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Haydée Santamaría; Cuban Revolutionary: She Led by Transgression

audiobook Haydée Santamaría; Cuban Revolutionary: She Led by Transgression by Margaret Randall in History

Description

The 2009 quadricentennial celebrations commemorating the discovery of the Hudson River by Henry Hudson will also spotlight one of our deepest and most enduring national legacies―the Dutch presence that has shaped not just the Hudson Valley but four centuries of American life.This lavishly illustrated book; a companion to the exhibition opening in June 2009 at the Hudson River Museum; takes needed stock of the remarkable past created by the settlers of New Netherlands. Although the Dutch controlled the Hudson Valley only until ceding it to the British in 1664; the Dutch established the towns and cities that today define the region―from New Amsterdam upriver to Fort Orange; today’s Albany. The Dutch heritage lives on; not only in historic estates or Dutch-named places like the Bronx or Yonkers but also in commerce; law; politics; religion; art; and culture.In thirteen original essays; this book traverses those four centuries to enrich and expand our understanding of America’s origins. The essays; written by a superb team of distinguished scholars; are grouped into five chronological frames―1609; 1709; 1809; 1909; and 2009―each marking a key point in the history of the Dutch in the valley.The topics range widely; from patterns of settlement and the Dutch encounter with slavery and Native America to Dutch influences in everything from architecture and religion to material culture; language; and literature.Based on fresh research; this book is at once a fascinating introduction to a remarkable past and a much-needed new look at the Dutch role in the region; in the story of America’s origins; and in creating the habits; styles; and practices identified as quintessentially New York’s.


#768216 in Books Margaret Randall 2015-08-14Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.90 x .60 x 5.90l; .0 #File Name: 0822359626248 pagesHaydee Santamaria Cuban Revolutionary She Led by Transgression


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. this work of love...By Marc LichtmanI had read and enjoyed two of Margaret Randall’s books on the Nicaraguan Revolution; as well as her translation of Tomas Borge’s 'Carlos the Dawn Is No Longer Beyond Our Reach.'That was a long time ago; and I hadn’t read anything by her since; although I read a lot of what is available on Cuba in English.I would have preferred a biography of Cuban leader Haydée Santamaría; but until there is one in English; this work of love; along with books by and about some of her closest collaborators will have to suffice.The strength of this book is reminiscences of her by Randall and by others who worked with her. The weakness is there’s so much left out; and much repetition; sometimes of things of great importance; but sometimes of words she may have spoken at a given moment; which because of repetition may be given greater weight than they merit.Her work at Casa de las Américas; the internationalist center for the arts Santamaría headed is what I knew the least about; and therefore what I learned the most from. I don’t know of any other sources to recommend on this; although Che Guevara’s work Socialism and Man in Cuba; mentioned several times in the book is important for understanding the revolution’s approach to art; unfortunately not always lived up to; although both Santamaria and her husband of twenty years; Armando Hart; played a big role in restoring it after “the five gray years.” In my opinion; the Cuban internationalist intervention in Angola; which Cuba launched without first informing the Soviet Union also created a new situation (see Cuba and Angola the War for Freedom; as well as the works by Piero Gleijeses).Of course I agree with the author that Haydée Santamaría should have received a state funeral; but as someone who has struggled with lifelong depression; I know that few people who haven't had that experience can understand suicide. And of course I agree that it's never about one thing.... Still; all the central party leaders were present.Nancy Stout’s biography of Celia Sánchez; One Day in December: Celia Sánchez and the Cuban Revolution fills in some of the gaps; as does Aldabonazo: Inside the Cuban Revolutionary Underground; 1952-58: A Participant's Account; by Hart. Women in Cuba: The making of a revolution within the revolution. From Santiago de Cuba and the Rebel Army; to the birth of the Federation of Cuban Women has accounts of her by Vilma Espín and Asela de los Santos. Che’s Episodes of the Cuban Revolutionary War; 1956-58 is also must reading.For the broader impact of the Cuban Revolution in the world; and especially in the US; I recommend; among many books; To Speak the Truth: Why Washington's 'Cold War' Against Cuba Doesn't End; Cuba and the Coming American Revolution; and It's the Poor Who Face the Savagery of the US Justice System: The Cuban Five Talk of Their Lives Within the Us Working Class.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great impact as biography; history; political analysis; and poetry.By John KotulaThe other day I was telling my wife about this book; giving her a summary of what I'd learned about Haydée Santamaria. In the process of recounting her remarkable life; I got quite emotional and close to tears. This surprized me because while I was reading the book I was sometimes impatient with Margaret Randall's telling of the story. I wanted a more vivid; maybe cinematic; version of the events where I could see what was happening and not just hear about it. However; that is not what the author is up to and in the end her book has great impact as biography; history; political analysis; and poetry.One thing this book makes clear is that we in the US of A are deprived of the truth about the shining example of Cuba. Yes; the truth is available; but to access it; we have to circumvent sixty years of cold war lies; vilifications; and denigrations; all layer on because Cuba is proof that here is another way. Societies can organize themselves to take care of all their people and not just to funnel profit to the oligarchy.Randall presents the heros and martyrs of the Cuban revolution; Fidel Castro; Che Guevara; Celia Sánchez; Haydée herself; among many others; as driven; principled; self-sacrificing; and humane. They were not perfect; but they were deeply deserving of our admiration and study. There is every reason to believe she is correct in this assessment.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Unsung Hero of the Cuban RevolutionBy Jack ColhounMargaret Randall introduces one of the most remarkable; but little known; heroes of the Cuban revolution to North American readers in her important new book Haydee Santamaria: Cuban Revolutionary. Santamaria was the only woman to take part on all aspects of the revolution in the 1950s. Haydee; as she was known In Cuba; participated in the Moncada Barracks attack in which her brother Abel and lher over Boris Luis Santo Caloma were captured; brutally tortured; and murdered by the Cuban army. She was captured; tortured; and imprisoned. As a leader of the urban resistance she smuggled arms and planned sabotage operations. She also fought alongside Fidel Castro and Che Guevara in the Sierra Maestra. After the triumph of the revolution; she founded Casa de las Americas; a path-breaking cultural institution that introduced the Cuban revolution to artists and intellectuals from around the world. “This is not a biography;” Randall writes. “This is an impressionist portrait; written by a poet rather than a historian. Mine is a rebel and feminist lens.” Randall first wrote about Santamaria in her Cuba memoir; To Change the World: My Years in Cuba (Rutgers University Press; 2009). The two women became friends as they collaborated on art projects when Randall lived in Cuba (1969-80). I was spellbound by Santamaria’s description of her dealings with the Mafia to purchase weapons. The Mafia; which operated a colony of casinos; hotels; and nightclubs in prerevolutionary Cuba; sold arms to all sides in Cuba from Batista to Cuban rebel groups. ”I was forced to escape from one of those meetings with a pistol in my hand . . .;” Haydee recalled years later. “[W]hen I’d leave a meeting in the U.S.; even if I took three or four showers I would feel dirty. I don’t want to give the false impression that any of those gangsters took advantage of me; they weren’t interested in a kid who barely weighed 90 pounds. But I was always afraid they might try to kidnap me in order to get money from Fidel.” But she “kept on transporting arms to the Sierra; and they [Cuban police] never caught me.” Santamaria said the Mafia cheated the July 26th Movement; which did not get all the weapons it paid for. She asserted; “The ammunition we . . . were able to smuggle out was due to the courage of Cuban women; who traveled with it sewn into their skirts.” Haydee was wise beyond her years. “I think it has to be difficult for people to be violent; to go to war if it’s necessary;” she told Randall. “What you can’t lose . . . is your humanity . . . When someone had to place a bomb . . . I would always choose . . . the one who had the greatest consciousness; the greatest human qualities; so whoever it was wouldn’t get used to placing bombs; wouldn’t get pleasure out of placing bombs; so it would always hurt him to [have to do that.]” Her humanity was underscored when she adopted children of fallen revolutionaries from Cuba and elsewhere in Latin America and raised them with her biological children. -- Jack Colhoun is author of "Gangsterismo: The United States; Cuba; and the Mafia; 1933-1966" (OR Books; 2013)

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