|
Belafonte and Hollywood’s Humanitarianism ©
2003 ABIP
Agustin Blazquez with the collaboration of
Jaums Sutton
Cubans in need of democracy and human rights
instead are accustomed to the throng of
international true believers visiting their
island as guests of the Castro regime for
the past 44 years.
Many are part of the Hollywood crowd that
espouse far-left, socialist and communist
causes, like Jane Fonda, Robert Redford,
Danny Glover, Jack Nicholson, Gene Hackman,
Ed Asner, Peter Weller, the late Jack Lemon,
Woody Harrelson, Leonardo di Caprio, Frances
McDormand, Naomi Campbell, Francis Ford
Coppola, Oliver Stone, Steven Spielberg,
Joel Coen, etc.
The people in
Cuba
realize that many are naïve fools that are
being used and others are die-hard Marxists
and Stalinists. They all seem clear about
what they think is best for the Cuban people
while they visit as pampered guests of the
Cuban elite. They are seen, however, as
collaborators of Castro’s repression and
their activities are noted.
They are also seen as bricks in Castro’s
foundation that they help extend all over
the world. After leaving Cuba, they talk
about the fraudulent accomplishments of the
revolution as if they were real, thereby
misleading and misinforming others abroad
and recruiting more for the constant
pilgrimage to Castro’s island.
As in former communist countries, Cuba began
drawing these fools in 1959 and has
developed and perfected the technique of
attracting and making the most of them. The
structured visits make it almost impossible
for the guests to see through the
propaganda. In the communist inside jargon
these people are classified as “useful
fools.” Indeed, they are.
In the article Harry Belafonte's Havana
Farewell, published on July 18, 2000 on
FrontPageMagazine.com written by Ronald
Radosh, he says “Most American admirers of
Harry Belafonte probably don't realize that
the popular singer and actor is an
unreconstructed Stalinist.”
The article continues, “In April 1997,
Belafonte was the featured speaker at the
60th Anniversary celebration of the Veterans
of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, where he
honored the efforts of these self-proclaimed
‘premature anti-fascists’ who in reality
served as Stalin's brigade in Spain, the
enforcers of Soviet policy.”
A look at this article reveals Belafonte’s
long history of Stalinism. Of course, in
our democracy he is free to think and
promote whatever he wants. But the article
exposes what lies behind this seemingly
harmless humanitarian.
If he had been a fan of Hitler, Belafonte’s
reputation would have been destroyed long
ago. And that is a double standard when you
take into account the crimes of the Nazis
vs. the crimes of the Communists. Both
should be equally repudiated by all people
of goodwill. There is no place for either
one in a civilized world.
With the excuse of “supporting the Cuban
people,” Belafonte’s multiple trips and
speeches at communist rallies in Cuba are
very much resented by those opposed to
Castro inside the island, who consider him
nothing less than a collaborator of the
regime.
His interference in internal Cuban affairs
is not welcome, especially since he is an
entertainer, not a Cuban and has never lived
there as an ordinary citizen for any of the
44 years of suffering the most brutal regime
in the 500 years of Cuban history.
What is incredible is that for many years
Belafonte has been UNICEF's Goodwill
Ambassador and in his constant visits to
Cuba has never denounced Castro’s regime for
violating the United Nations Charter since
1959 as well as the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
For example, among others: Article 3,
“Everyone has the right to life, liberty and
security of person.” Article 5, “No one
should be subjected to torture or to cruel,
inhumane or degrading treatment or
punishment.” Article19, “Everyone has the
right to freedom of opinion and expression;
this right includes freedom to hold opinions
without interference and to seek, receive
and impart information and ideas through any
media and regardless of frontiers.” Article
20, No. 1, “Everyone has the right to
freedom of peaceful assembly and
association.” No. 2, “No one may be
compelled to belong to an association.”
Apparently, Castro can do no wrong in the
eyes of Belafonte even though he promised
the Cuban people to restore the 1940
Constitution, to provide an entirely
civilian government, to have full democratic
political freedom of expression and press
and to have honest and free elections.
Instead, Castro installed a totalitarian
communist regime, which in reality is
totally illegitimate, because it violated
the 1940 Constitution.
But apparently, the fact that the little
Cuban people under Castro do not have the
same rights he enjoys is fine with
Belafonte’s humanitarianism.
In 1990 and 1991, I saw on PBS, Belafonte’s
series Routes of Rhythm. I wrote to
Belafonte agreeing 100% that Cuba was the
lunching ground and source of inspiration
for popular music in this hemisphere. But
what I could not overlook was that “for the
last 32 years no more new rhythms have
evolved and been launched from that island.
That is very revealing indeed. I wonder if
it has anything to do with freedom of
creation.”
After pointing out the propaganda he was
exposed to in the making of his series,
distortions and revisions to the history of
Cuba according to Castro I continued, "Your
show, with the unfortunate misinformation it
contained, may fool/foul many Americans.
But the eyes of a Cuban, who remembers the
past and is up to date with the present
reality, can see through the routes of your
show Ruse of Rhythm.
“It is a shame that there is plenty of
information about Cuba in public records
that no one bothers to research. The lack
of interest to know and hear what has really
been going on in Cuba and the apathy of
reporting by the [U.S.] media has made it
possible to cover up the truth, to create
the myth of Fidel among gullible
intellectuals and political activists and
help the longevity of that regime in
detriment to the Cuban people trapped inside
that island.”
The last paragraph of my still unanswered
letter said, “The people interviewed on your
show have not possessed freedom of speech as
we know it since 1959. So, in their
interviews they are doing their best under
the circumstances. The only free people in
Cuba
are the political prisoners in jails and
concentration camps, and the dead.”
On March 26, 2001, at the
Lincoln
Center
in New York, Harry Belafonte performed a
concert to benefit the Center for Cuban
Studies, a non-profit organization with a
long history of pro-Castro activities.
Founded in 1972 and headed by Sandra
Levinson, this organization is dedicated to
counter the effects of American policy
toward Cuba. This concerned-about-Cuba
veteran Calypso singer has not raised his
voice before for the outrageous violations
of humans rights going on in Cuba for
decades, but he raised his singing voice and
collected money for a notorious pro-Castro
organization.
This concert was also sponsored by the
pro-Castro Artists and Writers Committee for
Normalization of Relations with Cuba. Actor
Danny Glover, who is the founding member of
this organization, hosted the evening.
Glover, described in his bio as a
“humanitarian,” is also a frequent guest of
the Castro regime.
However, the humanitarian Glover has never
raised his voice on behalf of the Cuban
people’s human rights, the existence of the
shameful tourist apartheid, the
disproportionate majority of black Cubans in
Castro’s dungeons or the absence of black
Cubans in key government positions. What
has Danny Glover done on behalf of the black
Cuban political prisoners like Dr. Oscar
Elias Biscet?
As further evidence of what lies behind the
scenes of this event, the fanatical
pro-Castro “religious” organization Pastors
for Peace was also promoting this
fundraiser.
On June 2000, Belafonte was a featured
speaker at a political rally in Cuba
honoring convicted Soviet spies Ethel and
Julius Rosenberg.
On November 2002, Belafonte insulted
Secretary of State Colin Powell comparing
him with a plantation slave who is “serving
his master [President Bush] well.”
Belafonte was insulting to National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice when he used his
influence to have her disinvited as a
keynote speaker at an event where he was
going to be honored for his “humanitarian”
efforts.
Communism exterminated 100 million people.
Is it humanitarian to promote it?
And on December 2002, while Belafonte was
visiting Havana again with his comrade Danny
Glover because of the 24th International
Festival of New Latin American Film, he used
the opportunity to criticize in Cuba’s
communist newspaper Granma the U.S. policies
in Iraq. Glover expressed similar feelings.
Belafonte, an American from the U.S. says,
“It would be very difficult to find a nation
more committed to the culture of its people
and the development of the culture than I
have witnessed in Cuba.''
However, Maritza Lugo Fernandez, a former
Cuban political prisoner from her dungeon in
a women’s jail in
Cuba
accused Castro’s regime of “keeping the
Cuban people in complete ignorance about
politics and democracy.”
Who has better knowledge of Castro’s Cuba,
Harry Belafonte or Maritza Lugo Fernandez?
Unfortunately, people like Belafonte and
other “humanitarians” from the Hollywood
crowd contribute with their extraordinary
influence to the misunderstanding of the
Cuban situation. Far from helping the Cuban
people victimized by a brutal regime, they
willingly serve at the side of their
executioners.
© 2003 ABIP
Agustin Blazquez, Producer/director of the
documentaries
COVERING CUBA, COVERING CUBA 2: The Next
Generation & COVERING CUBA 3: Elian
(available in VHS & DVD at
http://www.cubacollectibles.com/
Author with Carlos Wotzkow of the book
COVERING AND DISCOVERING and translator with
Jaums Sutton of the book by Luis Grave de
Peralta Morell THE MAFIA OF HAVANA: The
Cuban Cosa Nostra
Top
^
|