Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

A Bit of Old Flint (and Detroit) in Cuba



Author, illustrator and artist Tom Pohrt reflects on visions of Flint's past during a trip to Cuba:

The Pastelaria Francesa is nestled between the Hotel Telegrafo and Hotel Inglaterra, facing the Parque Central Parque in Havana Cuba. It is a good place to sit early in the morning with your cappuccino and chocolaté Napoliatana and watch the street life. There has been a café in this same location since the 1850’s. The shouts of the old guy selling maní, (peanuts wrapped in a paper cone) or the latest edition of the state newspaper Granma, on the other hand, has only been here since the late 1950’s. Youthful looking policemen saunter back and forth, school children in their Young Pioneer uniforms - backpacks filled with books, the hustlers, the tourists, the beggar or two, uniformed clerks on their way to work, can be counted on to parade by.

Depending on where you are sitting you can have a grand view of the traffic emerging from Prado and Neptuno onto the Paseo de Marti, once arguably the grandest of avenues in all the Americas. Horses still clip-clop along pulling carriages, keeping to the right of the faster moving vehicles. You will see Russian Lada’s, the odd Peboda, various Japanese and now Chinese made cars and buses. But what stands out are all the vintage Chevrolet’s, Buick’s, Chrysler’s and Fords, dating from the 1940’s and 50’s, cruising along under a sub-tropical sun. No matter how many mornings over the years you stake your table here it is always a wonder to see these Flint and Detroit made vintage cars, especially in such numbers. The Paseo de Marti is not Saginaw Street Flint nor Woodward Avenue Detroit but the sight of these automobiles will surely stir memories in those who grew up when these cars ruled the streets.

Havana is not the only place to spot these vintage American cars. They are all over Cuba and I expect must number in the thousands. How the Cubans keep these cars going is a testament to their ingenuity under trying conditions. It is not a surprise to look under the hood of one of these cars to find a Russian engine, most likely from a Lada. Parts are butchered from who knows what, they are hand made or brought in piece by piece from outside the country. The condition of these cars too vary from excellent to rusted-out-panel-less heaps with a cinder-block supporting the front seat.

Mention Cuba and many think Mafia, cigars, rum and all the old American cars. It’s all still there, except the Mafia. Havana is a bit beat down at the heels and like the old cars manages to patch itself together here and there. Should anyone think to bring these cars back to the U.S. the current Cuban government would not allow it. They are considered a part of the Patrimonio Nacional. Maybe things will change some day but I hope the cars stay. They have become part of the landscape.







Thursday, May 21, 2009

Flint: Guantánamo North

President Obama plans to close Gitmo in Cuba, and Senator Carl Levin says relocation of the potential terrorists to Michigan might help the local economy. Why not Flint?

Josh Rogin at Congressional Quarterly reports:
"Most lawmakers view the prospect of moving prisoners from Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, to their districts as a negative proposition. But at least one Democratic senator is open to the idea as a potential economic boost to his struggling state.

"Carl Levin , chairman of the Armed Services Committee, said that construction and staffing at a new maximum-security prison in Michigan could help his cash-starved state.

“'If the governor and the local officials are open to it, that’s something that should be considered,' said Levin, making the point that each state should make its own determination."