Young People From the U.S. Travel to Cuba and Break the Siege
kolaking.substack.com
By Manolo De Los Santos and Kate Gonzales Source: Globetrotter It’s a hot and crowded Tuesday morning in the Yoruba Cultural Center in Havana, and the air sticks to the skin. You can hear the fluttering of paper as people fan themselves, and a surprise blackout takes out the sound system with a flicker of the lights. And yet, 150 young organizers from the U.S. sit shoulder to shoulder, listening attentively to two leaders of the cultural movement in Cuba. They line up and down the hall with the hope of squeezing in their question—on climate change, on housing, on fighting racism, about hope in the future—before time is up.
Young People From the U.S. Travel to Cuba and Break the Siege
Young People From the U.S. Travel to Cuba and…
Young People From the U.S. Travel to Cuba and Break the Siege
By Manolo De Los Santos and Kate Gonzales Source: Globetrotter It’s a hot and crowded Tuesday morning in the Yoruba Cultural Center in Havana, and the air sticks to the skin. You can hear the fluttering of paper as people fan themselves, and a surprise blackout takes out the sound system with a flicker of the lights. And yet, 150 young organizers from the U.S. sit shoulder to shoulder, listening attentively to two leaders of the cultural movement in Cuba. They line up and down the hall with the hope of squeezing in their question—on climate change, on housing, on fighting racism, about hope in the future—before time is up.