Tag Archives: history

Will Jamaica, the Caribbean, Africa, and the World Stand By and Allow Cuba to Die?

There is hardly a country in the Caribbean, including Jamaica, that has not benefited from the generosity of the Cuban people.

More than 500 Cuban doctors currently serve in Jamaican hospitals and clinics, many in rural communities where access to medical care would otherwise be limited or non-existent. Across the region, Cuban medical professionals quietly and consistently save lives. Through programs such as those of the Henry Reeve International Medical Brigade, Cuba has also sent doctors to assist nations in times of crisis, from the COVID-19 emergency in Italy to outbreaks and disasters in Africa and Latin America.

Cuba has trained Caribbean students in medicine for decades. Jamaican doctors have studied at the Latin American School of Medicine in Havana and returned home to serve their communities. In Africa, Cuban doctors and teachers have worked in countries such as Angola, Mozambique, and South Africa during some of their most difficult periods.

This is not a political argument about communism versus democracy. It is a humanitarian appeal.

Today, ordinary Cubans, elders, children, families, face severe shortages of fuel, food, and medical supplies. The long-standing embargo imposed by the United States continues to affect daily life in profound ways. Regardless of one’s political position, the human cost is undeniable.

The question before us is simple: when a neighbour who has repeatedly come to our aid is in distress, do we turn away? Do we pretend as if we have not benefitted from their generosity?

Humanitarian assistance is not an endorsement of any government. Providing fuel so hospitals can operate, medicine so children can receive treatment, and food so elders do not go hungry is not ideology ; it is reciprocity. It is solidarity. It is humanity.

Jamaica sits less than 100 miles from Cuba. Our histories, cultures, and futures are intertwined. Across the Caribbean and Africa, thousands are alive today because Cuban doctors showed up when others did not.

If we believe in justice, in fairness, in shared humanity, then this is a moment to act with moral clarity. Governments can debate policy. But people of conscience must insist that humanitarian corridors remain open and that aid reach those in need.

We must not allow ordinary Cubans to suffer in darkness when they have brought healing and light to so many of us.

This is a call  to Caribbean people, to Africans, to Europeans, to all who believe in human dignity to stand for compassion over division.

Let us be a blanket for Cuba in its hour of need.

Let us respond not with politics, but with humanity. Help Cubans to live.

Home in the Diasporic / Home at Home

I have never been exiled from Jamaica, though I have lived most of my life away from her shores. Jamaica has always been my root, my anchor, the marrow of who I am. I never felt cut off, never felt she was beyond my reach. Jamaica is not a distant place I visit; it is the pulse that shapes me, the rhythm in my walk, the breath in my speech. My Jamaicanness is not a badge nor a flag — it is seamless, both my imagined self and my lived reality.

Paul Gilroy speaks of “the dialectics of diasporic identification,” reminding us that it is never the same for everyone, yet always returns to the dialogue of homeland and home. Can home be carried with you? Is it in the yellow, green, and black, in the taste of ackee and saltfish — even from a can — in the cane you bite into, juice running down your chin, in the childhood lessons of duppies so that when a shadow looms, you wonder if it is this or more?

Perhaps it is as Gilroy insists: “It ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you’re at.” The “where” being body and mind, geography and imagination. Home becomes memory you carry like a favorite dress, a figurine, a faded photo of first love, the friends whose lives moved on without you as yours moved on without them. Yet it always circles back to origin. Like the time I walked into the faculty parking lot in California and found a note on my windshield: Go back to where you come from. Perhaps because I demanded a place for Black people and people of color. Perhaps because I was a woman. Perhaps simply because it was known that I was not from there — not California, not Oakland, not America. To them, I was Africa, a presence they never wished to claim except for her resources. Go back where you come from.

But it is never that easy when you live where you are not “from.” They remind you constantly, even if you wanted to forget, even if you could. It is always: Where are your people from? Where was your navel string buried? What soil stains your soles, veins your blood, whispers your names?

Gilroy says, “It ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you’re at,” but the deportee knows better. For those who fled poverty or were exiled into unfamiliar streets, home is neither here nor there. Stories told of home were mostly lies meant to soothe — to suggest a place that would welcome us — but home did not. Could not. Not for the deportees. Not for those who built new nations out of necessity. For them, home became nowhere: not in the Diaspora, not in the unfamiliar land of exile.

And yet, sometimes home is that uncanny space — familiar and foreign all at once. Like Half-Way Tree in Marcia Douglas’s Marvelous Equations of the Dread, where Marley returns disguised as a madman searching for himself. Home is recognition denied, a hostile space where you may be chased, ridiculed, shunned. It does not always yield answers. At times it feels strange, unfamiliar, as if you are experiencing the Diaspora within home itself. Still, even when hostile, home holds memory, bloodlines, visceral connections. Home teaches, as it teaches Duppy Marley before he drifts into the other realm.

But not so for the madman in Jennifer Rahim’s Curfew Chronicles. He wanted only to speak truth to power, to explain the injustice he witnessed. He was home, known — and yet not recognized. Recognition would mean being heard, and being heard would demand change. It would unravel the order, blur color and class boundaries, disrupt the hierarchy. So he was silenced, thrown down, his words trampled, his identity erased. At times, home itself robs you of belonging, of dignity, of safety. Home, too, imposes curfews.

James Clifford asks: “How do diaspora discourses represent experiences of displacement and replacement of homes away from home?” A valid question. Yet it must also be asked of home itself. How does the twelve-year-old boy who fails common entrance confront displacement at home? His identity hinges on a single act. For my Danny in Love’s Promise, the shame of home propels him outward, to anonymity in the Diaspora, to find voice and self where he is not known. Sometimes the weight of home stifles growth.

And sometimes, being away is the very condition for growth. Absence shifts the gaze from lamenting displacement to embracing the fertile ground of possibility. The Diaspora becomes a field where seeds of reinvention take root, allowing home to be reframed — not as loss, not as exile, but as promise. Between Gilroy and Clifford, home becomes a moving force, fashioned and refashioned, alive in memory, radiant in imagination — at once paradise, at once euphoria.