what conditions in cuba gave origin to the revolution

American Comandante | Commodity

Pre-Castro Cuba

On the eve of Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution, Cuba was neither the paradise that would afterward be conjured by the nostalgic imaginations of Republic of cuba's many exiles, nor the hellhole painted by many supporters of the revolution. These revolutionaries recall Cuba every bit "the brothel of the Western hemisphere" -- an island inhabited past a people degraded and hungry, whose main occupation was to cater to American tourists at Havana's luxurious hotels, beaches and casinos. Rather, Cuba was i of the about avant-garde and successful countries in Latin America.

Cuba_house_Rev.jpg
A native firm. Courtesy of the Cuban Heritage Collection, Univ of Miami Libraries

Success by the Numbers

Cuba'southward capital, Havana, was a glittering and dynamic city. In the early part of the century the state's economy, fueled past the sale of sugar to the United States, had grown dramatically. Republic of cuba ranked fifth in the hemisphere in per capita income, third in life expectancy, second in per capita ownership of automobiles and telephones, first in the number of television sets per inhabitant. The literacy rate, 76%, was the fourth highest in Latin America. Republic of cuba ranked 11th in the world in the number of doctors per capita. Many private clinics and hospitals provided services for the poor. Republic of cuba'southward income distribution compared favorably with that of other Latin American societies. A thriving heart class held the promise of prosperity and social mobility.

castro_precastro02_Rev.jpg
Credit: WGBH Archives

Inequalities

There were, all the same, profound inequalities in Cuban society -- between city and countryside and between whites and blacks. In the countryside, some Cubans lived in abysmal poverty. Sugar production was seasonal, and the macheteros -- sugarcane cutters who merely worked four months out of the year -- were an army of unemployed, perpetually in debt and living on the margins of survival. Many poor peasants were seriously malnourished and hungry. Neither health care nor educational activity reached those rural Cubans at the bottom of society. Illiteracy was widespread, and those lucky enough to attend school seldom made it by the beginning or 2d grades. Clusters of graveyards dotted the primary highway along the foothills of the Sierra Maestra, marking the spots where people died waiting for transportation to the nearest hospitals and clinics in Santiago de Cuba.

2 Worlds

Racism also fated Cuban order. The island's individual clubs and beaches were segregated. Even President Fulgencio Batista, a mulatto, was denied membership in ane of Havana'due south most exclusive clubs. "I might best summarize the complex situation by saying that urban Cuba had come to resemble a Southern European country (with a living standard as loftier or surpassing that of France, Kingdom of spain, Portugal and Greece) while rural Cuba replicated the conditions of other plantation societies in Latin America and the Caribbean area," according to analyst Marking Falcoff.

1244_2011335.jpeg
Fighting. Credit: Andrew St. George Papers, Manuscripts & Athenaeum, Yale University

Cluttered Political Scene

Cuba'southward social problems were compounded by a violent, chaotic and decadent political history. Since achieving independence in 1902, Republic of cuba had suffered what simply could be called bad authorities. A bloody and plush struggle to achieve independence from Spain had devastated Cuba'southward economy. The insurgent leaders, known as the mambises, had been decimated. José Martí, Cuba's George Washington, was killed in battle in 1895. On May 20, 1902, the birth date of the first Cuban republic, no leader had the power to harness the passions and ambitions unleashed by independence. The U.South. Congress passed the Platt Amendment, granting the U.S. the right to intervene militarily in Cuba to protect its interests there. The U.S. position further undermined the legitimacy of the government, as it placed the United States at the center of Cuban affairs. Invoking the Platt Amendment, the United States would occupy Cuba between 1906 and 1909, and continue to intervene in afterward years.

Autonomous Hopes

All the tensions of the First Commonwealth exploded in revolution in 1933. University students, labor unions, and disaffected ground forces officers joined in rebellion against Republic of cuba'southward fifth president, Gerardo Machado, a man who had taken corruption and repression to new heights. A university professor, Ramón Grau San Martín, took power at the head of a coalition. A nationalist, Grau called on "Cuba for all Cubans," but the U.S. ambassador, Sumner Welles, made a deal with Fulgencio Batista, an English-speaking ground forces sergeant, who unseated Grau. Batista became Cuba's strongman behind a succession of presidents until 1940, when he was duly elected president. Batista surprised many, ushering in an era of promise in Cuba by sponsoring a progressive constitution, allowing the Cuban Communist Party to join the government, and stepping downward in favor of his opponent, Grau, when his four-twelvemonth term was over.

Plagued by Corruption

For the next twelve years Cuba enjoyed democracy and free elections. But it was a democracy marred past corruption and political violence -- the work of "action groups" or gangs who shot their way through politics at the University of Havana and on the city streets. When in March 1952, Batista, in a coup d'etat, destroyed the democratic democracy he had brought into beingness, the phase was gear up for revolution. "Batista'due south coup opened a Pandora's box," explained writer Carlos Alberto Montaner. "Institutions no longer mattered. What mattered was audacity, the private capable of vehement action." That individual turned out to be a daring young lawyer named Fidel Castro.

Era of Change

Between 1952 and 1958, Cubans from all walks of life -- students, businessmen, mothers, politicians -- united in opposition against Batista. Author Carlos Alberto Montaner describes the mood: "the talk was well-nigh democracy, freedom and respect for human rights; the... objective was to restore the rule of law that had been swept aside by Batista."

comandante_precastro_03_Rev400.jpg
Fidel and Raul Castro with Che Guevara, 1959. Credit: Osvaldo Salas Estate

Hopes for Honest Regime

Even Castro -- a dynamic national figure post-obit his failed Moncada assault of 1953 -- spoke in those terms. "Not Communism or Marxism is our idea. Our political philosophy is representative democracy and social justice in a well-planned economy." Many wealthy Cubans welcomed Castro'due south rebel triumph in January 1959. "My parents, my grandparents and my uncles went out and paid their back taxes," recalls Professor Marifeli Pérez Stable, "because finally, in that location was going to exist an honest government in Republic of cuba."

*This article was originally published on the site for the 2005 American Experience documentary Fidel Castro.

hensleytworet.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/comandante-pre-castro-cuba/

0 Response to "what conditions in cuba gave origin to the revolution"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel