Spend your holiday in Cuba


Cuba: So Close Yet So Far

The island of Cuba has been inhabited forkilled shortly thereafter and has become
more than several thousand years byCuba's  undisputed  national  hero.
Amerindian peoples known as the Taíno and
Ciboney. The Taíno were known to be mostlyThe Spanish-American War resulted when the
farmers while the Ciboney wereU.S. battleship Maine was mysteriously blown
hunter-gatherers. The name Cuba in fact isup in Havana harbor, killing 266 men. The
derived from the Taíno word cubanacán,U.S. accused Spain, even though they had no
which means "a central place". Christophermotive, and quickly passed a resolution
Columbus sighted the island during his firstcalling for intervention. The war started
voyage of discovery on 24 October 1492, andwhen U.S. forces landed in Cuba in June 1898
immediately  claimed  it  for  Spain.and quickly overcame Spanish resistance. In
August a peace treaty was signed under which
Spain possessed the island of Cuba for 388Spain  agreed  to  withdraw  from  Cuba.
years, ruled by the governor of Havana. It
had an economic base of plantationSome advocates in the U.S. supported Cuban
agriculture and main exports of sugar, coffeeindependence, while others argued for
and tobacco to Europe and later to Northoutright annexation. As a compromise, the
America. British seized the island in 1762,McKinley administration placed Cuba under a
but returned it to Spain the following year.20-year U.S. trusteeship. The Cuban
Like most of the Spanish Empire, a smallindependence movement bitterly opposed this
land-owning elite of settlers held all thearrangement, but unlike the Philippines,
social and economic power. They were servedwhere events had followed a similar course,
by a population of small farmers, laborersthere  was  no  outbreak of armed resistance.
and  slaves.
Theodore Roosevelt, who had fought in the
Many architectural masterpieces constructedSpanish-American War and had some sympathies
during Spanish rule still stand today. Anwith the independence movement, succeeded
excellent example is the Catedral de SanMcKinley as President of the United States in
Cristóbal, Havana. During the 1820s, when1901 and abandoned the 20-year trusteeship
the rest of Spain's empire in South Americaproposal. Instead, the Republic of Cuba
rebelled and seceeded, Cuba remained loyal,gained formal independence on 20 May 1902,
although some campaigned for independence.with the independence leader Tomás Estrada
Partly because fears of a slave rebellion (asPalma becoming the country's first president.
had happened in Haiti) if the SpanishUnder the new Cuban constitution, however,
withdrew, partly because the prosperity ofthe U.S. retained the right to intervene in
Cuban settlers depended on their export tradeCuban affairs and to supervise its finances
to Europe, and partly because Cuba feared theand foreign relations. Under the Platt
rising power of the United States more thanAmendment, Cuba also agreed to lease to the
they  disliked  Spanish  colonial  rule.U.S.  the  naval  base  at  Guantánamo  Bay.
Due to the fact that Cuba is a mere 90 milesIndependent Cuba soon ran into difficulties
from the United States has had a profoundas a result of factional disputes and
influence on the countries development.corruption among the small educated elite and
Politicians in the south plotted the island'sthe failure of the government to deal with
annexation as a means of bolstering thethe deep social problems left behind by the
pro-slavery forces in the U.S. throughout theSpanish. In 1906, following disputed
early 1900's. In 1848 a pro-annexationistelections to choose Estrada Palma's
uprising was defeated after several failedsuccessor, an armed revolt broke out and the
invasion atemps from Florida provedU.S. exercised its right of intervention. The
fruitless. After that the United States triedcountry was placed under U.S. occupation and
to buy Cuba from Spain but was always turneda U.S. governor took charge for three years.
down.In 1908 self-government was restored when
José Miguel Gómez was elected President,
Rural poverty in Spain led to a substantialbut the U.S. retained its supervision of
Spanish emigration to Cuba. Among thoseCuban affairs. Despite frequent outbreaks of
arriving were the parents of Fidel Castro.disorder, however, constitutional government
During the 1890s pro-independence agitationwas maintained until 1925, when Gerardo
revived, fueled by resentment of theMachado y Morales, having been elected
restrictions imposed on Cuban trade by SpainPresident,  suspended  the  constitution.
and hostility to Spain's increasingly
oppressive and incompetent administration ofThis brief article can't possibly address the
Cuba. On 15 July 1895 rebellion broke out andvast history that is Cuba. I have listed
the independence party, led by Tomás Estradaseveral excellent books at the end of this
Palma and the poet José Martí, proclaimedarticle. You can find them all at Amazon or
Cuba an independent republic. Martí wasyour local bookstore.



1 A B C 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93