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Thursday, August 17, 2006
Val Prieto :: Townhall.com Columnist
Truth, even if clandestine, is still truth.
by Val Prieto
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The “r” on the typewriter no longer works and there’s no ñ key. The ink being engraved into the paper isn’t ink; it’s shoe polish. Typewriter ribbons are hard to come by and paper is old, brittle and scarce. There’s no copy machine, no scanner, no fax and there is no phone next to the typewriter on his desk. Computers aren’t allowed. Satellite dishes receiving the latest world news aren’t allowed. There’s no software, no hardware, and no staff. There are only a few sheets of yellowing paper, a typewriter, a pencil and a candle to see by.

He works by candlelight not because of the frequent “apagones” – power outages – but because any light shining though his window late at night is but a beacon to those who want to silence him. It would serve as proof that he’s up to no good by the standards of his government and an excuse to be picked up and taken into custody for “dangerousness.”

He plods on in the dark, without r’s or ñ’s, unable to see the full text in the darkness, and typing as gently as possible so as not to awaken the sleeping giants. Beads of sweat sometimes gather on his forehead, the humidity of Havana at night trickling his perspiration and making his eyes sting, smudging, perhaps, his already typed pages.

The morning daylight is his only editor. It is in the mornings when he can truly see his night’s work. He sits with the document and a half empty cup of café cubano brewed with a mixture of last week’s coffee grinds and soy, and he pencils in his edits. He inserts all the r’s and ñ’s by hand. He corrects his spelling. He adds slashes where the old Smith Corona failed to add a space. Right there, with his pencil stub, he edits for grammar and moves words here and there for impact.

He will not retype the piece when he’s done with his morning edit. Paper is scarce. He’s got very little shoe polish left for the typewriter ribbon. Had his last sheet of carbon paper not been used up, typed down to whiteness, he would have had another copy. Now, he must travel almost all of Havana looking for a phone owned by a friend to his cause.

His article won’t get Xeroxed or faxed. It won’t get typeset and printed. His article will be read, by him, over the phone a dozen times, perhaps more, with the hopes that the person on the other end of the line in Miami or New Jersey will do justice to his work. Each call is made hoping that the person in charge of monitoring his conversation from some government office in Havana won’t cut the transmission, and turn him in for a pound of rice as reward.

That is the life of the Independent Journalist in Cuba: Clandestine meetings, clandestine writing, clandestine transmissions with clandestine words of a clandestine truth.

Although he lives with fear, he’s made it his sidekick. If he should suffer the same fate as his peers, as his mentors, then so be it. He works for something more valuable than money, something more valuable than a byline, and something more valuable than himself. He works for the truth. His onus is to tell the story of the real truth instead of the “official” one, even though telling the truth, in Cuba, can kill him.

Right now there remain at least two dozen independent journalists incarcerated in Cuba simply because they dared speak the truth. Some have been locked away since 2003, still in the infancy of their 15 or 20 year sentences. Truth has made them suffer beatings, torture and malnutrition. Truth has mocked, ridiculed, and subjected them to abject horrors and indignity.

All because they bear witness to the world around them and dare describe it nakedly and without their government’s official veil.

There are many journalists from around the world in Havana. CNN is there. Reuters, the AP. They live comfortably in hotel rooms and work in comfortable in air-conditioned offices full of amenities. They have the copy machine. They have the faxes and computers and printers and scanners. They have staff and editors. What they don’t have is the security to report the truth. They trade that truth away, to keep a bureau and a staff. They walk on eggshells when they should be stomping the ground beneath them with integrity and zeal. With the hunger to dig, to dig deep enough to get to the real story that needs to be screamed aloud, at the tops of their lungs, for the entire world to hear.

Yet we hear no screams of injustice from the foreign reporter’s pool in Havana. We hear only the chirping. We here the Polly-wannacrackers of fidel castro’s propaganda machinery. It’s more important, you see, to keep a bureau in Havana, just in case the big story breaks, than to report the obvious failure of a system, and the systematic enslavement of a people.

To bear witness to the subjugation of journalism, you need look no further than Cuba.

The Inter American Press Association has called for newspapers to publish simultaneous commentary on the state of the imprisoned Cuban Independent Journalists today and to urge for their immediate and unconditional release. Reporters Without Borders has condemned Cuba’s treatment of independent journalists and lists Cuba as second only to China in the number of incarcerated journalists. If the numbers were calculated on a per capita basis, Cuba would stand alone as the number one jailer of reporters in the world.

There is no better time than the present to bring to the world’s attention the state of independent journalism in Cuba, and to show the world the ignominious fate of the few with the integrity and courage to stand up against their oppressors, armed but with words and truth.

Valentin J. Prieto is Editor in Chief of http://www.babalublog.com

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About The Author
Valentin J. Prieto is Editor in Chief of http://ww.bablublog.com.

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Sounds vaguely familiar...
....while reading this I could have swore it was a day in the life of the writer and editor of "View From The Island."

Jimmy, LOL
I followed my own advice. Got divorced 15 years ago.

Or Closer to Home
== To bear witness to the subjugation of
== journalism, you need look no further
== than Cuba

Or Foxsnooze.

Foxsnooze?
Yeah, but Foxnooze has CNN, MSNBC and The New York Times to counter what it says. No subjugated journalism there. Now, if Foxsnooze was the ONLY way to get our news, then you might be closer. Still, when was the last time someone in the USA got jailed and senteced to prison for reporting the news?

Whinning: Easy for you to say...
You get to mouth of here anything you want without fear of jail or censorship. You get a internet access, your own blog, and a comment link on every collumn. You probably own a digital camera (or could if you wanted one) a fax, a cell phone, and a computer.

Like others pointed out, Cubans WOULD have gotten rid of castro a long time ago, if it had not been for a certain filandering, sex-adicted, incompetent, and corrupt President called kennedy.

There is a difference between speaking out, and being a voice for those who can't speak out...and whinning. Can YOU tell the difference?

It says something that you would refer to your ex-wife as a dictator...big difference between a lousy marriage, and a dictator that murders, tortures and prostitutes an entire country! I'm quite certain your ex-wife wasn't THAT bad.

Now, honestly, do you really think Cuba could get rid of its dictator as easy you got rid of yours?


Don't Get It
I don't really think you get it, commenters that is. You suggest getting rid of the dictator, how would you do that? The United States of America has been unsucessful in doing so. The people in Cuba, if they attempted to change their leader, they would be killed or imprisoned. The only people who could actually get rid of the Castro 2, prosper from him being in office.

I hear President Bush talk all of the time about "liberating the Iraqi people from the oppression of Saddam". Did you stand there and say "Get rid of your dictator or quit your whining" to the Iraqi people? Yet, you have that comment for people living in a country 90 miles from our coast.

Hey Val
why did you take killcastro off your links?

did you and that bugarron Charlie Bravo have a falling out?

Great Article Val....
You've made it to the big times, Val...It's great to read your articles and to view them in townhall...Thanks.....

Cuba
"All it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing."

Fidel Castro once said that "history will absolve me."

No, it will not. Like Stalin, Hitler, Mao, and Pol Pot, history will bear witness to the truth and once again mankind can pretend they didn't know when in fact they did but chose to ignore it. The evidence of Castro's crimes are well documented, there's no excuse.

universal spectator: well, if I...
... was going to be offended at what you called me, it would be that you called me a liberal.

Amazing...

Schmuck.

Excellent Article
I came here from josue's site, and glad I did. I would say it's time to give Cuba a little push into the future, help her and her people out. And I'm still mad that the Democrats forced Elian Gonzales back to his 'family' in Cuba and cozied up to an evil dictator when they could have done something right for once.

Great Post
Once again, Val, you amaze me with your talents. Excellent post and I admire your constant, unwavering attention to what has been and continues to go on in Cuba despite how many people choose to turn a blind eye to the truth.

It's too bad some of the commenters here are too vapid to get the point...but then again, the mere fact that they can come on here, on their computers, in the comfort of their home or office and spew such idiocy IS kind of the point. They just have no idea that they illustrated it, clearly.

Josue: chill
As to my ex-wife: which one are you referring to?

As to your other comment, I'll preface by saying that though I never comment on typos, the only reason I'll mention it here is that I'm not sure if you mean "winning" or "whining" (you wrote "whinning"), and that makes a big difference in the meaning of your post.

Either way, I guess, my answer is this. If people want to overthrow a dictator, they can usually do it. Castro overthrew Batista. Lech Walesa got the USSR out of Poland (a tougher job than Castro).

But it's pretty easy for a bunch of exiles to sit around sipping espresso in Miami and moan and complain.

Pundit Blogger: as your post seems...
... aimed at me, too.

There are a lot of countries that have bad governments. That doesn't mean we saddle up the troops and go running out to every one to try to fix it for them. In Iraq, we had a national self-interest involved. I don't see one in Cuba anywhere.

Further, I don't see much of a movement (if any) in that country to do anything about changing the situation, unlike the example of Poland I cited in my last post.

There are a lot of dictators in the world, and a lot of beknighted people. You want to start sending troops to Somalia (again), Darfur, Ethiopia, Rwanda, et al?

To add to BrianR...
...or how about taking Mexico so that they will quit coming here! If we completely seal the border they would have no choice than to overrun their own government or suffer the consequenses..

Yeah, JimmyC,
Let's just annex Mexico.
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