[MKE - Indymedia] S. Ct. on Guantanamo, Cuban law on Gender issues, Madisalsa on July 5, Caravan on its way, Sister Cities Report on July 11th
Art Heitzer
aheitzer at igc.org
Fri Jun 30 14:16:36 PDT 2006
News issued by: Wisconsin Coalition to Normalize Relations with Cuba
633 W. Wisconsin Ave. Suite 1410, Milwaukee, WI 53203
(414) 273-1040 ext. 12; cubawifriends at mindspring.com
Check out our website: www.wicuba.org
______________________________________________________
Best wishes to all for a happy Fourth of July and preceding weekend! We have
two news items, two event announcements, and a quick report on the Caravan
visit to Milwaukee, which we hope will be of interest, and :
1. Report of Supreme Court's Guantanamo Decision: National Lawyers Guild
President-Elect and Law Professor Marjorie Cohn on yesterday's U.S. Supreme
Court decision re Guantanamo Military Commissions, Congress and the Geneva
Accords: A Supreme Rebuke - Bush Loses Guantanamo Case, in Counterpunch,
click on http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0630-20.htm
2. Reuters Report: "A draft bill presented to parliament ... if approved,
would make Cuba the most liberal nation in Latin
America on gender issues." (full article below)
3. This Wednesday, July 5, 2006, 6:30 - 9:00 pm, River Rhythms at
Milwaukee's Pere Marquette Park, downtown at the Milwaukee River, features
Madisalsa, www.madisalsa.com, repeatedly voted as Madison's best dance band,
a 10 member ensemble devoted to the musical traditions of Cuba, Puerto Rico,
and The Dominican Republic. Free!
4. Both our collections and send off event for the 17th Friendshipment
Caravan from Pastors for Peace were very successful. To follow the caravan,
to Texas, through Mexico, to Cuba and back, see www.pastorsforpeace.org.
Deep thanks to all those who contributed to make this a success!
5. July 11, 7pm, Ricardo Gonzalez (founder of the Madison-Camaguey Sister
City Project, and National President of the Cuban Committee for Democracy)
will report on the very important recent Tri-National Sister Cities Conf. in
Ontario, joined by Marilyn Weiland's report on her then just-completed 3
weeks language study visit in Venezuela) -- at Milwaukee's Central United
Methodist Church (CUMC), 639 N. 25th.]
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Reuters Report: "A draft bill presented to parliament ... if approved, would
make Cuba the most liberal nation in Latin America on gender issues." The
article follows, with a brief introduction.
"A draft bill was presented to parliament last year and was well
received, she said. It is expected to come up for a vote in December.
If approved, it would make Cuba the most liberal nation in Latin
America on gender issues."
---------
Pls. check out this interesting article and note that while Mariela's
relation with Fidel may be worth noting, both of her parents have been key
leaders of the Cuban Revolution: Wilma Espin, as top leader of the
Federation of Cuban Women (FMC), and Raul Castro, head of the Cuban military
and among those few survivors of the Granma landing, who then lead the
successful revolt of Cuban peasants and others against Batista's army. A
few years ago the top NLG leadership was privileged to meet with her and
discuss these related issues. --Art Heitzer
Castro niece fights for new revolution
By Esteban Israel
HAVANA (Reuters) - Mariela Castro is leading a Cuban revolution less
well known than her Uncle Fidel's: one in favor of sexual tolerance
within the island's macho society.
Castro, 43, is leading the charge from her government-funded National
Center for Sex Education, based in an old Havana mansion.
As director of the group, she promoted a soap opera that scandalized
many Cubans in March by sympathetically depicting bisexuality. The
controversial show depicted, among other story lines, the life of a
construction worker who leaves his wife and children for the man next
door.
Now President Castro's niece is pushing for passage of a law that
would give transsexuals free sex change operations and hormonal
therapy in addition to granting them new identification documents
with their changed gender.
A draft bill was presented to parliament last year and was well
received, she said. It is expected to come up for a vote in December.
If approved, it would make Cuba the most liberal nation in Latin
America on gender issues.
Castro says her goal is to bring the revolution her uncle and father,
Defense Minister Raul Castro, fought 47 years ago to the terrain of
sexuality. Her group has also campaigned for better AIDS prevention
as well as acceptance of homosexuality, bisexuality and
transvestites.
"I want to bring the revolution's humanity to those aspects of life
that it hasn't reached because of old prejudices," she told Reuters.
Much has changed, she says, since the 1960s when homosexuals were
sent to work camps, or the 1970s when gay men and women were denied
certain jobs as "ideological deviants."
"None of that exists anymore," she said. "But that is not to say the
same for homophobic attitudes."
Cuba eliminated the crime of sodomy in 1979. Cuba is also a country
where abortion is a constitutional right and divorce a simple
procedure.
A POWERFUL FAMILY
Mariela Castro says she isn't a leader, but simply part of a movement
for greater tolerance.
Nevertheless, she admits her access to the two most powerful figures
in the country has helped her cause.
Castro says she has the support of her 75-year-old father, who is
second in charge of the all-powerful Communist party and as first
vice president in line to succeed Fidel.
"Of course, I talk with my father whenever I have the chance. He is
one of those in the party that supports our work. He thinks it is
useful, good, just," she said.
Castro sees her uncle less often.
"Fidel is very sensitive to these issues," she said. "He is a pensive
man and when the subject is one of justice it gets his attention. He
asks for more information, more elements to consider."
Castro sees herself as continuing the work of her mother, Vilma
Espin, head of the Cuban Womens Federation for the last 45 years.
Eighty-seven percent of the island's women are members.
Espin, considered one of the most influential personalities of the
Cuban revolution, is the originator of the Cuban family code adopted
in 1975, which calls on men to share household chores and child care.
Castro said many people ask her if she plans to push legalization of
gay marriages.
"We do not know what we will propose. It depends on what we identify
as homosexuals' and lesbians' main needs," Castro said.
"Marriage is not as important in Cuba as in other more Catholic
countries. Here consensual pairing is more important," she said,
"What matters is love."
REUTERS
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