PROPAGANDISTS USE DEAD REX AGAINST CUBA
David Commissiong
To the
Editor of The Nation newspaper (Barbados) 18 February 2010
The Letter
published in the Nation Newspaper of Monday 15th February 2010 under
the headline - "To Rex Who Spoke Against Cuban Racism" -
should be a warning to public figures about the ease with which opportunistic
propagandists can use a person’s good name and reputation to promote ends
that that person would never support.
The letter,
which was signed by several domestic Cuban opponents of the Revolutionary
Government of Cuba, portrays our Rex Nettleford as a man who dedicated his life
and abilities to identifying and denouncing racism in contemporary Cuba, and to
"highlighting the lot of those who are fighting for civil rights in
Cuba".
This is a
portrait of Rex Nettleford that virtually none of us in the Caribbean can
recognise! Indeed, Rex Nettleford himself - were he still alive - would also
not be able to recognise this portrait of himself.
No doubt,
the purpose of the letter is to use Nettleford’s good name and reputation as a
weapon against the government of Cuba, and to further ends that are dear to the
signatories of the letter. Readers of the letter are being led to believe that
Rex Nettleford had devoted himself to identifying Cuba as a purveyor of acute
forms of racism. Clearly, the deceased Nettleford is simply being used.
But, to some
extent, perhaps Rex has to share some of the blame for this facile and
reactionary exploitation of his name and reputation. You see, in November last
year, Nettleford joined with three other Jamaican academics in addressing a
letter to President Raul Castro of Cuba in support of one Dr Darsi Ferrer
Ramirez - a domestic opponent of the Cuban government who had
been arrested a few months earlier - and incidentally, one of the
signatories of the Nation letter. It is clear from the Jamaicans’ letter that
they had been informed that Dr Ferrer was "participating in the
organisation of a peaceful demonstration in defense of the human rights of
Afro-Cubans when he was arrested," and that they had therefore issued
their letter in good faith.
What
needs to be noted however is that the letter from the four eminent and well
meaning Jamaicans was written within the context of a concerted international
effort by certain opponents of the Cuban government to generate a number of
such letters. Indeed, a very similar letter was penned and signed by an equally
eminent and well meaning group of African-American academics and public
figures!
However,
one of those African-American academics - Makani Themba-Nixon - had the foresight
to withdraw her signature, after realizing that her good name and intentions
were likely to be exploited in precisely the same way that Rex Nettleford’s
have been.
In
respectfully requesting the withdrawal of her signature, Ms Themba-Nixon wrote as
follows:- "I just don’t want any public statement that we sign to become
fodder for attacking a nation and a revolution that has contributed so much to
the world....... Certainly, we should have thought this through more carefully
when we signed on........... Unfortunately, this effort is being used by
enemies of all of us to attempt to undermine a government whose efforts have
proven critical to the uplift of Black people, despite its shortcomings."
May we allow
the great Rex Nettleford to be true to himself in death as he was true to
himself in life. And may this great African-Caribbean intellectual and warrior
rest in peace!
DAVID
A. COMISSIONG