In my recent trip to Cuba, I experienced an unusual feeling of being in a “safe space” as a Black woman that I have only felt in one other Latin American city- Cartagena (http://haiti-progres.com/news/2018/03/14/blackness-in-cartagena-colombia-a-jamericans-experience/).

I am not sure if Yanier knew I was Jamaican, but he knew we were Black. Nevertheless, these incidences became the catalyst of a vacation where memories were made devoid of any feelings of being “otherized.”
Tres Raices
The streets of Havana are decorated with a population that resembles the entire Black and White race/color spectrum, the evidence of an integration of tres raices- Tainos, Africans and Spaniards. There was an ease in the interactions of the phenotypical colors of the rainbow, as it should be, but, often is not evident in most countries. My hubby and I discussed this observation and we concluded that perhaps, the attempts at creating an egalitarian society has interrupted racial discord, as race and class historically intersect in providing the dialectic of the understanding of social inequality. Albeit, we are not that utopic to presume that issues with race or color are absent from this country, or that all the white, wealthy Cubans are in Miami LOL. However, there was not one incident where we felt that our race or skin tone was significant in determining how we were being treated; in fact, there was more curiosity as to whether we were Americans.
Visit to Guanabacoa
The “safe space” feeling evolved into a greater sense of
enlightenment and empowerment as we engaged in the Afro Cuban Tour with Arianna and Jose. We met in a quaint coffee shop that served Café cubano that mimicked the shades of the tres-raices. I am unsure if this coffee arrangement is deliberate as a racial commentary or just artistry, but, coupled with being in a group of primarily curious Afro tourists, the brilliance and beauty of Arianna and Jose, the tour started out with breathless excitement. Arianna with the eloquence of the Professor that she is, explained that the Afro history experience will be enveloped in an exploration of religion in her home town. We visited Guanabacoa, situated about three miles to the southeast of La Havana. This exploration of Afro Cuban history through religion, cemented the already known fact that the Africans outside of Africa, captured and enslaved in the Americas had to be creative to survive and as such, religion became a source of resistance and survival.
Religious Synchronism- An Act of Resistance
Being Jamaican, I have heard all my life about obeah, and I have heard and seen the pocomania and Jonkanoo displays and have always been curious. Despite having researched these cultural expressions and practices theoretically in Africana studies, I never had the courage to experience them in person.

Feeling Empowered-Not Today Colonizer



