also listened to their friends
and supporters abroad, those who unconditionally stood by Cuba
throughout her struggle against US-sponsored invasion and terrorism, and
the 45-year-long economic blockade.

While Havana has a lively and vibrant gay scene (something that would
have been unthinkable 30 years ago), the picture is not uniformly rosy.
Mariela Castro acknowledges that gays and lesbians still face occasional
police harassment, but says that the days of official repression are
over: "What remains are social and cultural reactions that must be
transformed, the same as in many other countries."

This article was published in the 'Comment is free' section of the
Guardian website on 28th March 2007.
(http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/calvin_tucker/2007/03/the_street_...)

Calvin Tucker is a co-editor of 21st Century Socialism.


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