Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 26

“official” (government controlled) social science researchers are reluctant to explore them. Origins of the tragedy Since the day it took power, the revolutionary government has demonstrated its particular interest in distorting the socioeconomic composition of Havana’s inhabitants. It seemed clear that residents of the capital, who lived slightly more comfortably and better informed than the rest of Cubans, might find it difficult adapting to the conditions of extreme poverty and complete totalitarian control that would soon ensue, as initial enthusiasm of the triumph began to wear off. The incipient government faced an immediate need to avoid obviously foreseeable risks. Officials had neither the time nor patience to wait for capital residents to emigrate abroad spontaneously and on their own volition (as would eventually happen). Nor could they transfer Havana residents to the country’s interior, although they attempted to do so. The solution was to impose change in the socioeconomic structure and, of course, on the way people thought. For this to be possible, the city’s class demographic must itself be altered. Thus began the surges from Cuba’s east. First came the members of the Rebel Army (the Revolutionary Army). Then hundreds of thousands of students, whose arrival in Havana was understandable at first, given the scarcity of postsecondary schools and vocational training programs in the interior; as time went on, the migrating students were actually military recruits. And after them, contingents of laborers by the dozens for widely varying projects, especially in construction. Then came police, new teachers and social workers. In every instance, it was assumed that the newcomers would not only take up perman V