50 years of solidarity

17 April 2011

Cuba Si
The magazine of CSC
In June, CSC will mark 50 years of the Cuban Friendship Institute with a public event in London. Jenny Kassman reports on five decades of building solidarity with the island
Spring 2012
Sport at the heart of revolution
Summer 2011
A socialist path to sustainability
A manufactured dissident
Breaking the Silence: Beyond the Frame- Contemporary Cuban Art
Restructuring the Revolution
Spring 2011
In Santiago it is always the 26th
50 years of solidarity
Revealing Che’s revolutionary roots
The Doctors’ Revolution
Winter 2011
Habana Hoy: The New Sound of Cuban Music
Gerardo remains positive
Playa Girón
Latin lessons: What can we learn from the world’s most ambitious literacy campaign?
Autumn 2010
Sustaining the revolution
Cuba and the number of “political prisoners”
Daughter of Cuba
La revolucion energetica: Cuba's energy revolution
Summer 2010
Noam Chomsky on Cuba-US relations - exclusive
Friends of Cuba Solidarity Campaign
Waste not, want not
Miami 5 updates
Spring 2010
Cubans in Haiti
Remedios y sus Parrandas
Concert for Haiti
The real war on terror
Auntumn 2009
Interview with families of the Five
Autumn 2009
Juan Almeida Bosque – hero of the revolution
Presidio Modelo, School of Revolutionaries
Summer 2009
From here to there - Interview with Omar Puente
Talking to Aleida Guevara
Pride in Cuba
Ken Gill ‘son of Cuba’
Cuba50 - 40,000 people join the celebrations
Spring 2009
Confronting rhetoric with reality
Talking about a Revolution
Pushing for a change in UK policy
A chance encounter with Operación Milagro
Winter 2008-9
Hasta La Victoria Siempre - Interview with Cuban poet who witnessed Revolution
The revolution that defies the laws of gravity
Feminising the Revolution
Autumn 2008
Families torn apart - Miami 5 interview
After the storm - Hurricane report
TUC Congress reports
Terror in Miami - Cuba's exile community
Summer 2008
Havana rights
AGM Report - CSC celebrates year’s successes
Miami Five – Ten years on
Changes in Cuba?
Spring 2008
Celebrating 50 years of progress
Fidel stands down
Libraries at the heart of the community
Lessons for a greener world
Cuba50 – Celebrating Cuban Culture
Winter 2007/08
“In every barrio, Revolution!” - CDR Museum opens
Fighting for the Five - Leonard Weinglass interview
The World of Work in a Changing Cuba
Campaign on Barclays and extraterritoriality continues…
Autumn 2007
21st century medicine
The living legacy of Che
Interviewing Fidel
Summer 2007
Farewell to Vilma:
From Pakistan to Rotherham:
Whose rules rule?
Spring 2007
Feeding the revolution
Stop the Hilton Hotels ban
Teaching citizenship the Cuban way
Winter 06/07
Exclusive: London's Mayor visits Cuba (inglés y espanol)
Rendezvous with lies
World Circuit Records celebrates 20 years
Autumn 2006
Life without Fidel
The landing of the Granma
America's favourite immigrants
Summer 2006
From Cuba with love: Cuban doctors in Pakistan
Teatro Miramar: a dream to be realised
Bush’s ‘secret’ plan for Cuba
Spring 2006
Exporting healthcare: Cuba and the real meaning of internationalism
Let there be Light
“Hombres not Nombres”
Winter 2005-6
Confessions of an “independent” trade unionist
We are stronger than ever
Europe partakes in a recipe for disaster cooked up in Washington
Autumn 2005
Brendan Barber pledges TUC support for Cuba
Five reasons why the people rule
Education from womb to tomb
Summer 2005
Bill and Joe’s Cuban cycle adventure
Poet of Guantanamo
Participation is key to Cuba’s democracy
Spring 2005
Is Venezuela next after Iraq?
Trip of a lifetime
Justice delayed, justice denied
Winter 2004/5
Cuba's Response to AIDS
Books: Bulwark against neo-liberalism
Guide to the `Report from the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba´
Autumn 2004
Book review: Cuba’s story
Autumn 2004
Heart strings
Speaking truth to power: Cuba at the UN
Summer 2004
Salud International to back Cuban internationalist doctors
Cuba saved my daughter
A revolution in culture
Spring 2004
Miami Five: Hopeful of justice
Biotech for all
US occupation of Guantanamo Bay is illegal, says top lawyer
Winter 2003/4
The truth about Reporters Sans Frontières
Solar-powered education
Charting women’s progress since 1959
Autumn 2003
Does the FCO website betray a political bias against Cuba?
Join the CSC bike ride to Cuba
How the US stole Guantanamo Bay
Summer 2003
Hands Off Cuba Campaign Launched
Monument to freedom
EU lines up with US
UK lawyer visits Havana
Ibrahim Ferrer: a lesson in greatness
My secret mission to meet Fidel
The Miami Five -an injustice too far
Spring 2003
Beyond the beach and sun:
CSC’s Father Geoff Bottoms visits one of the Five
Cuban student tours UK
Autumn 2002
British credit cards hit by US sanctions
Housing for the People
Moncada Day Cycle Challenge
Summer 2002
Evil Spirit
From May Day In Havana To The Cradle Of The Revolution
A dream for all times
How foreigners fuel US anti-Cuba policy
Spring 2002
African Roots
How the US planned to start a war with Cuba
Toys for Cuba
Welsh Education Minister meets Fidel
50 years of solidarity In 2010, the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples (Instituto Cubano de Amistad con los Pueblos, or ICAP for short) celebrated half a century of developing international solidarity and links between Cuba and the world.

Formed on 30 December 1960, the Institute’s first priority was to tell people outside Cuba of the true purpose of its embryonic Revolution and of the progressive changes taking place there in the face of threats and attacks from the United States.

At a time when the majority of international media only reported hostile and distorted opinions about the changes in Cuba, through ICAP, it was left to international solidarity campaigns like CSC to convey a truer picture of Cuban reality.

Consequently, ICAP’s principal task during these early years was to forge links with the groups that had formed in solidarity with Cuba worldwide, particularly following the imposition of the US blockade in February 1962. Today ICAP has relations with more than 2,000 solidarity groups worldwide, and developing these links remain the Institute’s first priority.

Work is divided in five geographical areas, each housed in a separate office in Havana’s Vedado district: Latin America and the Caribbean, North America and Puerto Rico, Europe, Asia and Oceania and Africa and the Middle East. ICAP’s palatial headquarters are located in Calle 17, once the home of the wealthy Faya Bonet family who, having made their fortune from sugar plantations, left Cuba for Florida in 1959.

It was from here that Holmedo Pérez Rubio, director of the European department, who has worked at ICAP for 36 years, described the Institute’s early years.

“One of the principal tasks for the new organisation was to arrange work brigades (where international volunteers work alongside Cubans on agricultural and building projects) so that people could see for themselves the ways in which the Revolution was transforming the lives of our people,” explains Holmedo.

The first work brigades had already visited the island before ICAP was formed. This included one in August 1960 with eight volunteers from the UK, one of whom, long-time CSC member Nicola Seyd, captured rare colour pictures of Che Guevara on camera when he came to address the volunteers. Another, the Venceremos brigade from the USA, continues to visit the island to this day, defying their country’s stringent laws and fines on those who do.

Other long-standing brigades are the Juan Rius Rivera from Puerto Rico, the José Martí from Europe, the Brigada Nórdica from Northern Europe (to which CSC sends people), the Southern Cross from Australia and New Zealand and numerous brigades from Latin America and the Caribbean. Recently, the 1st May Brigade was established to enable any nationality who wished to join Cubans in their May Day celebrations, to which CSC has sent 110 young trade unionists between 2008-2011.

ICAP has worked actively with the many solidarity groups in African countries. Cuba’s involvement in the struggle to achieve just and equitable societies in Algeria, Ethiopia and the Congo in the 1960s and in Angola in the 1980s, where it played a major role in ending apartheid in South Africa, as well as the hundreds of medical missions sent by Cuba throughout the continent has earned the island particular affection and support from Africans.

Despite the demise of support from Eastern European governments since 1989, there are still very active solidarity campaigns, especially in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Russia and the Ukraine. At the same time, since 1986, Cuba has been giving medical treatment to children affected by the Chernobyl disaster (including during the Special Period) and the arrangements made for the children during their visits have been the responsibility of ICAP.

ICAP’s work includes arranging conferences for activists from abroad. For the past six years, ICAP has organised the International Colloquium for the Miami Five in Holguín. This conference draws together groups from countries around the world to unite efforts and to consolidate the campaign to free the five Cubans unjustly imprisoned in the US since 1998. In 2010 there were about 350 participants from 56 countries, including a CSC group from the UK. (See pXX for details on how to participate in the 2011 conference).

On an individual level, representatives from ICAP frequently travel overseas, hosted by the solidarity campaign in each country they visit, to give talks and to inform people in those countries about the current situation in Cuba. In 2009, ICAP’S President, Kenia Serrano spoke at the Arab-Cuban Solidarity Forum held in Damascus attended by 12 Middle-Eastern countries and the CSC AGM in London.

Holmedo has travelled and worked abroad extensively in his 36 years working for ICAP. His father was a peasant from Sancti Spíritus before moving to Havana and becoming a metal worker. As a child, he would never have imagined that he would become the head of a major section of an organisation like ICAP.

As a nine year old he vividly remembers seeing Fidel and Camilo Cienfuegos in 1959 as the victory convoy passed near his house. It was thanks to the Revolution that he was given the opportunity to study International Economic Relations completely free of charge. It was also thanks to his decision as a nine year old not to leave the island in 1960 in Operation Peter Pan after being urged to do so by the priests at his school. In the US it is highly unlikely that he would have received the opportunities offered by the Revolution.

On 30 December 2010, ICAP celebrated its 50th anniversary, “Although,” says Holmedo, “the anniversary that we are celebrating is really 50 years of international solidarity with Cuba.” Nonetheless, no-one is resting on their laurels. “We need more than ever to continue defending the principles on which our Revolution has been built in the face of mounting US threats and the blockade which costs lives and millions of dollars a year,” explained Holmedo. “As the US government is now pressurising companies and banks from third-party countries to discontinue trading with the island, even with Cubans living abroad, the work done by solidarity groups is more important than ever.”
So what are the priorities for the future?

Holmedo described the three most important tasks for Cuba’s friends: “First, it is essential that we continue the struggle for the freedom of our Five Heroes. Next comes the continuing condemnation of the US blockade which inflicts so much damage and suffering on our society. Finally, we have the task of counteracting the inaccurate and often openly hostile reporting about Cuba by the mainstream foreign media – what we Cubans call the ‘media war’ against our country (la guerra mediática). We supply information to the solidarity organisations so that they can confront the media and inform the public about the way Cuba really is in their own countries.”

Before Luis Marrón became Political Counsellor at the Embassy in London, he was head of the section for Northern Europe at ICAP, having worked for the organisation for over 20 years. Coming from a Lebanese and Spanish background with parents who were primary school teachers, he was born during the first year of the Revolution. He remembers vividly how, during his early years, he saw his mother voluntarily giving lessons in literacy to adults who attended classes in their home. “One point that needs to be made,” he emphasised, “is that support for Cuba comes from people who cover a broad spectrum of political views.

It is not just people on the left who believe that Cuba has the right to be a sovereign state, that the US blockade should be lifted, that our Five Heroes have been unjustly imprisoned and that Gerardo and René should have the right to receive visits from their wives.”
Kenia Serrano Puig, the new President of ICAP, has reiterated that Cuba must continue to strengthen its links with other countries and solidarity organisations so that more people around the world may come to know the true nature of Cuban society. The need to defend Cuba and the principles of the Revolution remain as important as ever.

After 50 years, ICAP has links with 2,121 solidarity organisations in 151 countries, some of which do not recognise Cuba and in which Cuba has no diplomatic mission. In Europe alone there are over 800 solidarity organisations in 45 countries. Kenia has described Cuba as being “the voice of those who have no voice.” For this to happen, others have to speak for Cuba where Cuba’s voice is unheard – and within the British Cuba Solidarity Campaign there is no shortage of people who are willing to do so.
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