'We are now in a position
in which we are much more than simple instruments of one nation. We are
now the hope of the unredeemed Americas. All eyes - those of the great
oppressors and those of the hopeful - are firmly on us" - Che Guevara
Cuba's Fidel Castro
is a survivor. Having outlasted nine U.S. Presidents and survived numerous
assassination attempts by the CIA, Castro has ruled Cuba for 43 years and,
whether you love him or hate him, he must be considered one of the most
important political figures of the 20th century. Fidel, a documentary
by Cuban-American journalist, Estella Bravo, is a sympathetic portrait
of the Cuban leader that was commissioned by Channel 4 in Britain, and
won the Distinguished Achievement for Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking
from the Urbanworld Film Festival in New York. The film spans a period
of 40 years of Castro's rule from his early childhood and college days
to his Presidency of Cuba and includes interviews with Harry Belafonte,
Nelson Mandela, Alice Walker, Gabriel Garcia-Marquez, Sydney Pollock, and
others. Rare footage shows him swimming with his bodyguards, working in
the fields cutting sugar cane, visiting his childhood school, hanging out
with Ted Turner and Jack Nicholson, and talking with Elian Gonzales, the
six-year old boy who became a rallying point for Cuban exiles in Miami.
Released from prison after
serving two years of a fifteen-year sentence, Castro took a ragtag army
of volunteers and recruited farmers, women, and working people in the mountains
to fight a decade-long guerilla war that led to the overthrow of American-backed
Fulgencio Batista and his takeover of Cuba in 1959. Unfortunately, Ms.
Bravo shows us very little of the war or the reasons behind the popular
uprising (better depicted in the film I Am Cuba). Once in power,
Castro began a series of agrarian reforms that included nationalizing the
foreign refineries, seizing U.S. owned businesses such as Chase Manhattan
Bank, United Fruit Company, and Texaco Oil. Added to that, American dismay
at the mass trials of those who opposed the revolution led to the establishment
of the U.S. embargo in 1960 and Castro's embrace of the Soviet Union, the
establishment of a Communist dictatorship, and the suspension of democratic
elections.
Though at times revealing,
I found Fidel on the whole to be overly simplistic. Ms. Bravo extols
Castro virtues on almost every front including his support for free health
care including surgical procedures unavailable in other Third World Countries,
and Cuba's universal education for all its citizens up to the tertiary
level. These accomplishments are important, yet many contentious issues
are simply ignored. Bravo never mentions that homosexuality was considered
counterrevolutionary and subject to imprisonment and forced labor until
1988 nor the Human Rights Watch Report in 2000 that states that Cuba has
routinely imprisoned and/or harassed "peaceful opponents of the government".
I recognize that many of the well documented abuses have come about because
of Castro's desire to protect the revolution, knowing full well that the
U.S. has channeled millions of dollars to dissidents in hopes of destroying
it, yet these are issues that cry out for fuller examination. While Castro
has become a symbol of courage and independence for millions of Third World
people, he is neither saint nor demon, but a man of deep contradictions
and complexities whose full story waits to be told.
Howard
Schumann