Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Catching a cold in Cuba

Catching a cold in Cuba
Trip to beautiful island offers harsh lessons about shortages of
medicine, food and transportation

By SALLY MELCHER JARVIS, Correspondent
Sunday News

Published: Dec 30, 2007 12:08 AM EST

HAVANA, CUBA - It wasn't much of a cold; just the kind that would get
better by itself in a week. In the meantime it was a nuisance with a
cough and stuffy nose. A little over-the-counter remedy would help.

It was November 2007. We were in Havana, the capital of Cuba, with a
humanitarian group organized by the North Museum of Natural History &
Science. Our role was to bring medical and school supplies in our
suitcases. Americans are allowed in Cuba; they aren't permitted to spend
any money there. We prepaid for our trip including every meal and tip.

There were no over-the-counter remedies to be had. I asked the guide
what Cubans did if they had a cold. The guide said that a Cuban would go
to the doctor — a visit free of charge — who would write a prescription
for aspirin. However, there would be no way to fill the prescription.

We visited a pharmacy later in the trip. Behind the counter five
well-dressed Cuban women waited to serve, but the shelves were empty.
The only items in sight were the monthly ration of sanitary napkins, 10
permitted per Cuban woman per month.

I then understood the value of the over-the-counter medical supplies we
had brought to a Catholic charity.

It was like being in a dream where two different things can happen at
the same time. We were in a two-tier system: one for the privileged
(tourists, for example) and the other for those who lived and worked in
socialist Cuba.

Our luxurious state-owned hotel was closed to Cubans, except for those
who worked there. A Cuban could not even come in for a meal.

There were two levels of money. One, the CUC, was used by foreign
tourists and convertible to other currencies. The other, the peso, was
for Cubans, and worth 5 percent of the "better" currency.

There were two levels of stores, one that took pesos and another that
took CUC money. The peso stores had very little to sell. The stores for
CUC money were marginally better. Even a modest chain store in the
United States could outshine the "better" store.

There certainly were no traffic jams. With few privately owned cars and
limited public transportation, many people rely on hitchhiking. In one
five-mile stretch of a major highway I counted 20 people hoping for
rides. In the same five-mile stretch the traffic consisted of one taxi,
one bus, one pedestrian, two horse-drawn carts, three motorcycles, seven
cars, 11 bicycles and 13 pickup trucks. This included both sides of the
four-lane highway. About 15 percent are 1950s-era American cars still
using leaded gas.

Coupons are given out each month for food such as coffee and rice. The
coupons run out after two weeks, so it is necessary to buy food with the
monthly salary. Food at the farmers' market is expensive. So if a person
does not use the coffee ration, that coffee is traded for something else

On balance, we saw no people sleeping in doorways. We learned that there
was 95 percent literacy. There was no rent to pay, no medical insurance
needed — but no aspirin.

Cuba is a beautiful country with limestone soil as rich as Lancaster
County and a mild climate year-round. The people are friendly,
well-dressed and polite. Havana is a stunning Spanish colonial city with
tree-lined plazas and colonnaded homes. If only the windows were not
patched, the pillars rotted and the faded walls stained with mildew. The
government has restored a number of homes, but the overall effect is one
of decay.

The decay and lack of merchandise are blamed on the American embargo, in
place since 1960. One wall poster in a cigar factory called the American
embargo "genocide." Our country's story in Cuba is not an admirable one.
Still, I wondered if a socialist government in 50 years could not come
up with something better for its people.

It was depressing to see attractive and intelligent people restricted
and denied opportunity in such an appealing land only 90 miles away from
our country.

The accident of birth has put me in a free country and I have never been
so grateful.

http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/214416

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