23 Feb 2008 03:21:11 | Susanne Pacher
Tuesday, April 5, 2005, 6:00 pm, Hotel Havana Libre
Thanks to a severe case of the Revenge of Montezuma (or Ricky
Ricardo?..,) I am sitting here in the Hotel Havana Libre and I
finally get around to create updates from my first 4.5 days here
in Cuba. The Internet connection is definitely the slowest I
have ever seen in my entire life, (15 minutes to access my
messages at Yahoo..), but I am giving it a shot anyways.
Friday morning I arrived at the airport in Toronto at 5:30 am
since my husband gave me a ride before work. The plane was
scheduled to leave at 10:30 and several transfers with public
transport would have taken me 2.5 hours anyway, so I decided to
head there early and read a book.
Air Canada was delayed after all (due to a problem with the
water supply on the plane) and we had to wait for a substitute
plane from Winnipeg and finally got off the ground at about
noon. 3.5 hours later we arrived at the airport Jose Marti in
Havana - a reasonably modern airport. However, it took me and
the other travellers almost 2 hours to collect our luggage and
finally hop into a taxi.
On the way in from the airport I noticed that there was a
mixture of industrial developments and agricultural areas, right
up until the centre of the city, which is strange compared to
Toronto, where there is no significant agriculture until way
outside the city. The older gentleman driving the taxi was very
friendly and explained a few basic things to me, e.g. that most
of the area is industrial and agricultural. He also showed the
National Sports Centre to me. Of course you see old cars from
the 50s and earlier as well as beat-up Russian Ladas everywhere.
Old sidecar motorcycles are also a popular way to get around.
I finally arrived at my hotel at about 6 pm where my brand-new
friend Pedro (a connection through a friend in Canada) was
waiting for me. I had told my friend that I wanted to really
spend some time with locals to learn about Cuba, its customs,
its way of life etc.
Pedro is a brown-skinned black man in his late thirties with a
common-law wife and a young daughter. An extremely nice person
and heīs been very gracious in taking me around and explaining
things to me.
After I dropped off my suitcase and refreshed myself a little,
we hopped into a private individual's car (a practice extremely
common in Cuba), he paid a few local pesos and we were whisked
downtown in a very old beat-up Lada which ended up picking up
various other locals along the way.
Habana Vieja is a fascinating colonial city and the age and
beauty of the building is astounding. Of course I saw the
Capitolio (very similar to the Capital in Washington), several
of the big museums, the Hotel Inglaterra and some of the bars
that Hemingway frequented.
I also saw the big spider exhibit of 2 metallic spiders that are
located right in the heart of downtown, an exhibit by a French
sculptress that will stay in Havana until April 28 and then
apparently move on to New York.
We walked around and chatted about life in Cuba and I started to
learn a few things, about some of the practical consequences of
the revolution (e.g. blacks have it much better today than
before, and there is relatively little racism according to
Pedro), and the double economy, where locals receive their
salary in Pesos Cubanos, (around US$8 to $30 a month), which is
not even close to enough for living, so everybody participates
in the underground economy in some way.
We had a reasonably expensive meal in a downtown "Paladar", a
private restaurant in a private home with a maximum of 12 seats,
one of the few official private enterprises allowed. When asked
about the future of Cuba after Fidel, both my new-found friend
and the old man running the Paladar indicated that they thought
not much would change after a future passing of Fidel. (Actually
the mention of Fidelīs passing often makes people pull up their
hands in front of their mouths and start to speak very
quietly...).
After the meal, Pedro again flagged down a private vehicle, we
hopped in and I got dropped off at the hotel, dropping into bed
like a tired sack of potatoes. But I definitely had a great
introduction to life in Cuba on my first evening....
About Author :
Susanne Pacher is the publisher of
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