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Songs of Cuba, Silenced
in America
By JACKSON BROWNE
LOS ANGELES - Carlos Varela, the
great Cuban singer-songwriter, applied for a visa to come to the
United States to sing his powerful, amazing songs. He had concerts
planned in Miami, New York and Los Angeles. Our government turned
him down.
Visas have been denied to other
Cuban artists because their visits are "detrimental to the
interests" of our country. In essence, the government says
that if Carlos Varela plays concerts in the United States, the money
he makes would go to Fidel Castro. This is untrue. In Cuba, renowned
artists keep much of what they earn, because the government does
not want them to leave the country and live somewhere else. Yet,
the Bush administration used the same reasoning to keep Ibrahim
Ferrer, of the Buena Vista Social Club, and Manuel Galbán
from attending the Grammy award ceremony in Los Angeles last month.
(Both men won awards.)
It also forced the postponement
of concerts by the Spanish flamenco master Paco de Lucía
because he plays with Alain Pérez Rodríguez, a Cuban-born
bassist. I congratulate the State Department on finally determining
that Mr. Pérez is not "detrimental to the interests"
of our country, although those of us who were able to reschedule
and hear him play this month know that he is a truly dangerous man.
In a profound way, our government
takes on the role of oppressor when it tries to control which artists
will be allowed access to our minds and our hearts. We may think
we are isolating Cuba with our embargo and our travel restrictions,
but it is we Americans who are becoming isolated. People travel
to Cuba from Australia, Britain, Canada, Italy and Spain - countries
we consider staunch allies.
United States foreign policy toward
Cuba is unpopular in America, and for good reason. It stops Americans
from traveling to Cuba and Cubans from coming into the States. It
stops us from sharing medicine with the ill and restricts our ability
to sell food to the hungry. This policy is an outdated relic of
the cold war and exists only as a political payoff to Republican-leaning
Cuban-American voters in Miami.
The policy of punishing Cuba works
only when Americans see the angry face of Cuban repression. But
in the face of Carlos Varela, and the language of his music, Americans
would not find the mask of a demon, but hear the aspirations of
people just like themselves.
Perhaps the most prominent paradox
here is that Carlos Varela is known not only for his talent, but
also for his courage to speak out through his songs, many of which
have been interpreted as critical of the Cuban government.
While these young Cubans respect
the accomplishments of their leaders, they are ready, indeed impatient,
to run their own affairs. They want freedom for themselves and independence
for their country. They want the new Cuba to be created by the Cuban
people, not by the United States.
I believe in justice and human
rights in the United States and abroad. I am saddened by the treatment
by the Cuban government of the political dissidents in their country.
I long for the day when there is freedom for both Cubans and Americans
to travel in both directions across the Straits of Florida without
undue interference by their governments.
I want this freedom not just for
artists but for all people, American and Cuban, who live each day
in the hope for a just and prosperous future. Giving Carlos Varela
a visa to sing in America would be a good way to begin.
Jackson Browne, a singer-songwriter,
was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on March 15. |