Monday, September 16, 1957-Page - CUBA'S Y IJ G NTELCTUAj By DAVID A. MUNRO oNE AFTERNOON last Novem- ber a group of students at the Universidad de Oriente sauntered down to the highway that passes the campus and flagged down a passing bus. Most of them stood. joking, in front of it to prevent it from proceeding while or.e a lettering artist with a black brush, wrot "Abajo Batista" on its sides. On the front, in smaller letters, letters, he wrote "Arriba la revo- lucion" and signed it with the cryptic initials, "F E U, U de O." This meant Federacion Estudantil Universitaria, Universidad de Ori- ente. The -paining party stopped the next bus and the next. Bored driv- ers waite in their seats while the students redecorated the vehicles. Inside the university the signal, no more than a whisper, spread from classroom to classroom. By common consent the students left. The University authorities, who could not do otherwise, announced that there would be no further classes that day or the next. Thus a revolution was signaled. On November 30 came the first climax. These same young men, asith others-grimmerarmed, ui- formed as the °26 de .ulio" arma- attempted to seize the city of Santiago de Cuba, home of the University and seconad city of the islana. Two days later, with Santiago calmed, or at least cowed, under the carbines of a crack U.S.-train- ed regiment flown in from distant Habana, Fidel Castro landed onS a wild shore nearby with his follow- ers from Mexico. Ano some of our University stu- dents, who had fought the unsuc- cessful engagement at Santiago, successfully made their way though the roadblocks and pick- ets, the traps and the snipers, to join Castro in the high Sierra Maestra mountains. One of the most daring and successful guer- illa operations of all time was on. 0 F COURSE the guerilla army' in the hills needed supporting organizations in the city. And there began those internal pro- cesses that so regularly smark the growth of revolutions. Food was needed, and the mer- chants and the women banded to- tether to collect it. Medicines were needed, and the doctors and the women accumulated it. Money was needed, and clothes and arms and transportation Santiago, capital of the prov- ince, became a city with a clandes- ine purpose and with an elaborate underground to meet it. At its core were the women, wives of the im- portant men of the city, women with servants in their homes and time on their hands, women with sons or brothers or husbands in the mountains. Thus the pattern of revolution in C;ba began to take shape. Uni- versity students in the vanguard, yes. Mddleclass (and frequently middle-aged) women in the sup- porting ranks, yes. Wide public support among the literate, the alert, the educated, the urban, spreading out from Santiago to the province and to the whole nation. BUT THIS still leas a whole section of the society unmoved sad untouched. Below a certain point in the Cuban socio-economic scale the revolution has no mean- ing. To some, this is simply the coloring. The whites, say some whites, take all the risks while the blacks sit back to take all the advantages when the battles are won. An instructor in the Univer- sity's English Language Insti- /ute, David A. Munro has just returned from one year as asso- eiate professor of English at Oriente University in Santiago, Cuba. lie has contributed sini- lar articles concerning the Cu- ban situation to the pages of T heDaily. ' ' o T e -. circumstances. The young me- Tuey-'re Staling Tii ir Llves chanica engineer, enrolled at the (closed) Univrsidad de Oriente or the closed) Universidad de Ha- On Reawaken n (it H o me ban, cannot realistically look to the sugar industry, or even the still-rich sugar capitalists, for that future job. He can't realistically expect to get that future job at all, for the scattering of service industries, even the new Texaco refinery, never have and cannot now take up the slack. And the opportunity in public industry lies under the shadow of Old Spain. For the graft system, so legitimate a Hispanic heritage, has been successfully moving up taking over from the American system, upon which the Cuban government was so carefully modeled after the liberation. Thus, there is little chance that well-trained Cuban highway engi- neers can correct the dreadful highway deficit, or even get jobs in the highway departments. * There is similarly little chance for the sincere Cuban teacher, equip- ped only with his sincerity and his ability. * Thus a kind of creeping incom- . petence takes over, rotting the public serviced. Able and well- strained men are often not wanted in the jobs for which they are trained precisely because they are able and well-trained; their pres- ence would show up the entrench- ed cadre of incompetents. The answer of able young Cu- bans, especially the engineers, is UNIVERSIDAD DE ORIENTE-The Santiago school is the scene of peace and quiet now, closed for to cross the water to the United the duration since last November, when Cuba's students struck in protest of the government. States where the economy is booming and where there is little difficulty in being rewarded for But a little closer observation ispulated for their own and the directed against people, and they dfilty shows that revolutionary vs. non- nation's destruction. are only occasionally well enough ability. revolutionary society is not sharply Put the stareotypir goes the placed so that they knock out a NDER TIS selt-pespetuatig rut, van on thae blurred race lines other way, too. The s cial classes water-main or an electric power a5 they exist in Cuba. from which the Army recruits are nexus. But they do say to Haban, coadiiong, the ptetialities of It only seems so because color tau iht that the revolutoaries are Do not 1lrate. ont go out. Cuba, including its human re- is saughly correlated with socis gente maa,literally 'aearg"bad Cuba s in travail and in mourn- sure, remain undeveloped. eca osnic position. people but here includag the ing." Thus the direction of the Cuba fails even to cash in prop- And the fact is that this is a meanings of sick peope, vicious revolation and its tone is almost erly on the sugar industry, though middleclass revolution, properly peole. p .ope afflict j swith some wholly in the hands of the revolu- it produces 80 per cent of the and logically led by university stu- social infirmity which makes them tonaries, worlds "export sugar. Already dents, properly and logically sym- a public menace. This brings us back to the Uni- other producers have outstripped bolized by Fidel Castro, young son vezsity students, joking among Cuba in modern methods of har- of a wealthy planter (29 years 'HIS SEEMS quite logical to themselves as they paint slogans vesting and extraction. old when he set foot on Cuba to T the mind of Cuba's bottom on the buses, and to student lead- And Cuba has neglected most of "liberate" it), and darling of stu- classes. Doesn-t the present be- er Fidel Castro. What has so pro- the industries that could have dents everywhere down to the nign dictatorship give all these foundly moved these mddleclass been based on sugar. They include five-year-olders in pre-primario.-jobs including maintaining a people that they stake their lives plastics, detergents, special chemi- But there exists in Cuba a large standing army of 40,000? Haven't and their treasure to win freedom cals, paper, cattle food. cas below those who go to tandineharnay efp4e,111? hen-and freedom not from any for- In mining, a few American cam- Ssools, tose who have salaried island alway provided the jobs, ten devils but from one of their panies are scratching the rich sur- jobs, those who do not live on always protected and sold the su- own? faces of Cuba. They spend much jios tiooesswatofttoheulivet ptygax cane, always kept business Hiesweatingrout the pety ex- drdorMsofthebc onrweemudnercae lasketbsns THE ANSWER of Cuban econo- actions of greedy officials and roads and lack of radio (because It can therefore be only hateful mist is "stagnation," a stat- their companies are cautious about there is no electricity) have sealed and perverted people who burn nation unfortunately imposed up- any major investment. Neither them off frosm the id s 'nd the aid cane telecrcoys on a people accustomed to the big Americans nor Cubans have ex- mthe cane, bomb the electric sys- money, to an expanding economy plored Cuba's potential sea-x- Bust mans have cos e to the ease of normal army life and even to a labor shortage. traction industries. citie. They h se brought with s They do not react with the The official United States posi- thesms their level of ignorance of Naturally, each stereotype pro- self-abnegation of older, caste- tion has been no help to Cuba, politics and sanitation, their un- duces a Sort of moral sanction for rdder societies to whom hopeless- either. Sugar is largely controlled skS She e ping the other out, for the mur- ness and futile struggle are felt by New York financial interests. world, but have left behind their der of Cuban by Cuban, and for to be the inevitable order of things. And Cuba is kept in a state of countrymanos self-respet and a general bloodthirstiness unlike They react with the violence of a abject fear that its quota (there dignity .the comparative impersonality of frontier people who run up against is a world cartel) will be cut. Every This is the unleavened lump of international warfare. sudden restriction and curtail- Cuban government has thus had resistance. It is composed of peaple It is heightened, insofar as there ment. . to have American approval or it who are non-revolutionary be- is a racist basis for the mutual The restriction upon this society, could not survive. casieO they are non-political, of animosity, by the fact that Presi- the "stagnation,".is a matter of Presidents of Cuba are in a people little awareof bow to better dent Batista is a mestizo. record. In 1925 a Cuba with 3,000,- sense resident managers for out- their station by either the orderly 5000 people produced over 5 million side interests, and the concern of procesesatn democracy or the oal- BUT THERE are also moderat- tons of sugar for the first time in these interests is limited to their lective action of revolution, in'- tar profits. It does not include the is year extension of democracy to the HIS SOCIAL csugar populace. And this is a point of Tep .ril) view with which the Eisenhower tiparnee administration is in sympathy. its arut t NATURALLY, this leaves the Batista government with its hands tied. It has no popular sup- port and therefore no way, even if t wanted to find a way, of escap- g the graft system. In fact Batista, an ex-army seo- ant who seized power, never has hibited any love for democracy. t it is only through 'the exer- e of democracy that Cuba can d the popular support necessary get out from under the graft stem. The young intellectuals, there- a ore, chiefly want a reawakening lice t home. On this they have staked A their lives. Later, when they can beta say that Cuba has recaptured its beco self-respect, they can look for a ;con solution the one-crop country situation.