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Gap between state, youth is growing concern

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 3, 2008 at 05:25 PM

Cuba: Gap between state, youth is growing concern
By Ray Sanchez | Sun-Sentinel.com
7:49 AM EDT, April 3, 2008

HAVANA - The growing disconnect between the state and young people on 
Cuba is a hot topic in the closed congress of the government-allied 
union of writers and artists.

The union, known as UNEAC, is holding its first congress in 10 years in 
Havana's convention center.

In an lengthy article Thursday, the Communist youth daily Juventud 
Rebelde noted that only 1,453 writers and artists, or 17 percent of the 
union member****p, were under the age of 40.

Just 3 percent of the 400 participants in the congress were under 40.

"The numbers speak for themselves," the article said.

"The average age of the member****p is 60 years," filmmaker and writer 
Victor Casaus was quoted as saying. "Where is the continuity of Cuban 
culture?"

Playwright and critic Norge Espinosa asked: "What is the relevance of 
the UNEAC to young people today? What is its impact?...The truth is that 
a lot of talent has been lost because [young people] have not found a 
space."

The congress, which ends Friday, issued a statement calling on the state 
to embrace rather than restrict technologies such as the Internet.

Cuba's new president, Raul Castro, and other ranking government 
officials attended the opening session Tuesday.

The event is closed to the foreign press.

"We have to understand that our revolution will only be strengthened by 
looking at it from the inside," artists union member Juan Carlos 
Travieso said.

Brian Latell, a Cuba expert and former CIA analyst, touched on the 
disconnect between the state and Cuban youth in his latest newsletter 
for the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American 
Studies.

"Fidel [Castro] himself, in late 2005, during one of his last major 
speeches, warned an audience of Cuban youth that 'this country can 
self-destruct. The revolution can destroy itself,'" Latell wrote.

"A short time later his warnings were reiterated by foreign minister, 
Felipe Perez Roque, who expounded at length about the disaffection, 
alienation, and apathy of Cuban youth. He too warned that the revolution 
could destroy itself."

More than two years later, Latell added, Cuban leaders have no good 
options: "What they probably cannot yet be sure of, however, is whether 
they are experiencing an incipient rebellion of the country's youth."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-403cubagap,0,1239547.story
 




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Gap between state, youth is growing concern
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-03 17:25:29 

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