Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 17

This movement has accomplished great achievements, such as the First World Summit of Afrodescents and the International Year and Decade for People of African Descent, the Resolution for which constitutes concrete evidence of the independent nature of a global anti-racism movement, one that issues both strong criticisms and solid proposals regarding hegemonies and inequalities that persist. In recent years, highlights include legal and institutional instruments against racism in several of the continent’s countries, and the approval of the Inter-American Convention against All Forms of Racism. In the spring and summer of 2012, two academic events in Washington and Havana, and another more political - in Caracas, gave way to the creation of ARAAC, its mission to face the problem of racism, but while always affirming the power and interests of governments whose records are an embarrassment. In Cuba, the ARAAC chapter was publicly announced in August 2013. In a Havana bookstore, three doze n interested academics did what we have done so many times: we intensely discussed the racial problem; serious and profound things were said; traumas and frustrations were shared; we spoke of pressing needs and dangers. But, as is always the case, the representatives of power, who could and should acknowledge their responsibility and come up with effective solutions, were not there. A new person in charge of Human Rights for the ARAAC showed up at this meeting, giving a highfaluting and unintelligible speech. Another meeting was planned for the next month, at which proposals and measures were supposedly going to be discussed. When it took place, at the Casa de ALBA Cultural in Havana, the prior gathering’s spirit had been watered down into a strange, panic-laden climate. It was obvious that those in power (although invisible) had seen to this; very evident was their annoyance and discomfort with the ideas and expectations the August meeting had generated. Before a shocked audience, and with face filled with obvious panic and tension, Gisela Arandia, ARAAC coordinator, presented insipid dissertations about “Chávez and Africa,” “Specifics about Abolition in Brazil” and “The Life and Work of Evarist Estenoz.” In truth, there were participants who advocated for transparency and publicity for these debates on race as well as project goals. Intellectuals Tomás Fernández Robaina, Tato Quiñones and even Zurbano, who did not seem to know about the change in plans, made valid points and proposals for promoting a consistent approach to the subject. Notwithstanding, from that day on, the Human Rights coordinator never showed up again, and the project has become mired in a kind of lethargy that Zurbano now laments. A few days after the first meeting, which did fuel the expectations of some enthusiasts, I presented my doubts about the future of the proposal we agreed upon at that meeting in “Mesa de los leales maltratados” (Cubanet, August 9 2013) precisely because of this new platform’s lack of institutional independence, and because of the authorities’ consistent refusal to allow for an open debate and the activation of mechanisms and designs connected to the structural nature of racism, one that affects us all in some way. Among other things, I warned that: “It is good to remind the ARAAC-Cuba leaders and members that external and internal pressure regarding the race problem is growing. Thus, if they don’t want to take on the risk of a new failure, they should face the problem headon and meaningfully …” “The first thing these consecrated warriors for equality should do is set aside their political and ideological preferences regarding social, human and moral assessments and considerations linked to the race problem. Independent of their ideological leanings, if these activists do not acknowledge the Cuban authorities’ historical responsibility for deepening the inequalities they say they want to combat, their declared goals will not progress much at all. If the ARAAC-Cuba does not want to go down in history as a new instrument for fraud and manipulation, it should make itself an authentic mechanism for applying pressure on the authorities and demand that they respect their citizens and their commitments above all.” 17