Home / Contact / Stories,
News & Reports / Photos
Worldwide Gay Life,
Sites and Insights
Stories + Photographs + News + Reports + Links
Gay
Cuba 2003
Intro:
This story is part two of a pair of stories about gay Cuba on this
web
site. The first, Gay
Cuba 1997-02 (on a separate page) is a compilation of reports,
stories and news that I stitched together from numerous sources before
I
visited
Cuba.
I
suggest
you peruse that story before reading part two, It will give you a
broad
idea about how controversial homosexuality is in Cuba under
socialism.
The second story, on this page, Gay Cuba 2003, is the result of my
visit to that once-paradise island where gay life is still alive and
humming although repressed. Not surprisingly, lesbigay folks
dance a careful
line between
relative freedom and relative risk.
Also see:
Gay Cuba News & Reports 1997-2002
Gay Cuba News & Reports 2003-07
Cuba
Photo Galleries
Richard
Ammon
February 2003
Updated July 2007
A
brief reading about life in Havana reveals four common themes:
(1) watching or participating in the cruisy gay scene in front
of the Yara Cinema and the Teatro Nacional; (2) going to a private
gay 'fiestas
de diez pesos' (informal disco dances) which happen anywhere
anytime; (3) hearing about political repression and (4) seeing the pervasive
poverty that leads to sex for sale.
These titillating bits may be within the collective stew that is today's
gay Cuba today but I think they represent only a portion of what
a 'normal' Cuban gay man or lesbian woman experiences as they go
about their daily lives.
During my visit to Cuba in early 2003, I too found the sexy sharks
outside the Yara Cinema and Teatro Nacional to be appealing milk
chocolate, but that scene happens only at night on that corner; it
also happens
downtown
in the Central Park area by the large tourist hotels.
I
didn't manage to make my way to a 'fiesta de diez pesos' in one
of the
grubby suburbs because I was told they were shut down by the police.
But another reporter, Michael Luongo, in Havana a the same time
did find one--so much
for hearsay. He described it thus:
"Special
taxis lined up around the Corner from the Yara Cinema, and the drivers
all knew the secret location of the evening's gay parties. Getting
into a cab was not a simple matter though. My new friends spoke with
the drivers, but avoided the glare of the police as they did so, and
when it came time to hire a cab, we made a mad dash away from the police
to another street. The police in pursuit began whistling and waving
to stop us from getting in a cab. "It's like a joke" explained
Magdelana, when I asked her about the police once we were safely on
our way. "At times it's too much, but I think, honey, we have the
real power."
"But
later, stopped at a roadblock in the middle of nowhere, just
shy of the party, the police forced the driver to get out, show
his
ID, and answer questions for several minutes. They obviously knew where
the 'secret' party was, and we were given access at their discretion.
The party was in a courtyard between some small houses, and
in time, hundreds of locals and tourists were dancing to music I could
have heard at home - Whitney and Britney, with some Latina divas thrown
into the mix. A few men wore U.S. flag bandanas on their head,
which Fernando said could get them arrested. I asked Magdelana
why people living in the complex didn't call the cops. "If I
pay you, you say nothing," she responded." (For the full
story by Luongo see report http://www.globalgayz.com/cuba-news03-06.html,
article2 on
this site.)
A Discreet Community
But these night haunts hardly constitute the whole gay 'scene' in Havana.
From my observations and interviews the bulk of Havana lesbigay life more accurately consists of people such as the couples and singles I
saw at the ballet one evening in the ornate Teatro Nacional in the central
district next to enormous capitol building. The four performances were
sold out but my new friends--a gay couple of four years--secured me
a ticket. As the theatre goers gathered out front it was like a family
reunion as men and some women (I noticed far fewer female couples) shook
hands or exchanged cheek kisses (a standard greeting in Cuba).
Here were some of Cuba's middle class gay society out for an evening.
Nicely dressed and groomed (more conservative than chic), they gossiped
and chatted and laughed with a jovial and amicable energy. My hosts
seemed to be especially well connected as they mingled with many others
and introduced me to some who
were a little surprised but pleased that an Americano was there.
Not
a lot of U.S. citizens make the effort to go to Cuba, legally or
not, and even fewer gay or lesbian travelersstill, more than
ever before.
Before the show, during the intermission and after I watched as the
audience--gay and straight--gathered into clutches of friends. Of course
I couldn't tell how often or not these people met during their daily
routines, but it seemed to me that the gay circles prized the evening
as a special gathering where they could be 'out' in public without
drawing notice. These were not the daring and risky guys at the Yara
Cinema with scams for naive passing tourists.
Rather
these were the conservative closeted professionals with (low
paying) careers and long term relationships to guard. I saw very few
younger guys in the crowd. Mostly the folks were middle age who could
afford the ($10 orchestra seat) ticket price, the appropriate clothes
and the taxi fare.
Just before the start of the ballet, the esteemed retired prima donna
and current director of the Cuban Ballet Alicia Alonso entered her
center box seat demurely bowing to the spontaneous applause that greeted
her. Like Havana, she was beloved and worn.
Gay Friendly B&B
My hosts for my sojourn in Havana were Marcos and Raul (not their real
names) who live in a four-room, eighth-floor apartment 'casa particular', (the Cuban version of a B&B), with a nice view overlooking the
city toward old town. As I surveyed the city view, I couldnt help
noticing the lack of color. No typical red tile roofs and church steeples
that one might expect with Spanish architecture. Instead the roof-tops
were flat areas for storage or clotheslines and the dominant colors
of the buildings were varying shades of gray.
Inside Marcos and Rauls apartment was furnished with newish
but older style furniture. A new polished wood cabinet in the living/dining
room held a large screen TV, VCR and stereo. The floor was terrazo,
which seems to be the socialist tile of choice for countless apartments
across the city. A few pictures and curtains, bric-a-brac and a finch
in a cage warmed up the pale but clean walls. In the small 7X7 kitchen
a new washing machine stood proudly against one wall opposite the older
Russian-built fridge. Two bedrooms led off the living/dining room and
both were furnished with queen size beds and large wardrobes. Lean as
it was, their homestead was quite a bit more upscale than the average
apartment. (I stayed in another place for a night that had so little
kitchenware there was no bowl for my breakfast cereal; I ate it out
of a coffee cup.)
In
this flat Marcos and Raul live for free; actually it was assigned
to Raul years before he met Marcos. Housing is assigned in Havana and
there is rarely any moving out once the assignment is made. At first
the place was quite dismal with old paint peeling, some broken panes
of glass and no hot water. But Raul had no money to fix it up. He earnedand
still earns--about $12 a month as a typist for the state propaganda
office.
When Marcos came into Rauls life, the apartment began to change.
Being entrepreneurial and energetic and in need of cash, Marcos convinced
Raul that opening a casa particular (CP) was their ticket to a better
life. Originally permitted by the government as an inexpensive way to
house Cuban tourists visiting Havana, there are now many CPs that
are advertised to foreign tourists. (A number of them are listed
in guide books such as Lonely Planet.) In the three years since opening
their CP, Marcos and Raul have generated far more revenue than they
could have with state jobs.
Marcos is now able to devote himself full time to their business. Of
course the greedy and ubiquitous government reaches into any such free-enterprise
efforts and charges a hefty licensing fee (that has to be paid monthly
even if there have been no guests).
Word of mouth is often the best advertising among the gay community.
Through their network they let it be known their CP was gay
friendly and so their guests have virtually all been gay or
lesbian. One American guest subsequently posted the name and address
on the Internet along with another gay CP on the same street. Both charge
about US$20 a night, which in Cuban value is a lot of money. Now Marcos
and Raul can afford the ballet tickets and the new TV and washing machine
as well as a gym membership for Marcos. But they have to be careful
not to spend too ostentaciously lest the government question the actual
details of their finances.
(Note:
the same American guest subsequently withdrew his Interent posting after
his most recent visit although Marcos and Raul are still in business.
There is now only one 'gay friendly' casa particular listed on GayCuba.com.)
Cuban
Gay Life
One morning after a hearty homemade breakfast of eggs, sausage, fruit,
toast, juice and coffee prepared by Marcos, he and I talked about
being gay in Havana. (Raul doesnt speak fluent
English.) He and Raul have lived together for four years in their apartment
building (with about 60 units) surrounded by neighbors who are mostly
straight. Marcos is aware of two other gay couples and one lesbian couple
in the building. He has not known of any overt discrimination or obvious
homophobia from any of the residents. Why?
"The main thing to be gay here is to be discreto.
If you are not, how do you say-- flamboyant, and are not political with
your actions, you will not be bothered," he explained. For example,
one of the popular gay meeting places for a long time was on the Malecon
road that fronts the sea, across from the Fiat dealership. In the evenings
a colorful collection of gays and lesbians (mostly younger) pingueros
(male hustlers), guys on the make (bugarrones), tourists looking for
a hot Latino, the occasional drag queen, and straight
but curious young men would sit along the sea wall or cruise back
and forth.
Not
surprisingly, drugs and alcohol soon arrived as well. What started as
a discreet place of contact became a popular meat rack. Not surprisingly
the police moved in and now forbid lingering by more than a few people.
"You cannot do these things in public. But it was not just
against gays. The police get suspicious of any big groups or drugs so
it stops. They are paranoid of everyone," Marcos went on. "Even
by the Yara Cinema the police are always seen. Most of the people there
are waiting to buy ice cream at Coppelia but the gays are there too.
And some are not gay but look for sex for money. "

Police checking IDs of young
people |
True.
On two different occasions I watched as police officers stopped young
men and asked to see their ID cards. (Photo left) Occasionally a
person without proper papers was taken to the police station; if they
did not have permission to be in Havana, they were put on a bus and
sent back to their home towns. It was a constant low key but forceful
way to remind people that hanging around too long or too much was not
allowed. Further adding to watchful big brother' are the little
black notebooks every policeman carries in which he makes notes of things
and people he sees.
But for folks like Marcos and Raul, the Yara corner is the last place
they think about going. Their world centers more on their business,
their family and their friends. Because awareness of their casa
particular has spread, Marcos is often the busy host making arrangements
for visitors. Because they only have two bedrooms to rent out and are
sometimes full, he helps to find alternative digs for others, as he
did for me. A few days later, two Spanish acquaintances of his arrived
with two friends and needed suitable (i.e. inexpensive and gay friendly)
rooms so Marcos spent the day making inquiries of other friends or neighbors.
Social Influences
Marcos and I went on to talk about the changes in Cuba for gays over the past ten years. Despite a general cultural prejudice, there
are four factorsat leastthat influence the improving tolerance
toward gays. (1) Money, (2) the church, (3) the state--and (4) more
money.
(1) The common Cuban citizen is very poor, living on the equivalent
of less than US$20 a month. Despite free housing (often dismal and small),
free education (in shabby sparse buildings) and free medical care (often
lacking sufficient medications and equipment), there is little most
people can afford such as extra clothes, household goods or cars (many
still have 30-year old Russian fridges).
As
a result there is a thriving black market that is based on the U.S.
dollar. People are willing to offer whatever they can for dollar
cash: a taxi ride in a 1942 Buick; a room in their apartment; guide
services; sex; leftover rice allocations from the government store;
pizzas sold from their ground floor kitchens; old books; clothing, chewing
gum, etc.
The
dollar has become the unofficial currency with much higher value than
the peso (which continues to fall in value). So when Marcos has too
many guests, he offers his neighbors the chance to make a huge $25 for
giving up a bedroom for a night or two or more. Needless to say this
is also good public relations for Marcos as he hosts predominantly male
clientele.
(2) The Roman Catholic church since the 1959 Revolution and the
imposition of socialist dogma has had little influence over Cuban life.
Few people go to church and the bishops must guard against speaking
negatively toward Castro and his regime. Repressed as the situation
is, one ironic consequences has been the absence of religious homophobia
whipped up by clergy with their usual fervent campaign against the sins
of homosexuality.
(3) However, beginning in the 60s until the 80s the government supplied
more than sufficient disdain toward deviants. Although
homosexuality was never legally criminalized (and Fidel himself has
claimed he does not discriminate against gays; and the rumors are that
his brother Raul Castro is at least bisexual), it was considered abnormal
if a man did not marry and make babies.
From
the early days of witch-hunts against gays as threats to moral order to the somewhat relaxed present there has been discernable improvement.
The police are no longer on active search for sexual deviantsunless
of course if they make themselves obvious or inappropriate in public.
Neither Ray or Raul has ever been hassled by the authorities and they
dont worry when they meet their gay friends in public or at home.
(4)
Since the collapse of Soviet support for Cuba, and given the dismal
socialist economic policies, Cuba nearly went bankrupt in the early
90s until Fidel was forced to throw open the ports and welcome tourists,
unlike the early years of the glorious Revolution. Old Havana
has been declared a world heritage site by the UN. This in turn has
brought in a lot of money for restoration and tourist infrastructures
like hotels. Now there is a large seaport that can berth huge cruise
ships (from all countries except the USA) only a few yards from the
heart of the picturesque old town.
And
its no secret that among the well-paying guests are more than
a few lesbigay adventurers from Canada, Europe, South America and Asia
who want to feel the warm winter sun, view beautiful antique Spanish
architecture and perhaps make the brief acquaintance of an appealing
Cuban friend. Despite the absurd USA embargo, today there
is also a quiet but steady stream of American lesbigay travelers, both legally (for research or educational purposes) and illegally (by
way of Canada, Mexico, Jamaica, etc.) into that once-isolated socialist
paradise.
The
Mature Set
Ray and Rauls prosperity is sufficient to allow Marcos to hire a private English tutor who comes twice a week to share new words,
conversation and a lunch. I was introduced to the tutor one day and,
no surprise, he also turned out to be a member of our community.
Juan (not his real name) is a handsome retired accountant in his early
60s. He learned English as part of his job for a clothing export
company over the course of his career. Now, to earn always-needed
extra money he gives English lessons to students in a school as well
as in private. He and his partner Jose have been together for most of
the socialist occupation37 yearsduring which time they have
not lived together; Juans assigned house is quite far out in the
suburbs while Joses is close to the central district.
Juan
is a gentle and considerate man who was quite willing to talk to me
both for purposes of practicing his English with an American and to
ask questions about the outside gay world. When I told him
my hometown in California was about 20% lesbigay he was astonished.
I told him that often our city council has one or more openly gay members,
which he also found incredible. Hungry for quality English language
magazines, I gave him recent copies of The New Yorker and Atlantic Monthly,
which he treasured as a very special gift. Its impossible for
him to access such American periodicals in Havana, and if he could they
would be too expensive for him,
In
his 60-some years he has never seen a gay periodical or a gay video
or pictures of any gay pride event. He said that if someone tried
to send him any such material, his mail would be pilfered and the contents
removed. "They keep it for themselves!", he said with a sardonic
laugh; "they steal everything."
His life with Jose is very quiet and safely within the rules.
Both are retired now and Jose also offers English lessons. They spend
several nights together during the week now that they have more time. Their gay life consists of a circle of friends who are
mostly straight as well as some long-time gay friends. We
dont go out to commercial places. We like to read and have dinner
with friends. Jose likes to cook and talk; we like to visit with friends
who speak English as well so we can stay fresh with the language,"
he described.
As
for the standard line that Cuba has for a long time repressed gay people,
Juan said, "it is not so hard to be gay here in private. Neither
Jose nor I have ever had any trouble with this. We dont show
it on the street. We didnt show it at our work. It is not someone
elses business how we have our personal life. That is for us only.
For our neighbors, they know us and they just live their lives and we
live ours. Nobody wants trouble, you know; life is already hard here."
I
told him that I had been to the ballet with Marcos and Raul and he was
pleasantly surprised. "Oh, yes. We were there too." I asked
him about the gay and lesbian people in the audience and he laughed
with acknowledgment. "Of course. Gay people love beautiful thingsbut
so do many good straight people. Some of our best friends are not
gay and they have known about us for a long time. But it doesnt
matter. We are friends and that is whats important."
As for the Internet, Juan is not allowed to own a computer
as a private citizen. So we met in the lobby of the 5-star Hotel
Telegraphic on the main square in the Centro district so I could show
him my web site.. Had he not been with me, he would have been denied
access to the three computers provided for hotel guests. Further, he
would have been declined had he wished to rent a room in the fancy hotel.
Foreigners onlyor privileged Cubans with connections or money.
This is not to say Cubans lack any Internet access. A student
(you can never be sure) I met a few days later showed me a card he bought
for very few pesos that allowed him four hours of Intra-net computer
time at the post office. His e-mail and browsing is filtered through
the government ISP Correocuba. Obviously this makes
it easy for big brother to keep track of wandering minds. But some professional
folks such as research doctors or government officials or big businessmen
are allowed computerssome socialists are more equal than others
it appears. Juan accesses his e-mail through a doctor friend who is
engaged in medical research and uses Infomed.sld as his
mail server.
Juan was well aware of the hardships that some gays have faced at the
hands of the police. "I think the young people are more daring
now. It is not the same as many years ago when the police would hit
you. Now these boys go along the Malecon or in the park across from
here. It is foolish because they can be put in jail. We are not
free to do everything we like. But I hear they can bribe the police
and not be in jail. The money is a protection so they can find customers
for sex. Still they have to be very careful because many police dont
like gays and being in jail is terrible. But you know the money good
so they do it. In one night, I hear, a handsome pinguero can make more
money than a month. You know how it is; so they take the risk."
Universal Appeal
Regarding Juans comment about the pinquero hustlers in the Capitolio
area, sex is easily and widely available for sale in Havana, male
or female. It is after all one of the oldest professions anywhere
in the world. Whether the sellers are gay or bi or straight--Marcos
guessed that 30% of Cuban macho guys crossed over as long as they performed
the male roleits not rocket science to find
these guys working their turf.
More hidden are the liaisons between men who are reluctant to be
seen shopping at the Yara Cinema or in Central Park. Often these
are married Cubans with responsible professions or reputations. As well
there are many foreigners who travel with a pretty-boy image in mind
but who dont trust the street scene. For these classy
folks there are always temporary Adonis-looking young men who are arranged
through gay connections.
Half casual, half commercial these contacts are discreet yet common.
They may start out with an introduction in a private home or casa particular
as the young man drops by as a friend to the host and all are introduced.
The guest then takes it from there. I met three separate such tourists
in Havana -an American, a German and a Spaniard--who preferred
this safer way of match-making.
Usually
the visitor is older, educated and professional. The young gorgeous
sprite may or may not speak English, come from an impoverished family,
have one set of nice clothes (hoping for more), have minimal education,
and an unspoken fantasy of being taken far away from Cuba.
My observation of these kinds of arrangements, in countries from Morocco
to Malaysia, is that the older traveler is usually seasoned and realistic
about the nature of the arrangement, offering appropriate
gifts (rigalitos) of clothing, food or money in return for the sensual
comforts of one or several days and nights.
(Sidebar: However, for the untrained and over-eager
traveler, ones niavete may invite heartbreak if he doesnt
know whats really going on. It is a hard fall for some to suddenly
realize that love in such situations is primarily business.
More than a few vulnerable mature gay men have felt burned
by the appearance of sweet amours from an impoverished pretty youth
of a third world country who doesnt return the same feelings.
The reality is that the wealthy sugar dad will likely be
scammed or fooled or seduced into parting with a goodly sum of money
for his sweetheart boy who has a list of needy causes, from grandmas
hospital bill to school books to food and clothing to fixing up his
room. The world is strewn with remorseful foreign gay souls who failed
to discern the difference between a cool-hearted ruse and a romance.)
I would further add that if a gay visitor to Cuba intends to have an
overnight guest or an afternoon tryst, its better to arrange an
indepenciaa casa particular room that is not in someones
home but rather has its own location or private entrance. Also, if the
hired youth is arranged through a mutual friend the experience is likely
to be both safer and more satisfying. There are any number of foreigners
who return to Cuba regularly to visit with their favorite paramours.
The Next Generation
Walking around Havana on my own was my preferred mode of seeing and
feeling the quick and dusty soul of the city. Nevertheless, each day
at some point I happened upon pairs of young men (versus being beset upon by brazen female sex workers in the evening)
on the street. These were not areas with many tourists so I didnt
feel these were hustlers after something and I felt comfortable talking
with them. None of them approached me with a come-on as hustlers often
do.
Each time, the guys said they were students; indeed the university was
in the vicinity and they did carry notebooks or papers of some sort.
At least one of each pair spoke reasonably good English so we engaged
in conversation about school, Fidel, American politics, families and
so on. Without exception, these young people scorned Castro and thought
he was more crazy than sane. Not that they yelled this out loud
but they did not seem to fear that someone might overhear them.
When I recall the comments of a couple of taxi drivers and others I
met who also expressed similar thoughts, it seems evident that Castro
has become an anachronism to the young adult generation. They dont
like him or his socialist policies. They feel the repression and
limitations the government imposes on their lives but theyre not
so foolish as to do anything about it. So they go to college hoping
for some future relief while preparing for a job in the system.
The students said everyone has a job in Cuba and a person can be investigated
and possibly jailed for not workingor he will be given a manual
job to do by the police regardless of his skills. (There are a lot of
street sweepers in Havana--as there needs to be since people throw their
trash in the gutters without a thought.) A doctor in Cuba earns between
$20-30 a month. A policeman earns a hefty $40 a month so you can
be sure he does his job well. Indeed, I saw some cops busily scribbling
notes in their little black notebooks on a busy corner one morning.
One of the students, Augustino, wanted to be a veterinarian which would
pay him perhaps $25 a month. His companion Jorge was a music teacher
who gave private piano lessons to earn a bit of extra money. His retired
father receives $4 a month from the government. Another, Giovanis, said
the government gave him a dollar a month as a student; he ate and slept
free at the university where there was no tuition. To help support him,
his mother sends him money she earns under the table. She works in a
position that allows her to sell gasoline. In a softer voice, Giovanis
said she sells the allotted ten gallons then furtively sells a additional
five gallons (which a buyer is very happy to get) for the price
of ten and keeps the extra money. Castros socialist dream has
created a risky nightmare black market for nearly everyone.
The University of Havana campus was closed to outside visitors on
the Saturday I went by. The front entry is quite impressive with its
huge wide sweeping stairs leading up to neo-classical faced buildings.
I walked around to the back of the campus and saw a different image:
dilapidated classroom buildings whose shutters were falling off; chips
and cracks in the exterior stucco walls; the stadium was locked up and
I could see some repair work but the weeds in the running track suggested
the reparations themselves were permanent. The big blue Olympic-size
swimming pool was dry as a bone and growing its own garden of weedy
greens.
For their company and conversation I took Giovanis and Jorge to lunch
at the Three Musketeers Restaurant/Club where portions of the popular
2001 film "Buena Vista Social Club were shot. The food was
quite good (and over-priced) but we all had a very hearty mid-day meal
(meat, beans, rice and salad), something the boys said they could never
afford.
Leaving them after lunch, I walked across town through non-tourist areas
of Vedado disctrict toward my casa particular. There was not much to
be cheerful about. Despite the warm February weather and the reputed
lively and musical soul of Cuba, of Havana, the conditions
in which the vast majority of Cubans live are not pretty. (I also took
a trip into the countryside to the old-world south coast town of
Trinidad.)
Decaying ornate buildings, dark residential hovels with florescent strip
lighting and cement walls, cheap furniture, deplorably rattling 50s
cars that emit black fumes, two-channel TV with boring programming,
skimpy and pitiful thrift-store quality selections at the peso-based
grocery and clothing stores. (There are government owned dollar-based
stores where the shelves are filled with brands and choices, which
few can afford). There are ferral dogs everywhere barking or scrounging
or dead. It was a walk back in time and a walk through shame...
It may be charming in the tourist old town but for everyday living its
a disgrace to the government and humiliating to its citizens. I watched
a policeman try to use a pay phone one day; there were four in a row
as he tried each one; only one worked. One of the students, Raul, had
said sarcastically that sex was the only fun thing to do--that and
eating ice cream.
There
are of course many high-end hotels and restaurants and clubs
which are insulated against this. A tourist who comes in on a luxury
ocean liner will see little of this pervasive grim reality. Wealthy
foreigners and Cubans (there are quite a few, but only a fraction of
the population) can be whisked around town in the air conditioned
comfort of a new SUV and arrive at their ocean-view suite in the
elegant Hotel Nacional (photo above).
In
the Mirimar section of Havana there are many well-groomed stately
mansions behind wrought iron fences and foliage where the diplomat and
executive set live and dine. But for the common citizen this area has
only the reality of an imaginary Hollywood film.
Concluding--for Now
So the question remains, as I set out on my way to Cuba to discover, is the glass half full or half empty for gays in Cuba today? The answer is of course both.
There
continues no current hope or intent of a visible community
presence. Absolutely no political activism is possible or
thinkable by any LGBT person who wants to stay out of jail. There may
be informal and movable small fiestas that happen and end quickly;
there may be an unspoken gay night at a cabaret, disco or restaurant
but hardly any outsider will know about it. There may be rent boys
for sale but this is fraught with risk (emotional and legal) and
half these guys may not even be gay (whos exploiting whom?). There
may be a rare gay-theme film that everyone raves about but its
gone after a while with nothing to follow it.
Is it safe to be gay in Cuba? If you are an activist, definitely
not. If you are a conservative and discreet single or couple who can accept limitations on your life, the answer is yes.
If you are a handsome street-smart pinquero with a quick eye
and fast tongue and a penchant for adventure the answer is that being
gay (or playing gay) is fun, risky and profitable.
As
part of this half-full-half-empty question, the newest Lonely Planet
Havana guidebook (March 2001which means the book was written
in 2000 and is now almost three years old) has nearly a full page (171)
on the gay situation in Cuba. To their credit, the folks at LP have
tried to offer a brief analysis and suggestions for venues. The Cinema
Yara is mentioned first as a good place for keying into the virtually
invisible scene to find one of the informal small fiestas diez
pesos. Other mentioned venues are: El Café Mercurio (Plaza
de San Francisco), Cubalse cafeteria (next to the Fiat dealership on
the Malecon), the Castropol cabaret for drag shows and disco (Malecon
and Av. de Italia), Joker (Linea and Calle 10), and Ecodisco (Linea
and Calle E. Semi-regular discos that attract a friendly crowd include
Periquiton de Mantilla (Saturday), Rosalia de Castro (near Capitolio),
or Fiesta de H y 21. "Discretely inquire among the people in front
of the Cine Yara as to the dates and whereabouts of these or other locales."
But things change unpredictably in Cuba. In the winter of 2003, the
word was out about a police alert for imported drugs into Cuba. One
traveler there posted this on the web:
"The gay scene in Havana is under pressure from increased police
observation for suspicion of drug use at the fiestas diez
pesos and at meeting places like Central Park and Yara Cinema.The
Cubalse cafeteria on the Malecon and Bim Bom ice cream store are no
more. Casa particulars, both straight and gay, are under increased scrutiny
all over the island. The Barbara Walters interview last year and several
news reports in Europe have embarrassed the Cuban government regarding
sex tourism. Tourism is now the number one source for foreign currency
so the government has initiated the anti-drug and Casa campaign. This
info is current, I returned to US on Feb 8, 03 after a one-month
stay. I lived in four different Casas both legal and illegal."
There are worse conditions under which lesbigays live, such as
in very conservative Muslim countries, and there are of course places
far better where homosexuality has a front row seat, as in Scandinavia.
Along this continuum of social/religious/poliyical regard for our community,
I think there is good reason for hope in the future when Fidel is
gone.
There
may be a generalized homophobia in the culture, but there are also strong ameliorating trends as well. Cuba is a country within the Latino
mentality where sex is considered a personal right and an important
way of expressing and defining oneself; it is less categorical than
in North America and Europe and many men who have sex with other
men dont consider themselves gay or straightthey are
being men having pleasure with another person. Those who
do identify as gay arel simply part of an interwoven sexual tapestry
than includes many varieties.
Homosexuality, indeed all sexuality, here seems not to carry the
same demonizing stigma as in other more highly-Catholic Latino countries. Many lesbigay Cubans have non-gay friends whose attitude is essentially
indifference to the difference.

Drinking water delivery in
Havana |
Further,
the Catholic church in Cuba after Fidel is unlikely to regain
its influence sufficient to mount effective opposition to the inevitable LGBT activism that will spring to life. With the forceful
support of many gay Cuban exiles (especially in Florida) and their developed
agendas and organizations, I predict there will be a strong and public
gay presence advocating change in Havana.
Meanwhile,
the poverty continues; the repression pervades everyday life; the economy
stumbles along and Fidel rules absolutely while drinking water is trucked
into some buidlings in the capital. The tourists arrive in style, look
around and leave. Lesbigay citizens breathe quietly and make furtive
dollars in the closet or dance at the occasional fiesta. Pretty boys
watch the streets for new opportunities. And everyone looks to the future.
Further
travel information from CubaAIDS www.cubaaidsproject.com
Hello friends and future Cuba AIDS Project travelers,
We
have moved closer to reality on our licensed Cuba trips. We have at
least five fine guides to help you in Cuba: Bob Kelley from Washington,
D.C., Carol and Mark Slegers from Portland Oregon, Surah Hirsch, D.C.
from Portland, Oregon and Rick Schwag from Vermont
You
can contact them directly per email Surah: DrSHirsch@aol.com Rick:
cuba@together.net Carol Slegers:
Caslegers@aol.com
Applications can be found at www.cubaaidsproject.com Participation in
all group activities and compliance with all USA guidelines regarding
OFAC licensed Cuba travel is mandatory. Thank you for caring for Cuba's
HIV/AIDS patients and their families. |