mandag 12. november 2012

Three weeks in Cuba

Bernstein, Germany 10.11-2012

It is a long time since I wrote here on my blog, so I think I have to come with a small update about the latest developments in my life, before I start telling you about my three weeks in Cuba.

In July, I earned myself a girlfriend. I was playing on the streets of Bergen, and she decided to give herself, 20 kroners and an ice-cream, and what could I do except saying thank you. Her name is Kristine, and she will soon play an important role in this story. In August I lost whatever brief housing I had over the summer, and started to look for a new job, as the season at my museum drew to an end. In September I got bored with only getting crappy job-offers and living on mercy, so I decided it was time to get “out there” one more time, and then start studying after New Year. I have applied for a place at theology in Bergen, and have gotten a room at Alrek, so I am ready for the next semester. So, from one day to the next, I had three months to fill.

The first thing I did was to leave Norway for Germany. After some days at my grandparents’, I went to the South-West, and locked myself into a small hut (once a mill) owned by Wiebke, with my computer, and wrote for ten days. I wrote about the Africa-trip that this blog is all about, but still have quite a lot of work ahead of me before it is a book.

Now over to Cuba. Why would I go to Cuba? Many people have asked me that question, and to be honest, I did not go to Cuba for Cuba’s sake. Kristine went there mid September, to do parts of here nursery-school there, so I went visiting on the 18th of October. I came home yesterday (9th of November).

Cuba is an Island, west of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, east of Mexico and south of the United States. It was a Spanish colony until the liberation in the 1890s. In 59 Fidel Castro and his revolutionaries got power, and since then it has been a communistic country. Fidel is now a little old, so his younger brother Raul Castro is leading the country. I have thought a lot about the communistic system of Cuba, and could write a lot, but I think there is no space for it here. I can say this much though. It works to the extent that everyone is more or less equally poor, no one starves to death (not even during the crises 90-94), and people get quite lazy. I think people are not happy as it is, but I think many will be unhappy, should the system be radically changed. The one thing that seems to make the Cubans angry is that they were not allowed to travel outside their country, but there is a brand new law on that now, so starting at the 14th of January Cubans can leave the country (if they have the money).

I visited Cuba for the sake of seeing Kristine, and regarding that here school is in Holguin (North-West), I was there for most of the time. I met here in Trinidad though, and we tried to get a bit around during the weekends, but hurricane Sandy made things a bit complicated. She did not destroy too much in Holguin though. She broke a lot of branches and some trees were unrooted, but no houses were damaged. Santiago was hit much worse, and even though I did not go there I believe it when they say that most of Santiago was damaged. Kristine and I went to Guardelavaca (40 kilometres from Holguin) only a day after the storm hit, and when we eventually got there (we had to take some back roads, because the main road was closed) we found it without water and electricity, and the big beach-hotel (we did not stay there) had suffered badly with plenty of broken windows. It must have been even much worse further east (between Santiago and Baracoa) where Sandy went through.

This post is a bit chaotic, but I cannot tell you about everything I did in Cuba chronologically, and it would not be appropriate either. Last weekend, though, we wanted to head east and towards Baracoa. We rented a scooter (we wanted a motorbike, but there was nothing to get except 50 cc scooters) , and since top speed was between 30 and 50 depending on the wind, and we had to walk and push where the road was at its steepest, we never got that far. We got to Mayari and up to Cuba’s highest waterfall (over 100 meters), but due to destructions by the storm, the path leading to the foot of the falls was closed. It was also very foggy, so we did not see too much. We had great fun though, pushing a scooter through Cuba, but there was no use in continuing further east. Instead we drove to Gibara, a nice little fisher-village.

The last two days I spend in Havana, and two days was just enough to get a brief overview of the old town, and visit two good art museums. Havana is a proper beautiful capital city with plenty of beautiful old buildings, good museums on every corner and saying has is that the nightlife is good too. It does of course have a seaside avenue (the Malecon). I could say that Cuba has many things that remind me of Africa, but I have not seen a town like Havana in Africa. Nor have I seen art of the quality that you have in Cuba. I recon some suffering and intellectuality leads you right there. Antonia Eriz’s the wall-styled paintings (in the museum de belles artes de Cuba) talked straight to me.

It’s funny how I came to Cuba with three goals; first and foremost to see Kristine and spend time with her. Mission accomplished. Secondly I came to learn some Spanish. I can say I managed that too. Thirdly I wanted to see some of Cuba and the communism. Off the three, I feel I managed this the least, but still that is what I go on about passage after passage. Few trips have given me so many new thoughts and ideas as this, which once again proves to me how the human being lives and breathes of new experiences.

I will have to add a little paragraph about my days in Holguin. That was after all the biggest part of my trip. Holguin is a province-capital, and a fairly big city. Kristine is there with nine other Norwegian girls to do three months there in their nursery-study. Normally they have to live in a hotel, but while I was there, Kristine was allowed to move out of the hotel and into a “casa particulare”, private accommodation, with me. In stark contrast to the service at the hotel, the service in the private rooms is good. Private stuff was a long time completely forbidden in Cuba, but the last years small things like taxis, small “cafeterias” and even some restaurants have been allowed, and a family is allowed to rent out two rooms if they fulfil the requirements, being a room with bathroom, air-condition and a fridge. We stayed at Lissie and her family, and had a really good time there. Lissie and her husband Ronaldo were very nice, and their granddaughter, Veronica (one year and four months), was about the sweetest little thing you can imagine. She learned to walk while we were there, and learned many new works. When I was at safe distance she looked at me and peaked around the corners, but as soon as I came close she ran to mummy or grandfather and hid and even cried as if I was a monster.

We spend a lot of time wandering around town, looking for stuff to eat or things to buy. Cuba has plenty of shops, but they usually don’t sell much other than soft-drinks and cigarettes and a lot of alcohol. It’s strange to see a big shop with many shelves, but nothing in them. We also spend some time with schoolwork, and I could of course study while Kristine was at her school (some few hours from Monday to Thursday). I brought a book for my study next spring, and I finished it, not because I had to, but because it was so interesting (thank you Sigvart!). I did not get many Cuban friends, but in the Norwegian group I got to know Kristines three best friends, Tone-Lill, Cecilie and Liv. I played for them two evenings (on the guitar), and we played volleyball and card-games. I could even talk to them. Cecilie speaks Arab and has been in Egypt and that area and could give me insight of that society from a woman’s point of view. The other girls (the 6 I have not mentioned with name) seemed to be most interested in dancing, drinking, nice dresses, getting shampoo and boys. It is sad to see what people in Cuba think about when they hear Norway (other than it being cold and having long days and nights depending on time of year). One guy I met in Havana new one word in Norwegian. It was drita-full (dead-drunk). It seems that most Norwegian that come to Cuba (or anywhere) end up drita-full in some bar. Cubans like to party and dance themselves. After all, they have a lot to forget, and they don’t need to go early to work, because they get the same salary anyway. It makes me embarrassed to be associated with Norway when I see how many Norwegians are, when the bottle of beer costs 6 kroners instead of 60 (or even in Norway when it does cost 60).
Wiebke's mill

The seaside in Havana

Kristine does a little "guantanamera"

Landscape from the "Valle de los ingenios" by Trinidad



What a beauty! Kristine with Holguin in the background

Gibara

Old american cars and Bici-Taxis in Havana

One of several forts in Havana

Now I have written too much already. Before I talk badly about something else it is time to round up with telling you about the next two months. If you remember Jeremy, it is good for you. I will go to France next week, spend ca ten days to drive motorbikes with him there before we head to Madagascar together to drive motorbikes there. My parents will arrive in Madagascar a week or so before Christmas, and Jeremy will go back home. Christmas will be celebrated with the whole family in Toliara, and on the second of January I fly slowly back to Norway, coming to Bergen on the fourth. But most of this will be here on the blog, so just stay tuned in!

10 kommentarer:

  1. Tradisjonen tru snik eg meg inn med fyrste kommentar. Er på veg til universitetet, men ser fram til å lese om ferda så langt så snart eg kjem tilbake til leilegheita!

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  2. Ja, tradisjoner er viktige. God lesning!

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  3. Nice :) Høres ut som du har hatt ein spennande tur! Kjekt å sjå litt livstegn igjen =)
    Saludos de Bolivia

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  4. Kjekt å høre om hvordan du hadde det på Cuba og se bilder derifra. Hilsen gamlingene og ungdommen i Skjenlia :)

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  5. Buenos Knuta: Ja, det var annerledes og spennende. Gleder meg til å se dere igjenn, og håper livet i Bolivia er bra!
    Fam. Misje: Takk

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  6. Utrolig artig å lese bloggen din HC, du er flink til å skrive. Vakre bilder!
    Konge at du kommer på NLA til våren, hvilken bok leste du i? Bare å glede seg ;) Klæm fra Linda

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  7. Takk! Ja, gleder meg til NLA. Jeg leste "det gamle testamentet - Analyse av tekstar i utval". Det blir stas.
    Klem=)

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    Svar
    1. Jaja, hvis du likte DEN så er du godt rustet. God advent!

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  8. Bra bilder og ærlig tekst -Så fint! Håper du får en fin jul på Madagaskar! Hilsen Odrun

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