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Weeping, hopeful, Cubans look to future without Fidel Castro

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Cuban community in Miami celebrates the announcement that Fidel Castro died in front of La Carreta Restaurant, early Saturday, Nov. 26, 2016, in Miami. Within half an hour of the Cuban government’s official announcement that former President Fidel Castro had died, Friday, Nov. 25, 2016, at age 90, Miami’s Little Havana teemed with life - and cheers.

HAVANA >> Music fell silent, weddings were canceled and people wept in the streets Saturday as Cubans faced their first day without the leader who steered their island to both greater social equality and years of economic ruin.

Across a hushed capital, dozens of Cubans said they felt genuine pain at the death of Fidel Castro, whose words and image had filled schoolbooks, airwaves and front pages since before many were born. And in private conversations, they expressed hope that Castro’s passing will allow Cuba to move faster toward a more open, prosperous future under his younger brother and successor, President Raul Castro.

Both brothers led bands of bearded rebels out of the eastern Sierra Maestra mountains to create a communist government 90 miles from the United States. But since taking over from his ailing brother in 2006, the 85-year-old Raul Castro has allowed an explosion of private enterprise and, last year, restored diplomatic relations with Washington.

“Raul wants the country to advance, to do business with the whole world, even the United States,” said Belkis Bejarano, a 65-year-old homemaker in central Havana. “Raul wants to do business, that’s it. Fidel was still holed up in the Sierra Maestra.”

In his twilight years Fidel Castro largely refrained from offering his opinions publicly on domestic issues, lending tacit backing to his brother’s free-market reforms. But the older Castro surged back onto the public stage twice this year — critiquing President Barack Obama’s historic March visit to Cuba and proclaiming in April that communism was “a great step forward in the fight against colonialism and its inseparable companion, imperialism.”

Ailing and without any overt political power, the 90-year-old revolutionary icon became for some a symbol of resistance to his younger sibling’s diplomatic and economic openings. For many other Cubans, however, Fidel Castro was fading into history, increasingly at a remove from the passions that long cast him as either messianic savior or maniacal strongman.

On Saturday, many Cubans on the island described Fidel Castro as a towering figure who brought Cuba free health care, education and true independence from the United States, while saddling the country with an ossified political and economic system that has left streets and buildings crumbling and young, educated elites fleeing in search of greater prosperity abroad.

“Fidel was a father for everyone in my generation,” said Jorge Luis Hernandez, a 45-year-old electrician. “I hope that we keep moving forward because we are truly a great, strong, intelligent people. There are a lot of transformations, a lot of changes, but I think that the revolution will keep on in the same way and always keep moving forward.”

In 2013, Raul Castro announced that he would step aside by the time his current presidential term ends in 2018, and for the first time named an heir-apparent not from the Castro’s revolutionary generation — Miguel Diaz-Canel, 56.

Fidel Castro’s death “puts a sharper focus on the mortality of the entire first generation of this revolution,” said Philip Peters, a Cuba analyst and business consultant, “and brings into sharper focus the absence of a group of potential leaders that’s ready to take over and politically connected to the public.”

For Cubans off the island, Castro’s death was cause for celebration. In Miami, the heart of the Cuban diaspora, thousands of people banged pots with spoons, waved Cuban and U.S. flags in the air and whooped in jubilation.

“We’re not celebrating that someone died, but that this is finished,” said 30-year-old Erick Martinez, who emigrated from Cuba four years ago.

The Cuban government declared nine days of mourning for Castro, whose ashes will be carried across the island from Havana to the eastern city of Santiago in a procession retracing his rebel army’s victorious sweep from the Sierra Maestra to Havana. State radio and television were filled with non-stop tributes to Castro, playing hours of footage of his time in power and interviews with prominent Cubans affectionately remembering him.

Bars shut, baseball games and concerts were suspended and many restaurants stopped serving alcohol and planned to close early. Official newspapers were published Saturday with only black ink instead of the usual bright red or blue mastheads.

Many Cubans, however, were already imagining the coming years in a Cuba without Fidel Castro.

“Fidel’s ideas are still valid,” said Edgardo Casals, a 32-year-old sculptor. “But we can’t look back even for a second. We have to find our own way. We have to look toward the future, which is ours, the younger generations’.”

16 responses to “Weeping, hopeful, Cubans look to future without Fidel Castro”

  1. wiliki says:

    A mixed bag. He punished the regime of the previous dictator and at the same time improve the living conditions for all of his people.

    • Waterman2 says:

      One thing I promise you he didn’t do was improve the living conditions of the Cubans. He was a blood thirsty dictator who ruled by the gun and buried dissidents by the trench full.

    • steveoctober says:

      While he did push his predecessor out, keep in mind that Batista’s regime would have come to an end through another organized rebellion. The conditions in Cuba were just so bad that it was begging for a revolution and it would’ve happened either way.

      • wiliki says:

        They would have had to convince the Americans that they were a worthy successor to Batista, the previous dictator. As had Castro.

        Remember organized crime in America had a lot to lose if their casinos were shut down. And they were very influential in Congress.

        Probably organized crime contributed to the number of assassination attempts on Fidel’s life and may have been involved in President Kennedy’s assassination. Castro shut down the casinos.

  2. wrightj says:

    He sure scared the world in 1962 – Whew!

  3. latenightroach says:

    I don’t blame the Cubans in Florida who escaped his tyranny for dancing in the streets last night.

  4. WizardOfMoa says:

    He was part of a family, a family that loved him. Any loss of a family member is heartbreaking. My sincere condolences to his family!

    • BlueEyedWhiteDevil says:

      One of whom is his daughter living in Florida and has despised him for decades.

      • wiliki says:

        Most of the wealthy hate his ideology and his responce to their efforts to kill him and destroy the revolution.

        His daughter is no exception. His other children probably mourn him. Is his family not as well off as they were before the Revolution?

        Some children prefer to return to Cuba. Remember the child that survived the 90 mile ocean trip.

  5. 64hoo says:

    glad he is dead, I hope that dictator burns in hell.

  6. Ronin006 says:

    The tears being shed in the streets of Cuba are not tears of mourning; they are tears of joy for being rid of a brutal dictator and oppressor. More tears of joy will be shed when his brother, Raul, passes on and hopefully soon. De oppresso liber.

  7. lokela says:

    They should think as it’s a new beginning. Start with the cigars.

  8. WalkoffBalk says:

    How will Kappernick honor Castro tomorrow?

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