By Muriel J. Smith
Visiting a senior day care center in the heart of old Havana was an unforgettable experience. As the oldest in our group of six spending five days in Cuba, and being short of four score in years myself by a couple of months, I was particularly eager to see the health, care, and welfare of senior Cuban citizens.
In spite of the best efforts of caring people, and the inherent happiness of people who have known far better times, it was pathetic.
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Posted: July 31st, 2016 | Author: admin | Filed under: Cuba, Monmouth County News | Tags: Cuba, Five Days in Cuba, Monmouth County News, Muriel J. Smith, Muriel Smith, Red Bank Catholic High School, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on A senior day care Center in Havana
By Muriel J. Smith
Photos by Tricia Curtin and Nancy Zockoll
Part Three of a series
They’re a musical group, the Cuban people. They love to dance, are proud of the salsa, automatically start to move rhythmically whenever they hear music, and can dance at outdoor restaurants on cobblestoned streets with abandon and joy. There are plenty of discotheques and nightclubs in and around Old Havana, and it seems that 90 pesos, about $10 American, is the going fee for entry. The one evening our group of six Americans and eight Cubans decided to go, the club had had a fire earlier in the evening, so the club part was closed. The restaurant, however, was open, but we opted to move on.
There is no doubt there are two different and distinct styles of living in Cuba.
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Posted: July 29th, 2016 | Author: admin | Filed under: Cuba, Monmouth County News | Tags: Cuba, Five Days in Cuba, Monmouth County News, Muriel J. Smith, Muriel Smith, Red Bank Catholic High School, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on Cuba: art and music, race and Joann Chesimard, income inequality
By Muriel J. Smith
(photos Tricia Curtin and Nancy Zockoll)
Indeed, they really are all there, those classic American-made cars of the 1950s. They’re all over the well paved and not so well paved roads of Cuba, and most of them are taxis.
There are thousands of them, all brightly painted, the sun bouncing off shiny chrome; all with their windows down…pre-air conditioning days, remember…their interiors either plush or vinyl cleverly patched or taped to look good, and who knows what under the hoods to keep them purring, or growling gently as they navigate the streets. The cars presumably date back to the 1950s when they were new, Cuba and the USA were friends, and Cubans enjoyed a middle class status that enabled them to purchase foreign cars. For good reason, most chose American rather than Russian vehicles, though some of them were also available during ‘the special period,’ the time in the 1960s when Russia was the alleged friend of Cuba. The vehicles have been handed down from father to son, and with an embargo prohibiting the import of car parts, have been kept in running condition through ingenuity and a strange conglomeration of makeshift and re-made parts. Cuba is on good terms with Venezuela, so fuel for the vehicles is no problem. Nor do they spend a lot of time or effort on repairing windows that no longer rise or close, given those 90 degree sun-filled days.
But there’s so much more to Havana than cars.
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Posted: July 26th, 2016 | Author: admin | Filed under: Cuba, Monmouth County News | Tags: Cuba, Five Days in Cuba, Monmouth County News, Muriel J. Smith, Muriel Smith, Nancy Zockoll, New Jersey, Red Bank Catholic High School, Tricia Curtin, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on Cuba: It’s more than cars!
By Muriel J. Smith
Perhaps the best solution to the problems between Cuba and the United States is to leave it up to the teenagers. Especially if they are teens like Catherine Curtin of Atlantic Highlands and Ava Zockoll of Bay Head. Because while negotiations are going on at high levels between the bureaucrats of both nations, and compromise and trade-offs are slowly making it easier for Americans to travel there, 16-year old Catherine, a junior at Red Bank Catholic High School designed a week long stay in Cuba’s capital to interact with Cuban teens on the volleyball court. Eager to join her on the expedition were RBC’s girls’ volleyball team captain Zockoll, Ava’s mother, Nancy, and Catherine’s parents, Dan and Tricia Curtin. And me. The Curtins asked me to accompany them on the trip so I could report it for newspapers and magazines.
Life is certainly good.
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Posted: July 25th, 2016 | Author: admin | Filed under: Cuba, Monmouth County News | Tags: Ava Zockoll, Catherine Curtin, Cuba, Dan Curtin, Five Days in Cuba, Monmouth County News, Muriel J. Smith, Muriel Smith, Nancy Zockoll, Red Bank Catholic High School, Tricia Curtin, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on Five days in Cuba
There is some speculation that our governor will eventually bow out of the race for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination in return for a position in the administration of the next President Bush. I doubt that will happen. But if it does, let’s hope the position in question isn’t secretary of state. Earlier this week, Chris…
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Posted: December 27th, 2014 | Author: admin | Filed under: 2016 Presidential Politics, Chris Christie, Opinion, Paul Mulshine, U.S.-Cuba relations | Tags: 2016 Presidential politics, Barack Obama, Chris Christie, Foreign Policy, Paul Mulshine, U.S.-Cuba relations | 1 Comment »
Help keep the pressure on the Obama Administration to bring Joanne Chesimard to justice by signing the petition started by Bob Angelini on Whitehouse.gov.
HAVANA — Cuba said Monday that it has a right to grant asylum to U.S. fugitives, the clearest sign yet that the communist government has no intention of extraditing America’s most-wanted woman despite the warming of bilateral ties. Gov. Chris Christie has urged President Barack Obama to demand the return of fugitive Joanne Chesimard before restoring…
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Posted: December 23rd, 2014 | Author: admin | Filed under: U.S.-Cuba relations | Tags: Bob Angelini, JoAnne Chesimard, Obama Administration, Trooper Werner Foerster, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on Cuba says it might not turn over fugitive cop killer Chesimard
HAVANA — When longtime Cuban spy Gerardo Hernandez went free last week from a U.S. prison and flew to Havana for the first time in 16 years, he was unfazed to find his wife — gasp! — very pregnant. The mystery of that pregnancy emerged Monday, and it will go down in history books as one…
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Posted: December 22nd, 2014 | Author: admin | Filed under: U.S.-Cuba relations | Tags: Adriana Perez, Gerardo Hernandez, Pregnancy, Sen. Patrick Leahy, Spy, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on Diplomaculate conception? US let Cuban spy give sperm to impregnate wife
Trooper Werner Foerster
With the United States exchanging prisoners with Cuba and moving quickly to normalizing relations with Castro regime, there is a growing movement in New Jersey to prevail upon the Obama Administration to extradite convicted cop killer Joanne Chesimard, aka Assata Shakur back to New Jersey to serve her sentence for the murder of State Trooper Werner Foerster.
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Posted: December 19th, 2014 | Author: Art Gallagher | Filed under: New Jersey, U.S.-Cuba relations | Tags: Bob Angelini, Congressman Leonard Lance, Congressman Rodney Frelinghuysen, JoAnne Chesimard, New Jersey, Trooper Werner Foerster, U.S.-Cuba relations | 2 Comments »
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration has no intention of withdrawing from the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, despite the sudden shift in U.S.-Cuban relations. “There is no impact to Guantanamo from the changes announced today,” the National Security Council spokeswoman, Bernadette Meehan, said Wednesday evening. Hours earlier, at the U.S. outpost in southeast Cuba,…
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Posted: December 19th, 2014 | Author: admin | Filed under: U.S.-Cuba relations, War on terror | Tags: Cuba, Guantanamo, Guantanamo Bay, Obama Administration, U.S.-Cuba relations | 3 Comments »
SAYREVILLE — U.S. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) today blasted President Obama’s decision to begin re-establishing diplomatic relations with Cuba and easing economic restrictions imposed on the communist country. “I think it stinks,” Menendez, the son of Cuban immigrants and the outgoing Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman, said at a press conference on new financial help for Hurricane…
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Posted: December 18th, 2014 | Author: admin | Filed under: Bret Schundler | Tags: Cuba, President Barack Obama, Senator Bob Menendez, U.S.-Cuba relations | Comments Off on Menendez on Obama Cuba deal: ‘I think it stinks’