Little Christmas cheer in Cuba; Santa blacklisted
Sun Dec 18, 2005 12:10 PM ET
By Anthony Boadle
HAVANA (Reuters) - Eight years after Communist Cuba restored December 25 as a national holiday in a gesture to Pope John Paul II, there is not much Christmas spirit to show for it.
Christmas decorations are mostly to be found in the more expensive shops and tourist spots, and there is no Santa Claus waving at children on the street corner.
Santa, viewed as a symbol of capitalist consumer society, is banned from storefront displays and can only be seen in private homes.
Cubans have not taken to saying "Merry Christmas," which is not surprising since the atheist state had the holiday crossed off the calendar from 1969 to 1997.
Most use "Happy Holidays" as their greeting and tend to see New Year's Eve as a bigger seasonal holiday. That's when President Fidel Castro's government celebrates the anniversary of the revolution that brought him to power in 1959 and authorities put on street fairs with salsa music and cheap beer.
"Few people say 'Happy Christmas.' The young have no idea what it means," said Carmen Vallejo, a Catholic dissident who works with cancer-stricken children.
Cuba did away with the Christmas holiday in 1969, when Castro's government was trying to bring in a record sugar harvest of 10 million tonnes and needed Cubans to work the extra day cutting cane.
It became a holiday again in 1997, as a show of goodwill before the late pope's historic visit to Cuba one month later. The Church got a temporary boost from the visit, but few of Cuba's 11 million people are practicing Catholics.
This year, for the first time, authorities have allowed a choir of 93 singers from 28 Christian churches to sing Christmas carols in Cuba's main cities and broadcast a performance on state-run television.
At the top of Old Havana's Obispo street there is a large Christmas tree lighting up the Floridita bar, where American author Ernest Hemingway drank frozen daiquiris.
'PEOPLE HAVE NO MONEY'
But residents say there are fewer lights than last year along the colonial-era shopping street, and fewer shoppers.
Stores in Central Havana's main shopping center, Carlos III, are stacked with Chinese goods, from bicycles and tennis rackets to skateboards and roller blades.
Plastic toys made in China are expensive for Cubans, with some selling for $20, more than a doctor's monthly salary.
"There are much fewer shoppers this year. Things are very bad," said Carlos, a parking attendant. "This is the worst year since I started here nine years ago. People have no money."
Many Cubans supplement meager wages with dollars sent by relatives in the United States. But the cash remittances lost 20 percent of their purchasing power after Cuba penalized the U.S. currency a year ago and revalued its own currency.
"There is no Christmas spirit, not even in the churches, because people have no prospects. In the current economic crisis they don't have enough to get by on, let alone celebrate," said Vallejo.
"Sometimes I feel God has turned his back on Cuba."
Cubans got some year-end relief from price cuts ordered by the government for some imported supermarket foods, including jam, raisins, tomato puree and canned tuna and sweet corn.
Christmas cheer or not, Cubans will enjoy a family dinner on Christmas Eve, a tradition akin to Thanksgiving consisting of roast pork and "congri" -- black beans mixed with rice.
Sun Dec 18, 2005 12:10 PM ET
By Anthony Boadle
HAVANA (Reuters) - Eight years after Communist Cuba restored December 25 as a national holiday in a gesture to Pope John Paul II, there is not much Christmas spirit to show for it.
Christmas decorations are mostly to be found in the more expensive shops and tourist spots, and there is no Santa Claus waving at children on the street corner.
Santa, viewed as a symbol of capitalist consumer society, is banned from storefront displays and can only be seen in private homes.
Cubans have not taken to saying "Merry Christmas," which is not surprising since the atheist state had the holiday crossed off the calendar from 1969 to 1997.
Most use "Happy Holidays" as their greeting and tend to see New Year's Eve as a bigger seasonal holiday. That's when President Fidel Castro's government celebrates the anniversary of the revolution that brought him to power in 1959 and authorities put on street fairs with salsa music and cheap beer.
"Few people say 'Happy Christmas.' The young have no idea what it means," said Carmen Vallejo, a Catholic dissident who works with cancer-stricken children.
Cuba did away with the Christmas holiday in 1969, when Castro's government was trying to bring in a record sugar harvest of 10 million tonnes and needed Cubans to work the extra day cutting cane.
It became a holiday again in 1997, as a show of goodwill before the late pope's historic visit to Cuba one month later. The Church got a temporary boost from the visit, but few of Cuba's 11 million people are practicing Catholics.
This year, for the first time, authorities have allowed a choir of 93 singers from 28 Christian churches to sing Christmas carols in Cuba's main cities and broadcast a performance on state-run television.
At the top of Old Havana's Obispo street there is a large Christmas tree lighting up the Floridita bar, where American author Ernest Hemingway drank frozen daiquiris.
'PEOPLE HAVE NO MONEY'
But residents say there are fewer lights than last year along the colonial-era shopping street, and fewer shoppers.
Stores in Central Havana's main shopping center, Carlos III, are stacked with Chinese goods, from bicycles and tennis rackets to skateboards and roller blades.
Plastic toys made in China are expensive for Cubans, with some selling for $20, more than a doctor's monthly salary.
"There are much fewer shoppers this year. Things are very bad," said Carlos, a parking attendant. "This is the worst year since I started here nine years ago. People have no money."
Many Cubans supplement meager wages with dollars sent by relatives in the United States. But the cash remittances lost 20 percent of their purchasing power after Cuba penalized the U.S. currency a year ago and revalued its own currency.
"There is no Christmas spirit, not even in the churches, because people have no prospects. In the current economic crisis they don't have enough to get by on, let alone celebrate," said Vallejo.
"Sometimes I feel God has turned his back on Cuba."
Cubans got some year-end relief from price cuts ordered by the government for some imported supermarket foods, including jam, raisins, tomato puree and canned tuna and sweet corn.
Christmas cheer or not, Cubans will enjoy a family dinner on Christmas Eve, a tradition akin to Thanksgiving consisting of roast pork and "congri" -- black beans mixed with rice.
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Re: Little Christmas cheer in Cuba; Santa blacklisted (Reuters)
Sun, December 25, 2005 - 1:37 PMSometimes I wish I could ban Santa and gifts at christmas time!
As a general policy it doesn't see so bad. What I really hate about the christmas holiday in the US is that everyone is forced to go along with it in some way or other -- shops are shut down, restaurants closed and people express sympathies if you aren't doing "something special." I don't celebrate Ramadan, or Yom Kippur - why would I feel oppressed at being left out of Christmas? Instead, I feel oppressed at overt attempts to strongarm everyone into cosumerism and false cheer.
I'm going to Saul's - at least they are open! -
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Re: Little Christmas cheer in Cuba; Santa blacklisted (Reuters)
Sun, December 25, 2005 - 10:03 PMYeah, you do have a valid point about Christmas here in the US - but I don't want to ban Christmas anywhere, no regime should mandate - but I do hate the false cheer and the materialism of it all. I especially hate the stupid car commercials on TV - it's Christmas for God's sake not a car dealership holiday. If you don't believe in Christmas in the US you can earse it all out - you can go to a movie and Chinese food on the 25th instead.
The good thing here is that we can choose not to celebrate it and to celebrate it all we want. It's about choices. Its just so sad in Cuba and how the powers that be there have told the people and "strongarmed" them what to do for so long. So long, so long. -
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Re: Little Christmas cheer in Cuba; Santa blacklisted (Reuters)
Tue, December 27, 2005 - 1:44 PMNo - they aren't banning Christmas; just Santa!
Now, that said - I think it would be most excellent to go down there with 25 santa suits and do a santa rampage. :)
And it is quite difficult to avoid christmas in the states - people are strong-armed into participating, regardless of what your religious affiliation.
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Re: Little Christmas cheer in Cuba; Santa blacklisted (Reuters)
Mon, January 2, 2006 - 3:56 AMI was talking with a friend, in Cuba, about things like religious holidays and he came up with a very valid point.
Before the Revolution, only the people who had money could afford to be 'good' Catholics. Only people with a decent disposable income could afford to do Christmas. Most people lived from hand to mouth and had nothing in the way of disposable income with which to buy the 'necessary' trimmings.
Has anyone else been into a church in Cuba? I visited a Catholic church and was amazed at the explanation of who all the figures were. It's a very complex cross-over between the Christian 'saints' and the figures prominent in the Santeria religion.
As the article says - very few Cubans are practicing Catholics so why sould we expect the Cuban people to get sucked into the soul-destroying frenzy of greed which we know as 'Christmas'?
