
Originally inhabited by Ciboney and Arawak Indians,
Cuba was colonised by the Spanish following the arrival
of Columbus in 1492. In the 1600s European powers struggled
to control the country. After two wars of independence
the Cubans won their freedom from the Spanish in 1899,
only to be ruled for another 60 years by governments
in the hand or pocket of the U.S.A.
Independence from the US domination
was finally won in the late fifties after more than
two years of fighting between the Batista regime and
revolutionary forces led by Fidel Castro, Che Guevara
and others. US hostility to the new order culminated
with the implementation of an economic embargo. This
left Cuba getting all its support from the Soviet bloc,
and by the mid sixties communism was taken on as the
official ideology. With this political concordance came
also the reliance on Soviet technical support and guidance.
By the mid eighties criticism of the
way the Revolution was developing reached a level that
the government declared the need for an Era of Rectification.
This involved a number of measures designed to answer
popular discontent, and to assert a more indigenous
path of development. Bureaucracy was cut back, a new
elected local government structure was created. Surplus
labour was directed into the construction of new housing,
hospitals and schools. Some state farms were broken
up into a number of workers co-operatives. In 1965 Che
had left Cuba, critical of the island's wholesale adoption
of Soviet influences. After 20 years his perceptions
made sense to sufficient Cubans and a reaction took
place.
When the Soviet bloc crumbled in 1989
Cuba's economy was thrown into crisis. The markets for
their exports, and the hard currency for imports, disappeared
as former Soviet bloc countries realigned their economies
to join the capitalist system. The supplies of spare
parts, of fuel, medicines and agricultural chemicals
all diminished drastically. It was assumed that Cuba
would follow the Soviet bloc: an economic and political
collapse followed by an acquiescence to capitalism.

The U.S. responded to these events by tightening the
blockade, hoping to speed up the 'inevitable' collapse
of the communist government. The Cubans declared this
crisis the "Special Period (in Peacetime)" and implemented
a continuing series of economic reforms including the
redirection of its trade towards the world market, major
development of tourism, and the legalisation of small
scale private enterprise.
Ten years later and Cuba remains independent
and communist. This has not been the work of one person,
or one party, but the work of a nation determined to
enjoy Pax Cubana, not Pax Americana. How Cuba has survived
these last ten years is too big a story for this website.
What we are concerned with is how some Cubans, in their
search for political and economic independence, have
embraced and adopted/adapted sustainable solutions.
Organic agriculture, urban gardening, permaculture,
herbal medicines, renewable energy, waste minimisation,
have all developed rapidly since 1990. The developments
in Cuba have inspired people all over the planet, and
networks of international support have developed to
help compensate for the U.S. blockade and hostility
to its small neighbour.
An Organic Revolution |