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No Color Line Drawn in Cuba
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includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied . A Graphic Description-Condition in the Pearl
of the Antilles-American Prejudice Cannot Exist There-A
Catholic Priest Vouches for the Accuracy of Statement.
The article we reprint from the New York Sun touching the
status of the Colored man in Cuba was shown to Rev. Father
Walter R. Yates, Assistant pastor of St. Joseph's Colored
Church.
A Planet reporter was informed that Father Yates had resided
in that climate for several years and wished his views.
"The Sun correspondent is substantially
correct," said the Reverend gentleman. "Of
course, the article is very incomplete,
there are many omissions, but that is to be
expected in a newspaper article."
It would take volumes to describe the
achievements of men of the Negro, or as I
prefer to call it, the Aethiopic Race, not
only in Cuba, but in all the West Indies,
Central and South America, and in Europe
especially in Sicily, Spain and France.
"By achievements I mean success in military,
political, social, religious and literary
walks of life. The only thing I see to
correct in the Sun's article, continued the
Father, is in regard to population. 'A
Spanish official told me that the census
figures were notoriously misleading. The
census shows less than one-third colored.
That is said not to be true. As soon as a
man with African blood, whether light or
dark, acquires property and education, he
returns himself in the census as white. The
officials humor them in this petty vanity.
In fact it's the most difficult thing in the
world to distinguish between races in Cuba.
Many Spaniards from Murcia, for instance, of
undoubted noble lineage are darker than
Richmond mulattoes.'"
May I ask you, Father Yates, to what do you
ascribe the absence of Race prejudice in
Cuba?
"Certainly. In my humble opinion it is due
to Church influence. We all know the effect
on our social life of our churches. Among
Catholics all men have always been on equal
footing at the Communion rail. Catholics
would be unworthy of their name, i.e.
Catholic or universal were it not so."
"Even in the days when slavery was practiced
this religious equality and fellowship was
fully recognized among Catholics."
Did you know there is an American Negro
Saint? He was born in Colon, Central
America, and is called Blessed Martin De
Porres. His name is much honored in Cuba,
Peru, Mexico and elsewhere. He wore the
white habit of a Dominican Brother. The
Dominicans are called the Order of
Preachers.
Christ Died for All. Father Donovan has
those words painted in large letters over
the Sanctuary in St. Joseph's Church. It is
simply horrible to think that some
self-styled Christian sectarians act as if
Christ died for white men only.
Matanzas, Cuba, Jan. 20.--Not least among
the problems of reconstruction in Cuba is
the social and political status of the
colored "man and brother." In Cuba the shade
of a man's complexion has never been greatly
considered, and one finds dusky Othellos in
every walk of life. The present dispute
arose when a restaurant keeper from Alabama
refused a seat at his public table to the
mulatto Colonel of a Cuban regiment. The
Southerner was perfectly sincere in the
declaration that he would see himself in a
warmer climate than Cuba before he would
insult his American guests "by seating a
'nigger' among them!" To the Colonel it was
a novel and astonishing experience, and is
of course deeply resented by all his kind in
Cuba, where African blood may be found, in
greater or less degree, in some of the
richest and most influential families of the
island.
Colored Belles There
In Havana you need not be surprised to see
Creole belles on the fashionable Prado--perhaps
Cuban-Spanish. Cuban-English or Cuban-German
blondes--promenading with Negro officers in
gorgeous uniforms; or octoroon beauties with
hair in natural crimp, riding in carriages
beside white husbands or lighting up an
opera box with the splendor of their
diamonds. There was a wedding in the old
cathedral the other day, attended by the
elite of the city, the bride being the
lovely young daughter of a Cuban planter,
the groom a burly Negro. Nobody to the manor
born has ever dreamed of objecting to this
mingling of colors; therefore when some
newly arrived foreigner declares that nobody
but those of his own complexion shall eat in
a public dining room, there is likely to be
trouble.
The War Began
When the war began the population of Cuba
was a little more than one-third black; now
the proportion is officially reckoned as
525,684 colored, against 1,631,600 white. In
1898 two Negroes were serving as secretaries
in the Autonomist Cabinet. The last regiment
that Blanco formed was of Negro volunteers,
to whom he paid--or, rather, promised to
pay, which is quite another matter,
considering Blanco's habit--the unusual hire
of $20 a month, showing his appreciation of
the colored man as a soldier. If General
Weyler evinced any partiality in Cuba, it
was for the black Creole. During the ten
years' war, his cavalry escort was composed
entirely of colored men. Throughout his
latest reign in the island he kept black
soldiers constantly on guard at the gates of
the government palace. While the illustrated
papers of Spain were caricaturing: the
insurgents as coal-black demons with horns
and forked toe nails, burning cane fields
and butchering innocent Spaniards, the
Spanish General chose them for his
bodyguards.
One of the Greatest
Generals
One of the greatest Generals of the day,
considering the environment, was Antonio
Maceo, the Cuban mulatto hero, who, for two
years, kept the Spanish army at bay or led
them a lively quickstep through the western
provinces to the very gates of Havana. As
swift on the march as Sheridan or Stonewall
Jackson, as wary and prudent as Grant
himself, he had inspirations of military
genius whenever a crisis arose. It is not
generally known that Martinez Campos, who
owed his final defeat at Colisea to Maceo,
was a second cousin of this black man.
Maceo's mother, whose family name was Grinan,
came from the town of Mayari where all the
people have Indian blood in their veins.
Col. Martinez del Campos, father of General
Martinez Campos, was once Military Governor
of Mayari. While there he loved a beautiful
girl of Indian and Negro blood, who belonged
to the Grinan family, and was first cousin
to Maceo's mother. Martinez Campos, Jr., the
future General and child of the Indian girl
was born in Mayari. The Governor could not
marry his sweetheart, having a wife and
children in Spain, but when he returned to
the mother country he took the boy along.
According to Spanish law, the town in which
one is baptized is recognized as his legal
birthplace, so it was easy enough to
legitimatize the infant Campos. He grew up
in Spain, and when sent to Cuba as
Captain-General, to his everlasting credit
be it said, that one of his first acts was
to hunt up his mother. Having found her, old
and poor, he bought a fine house in Campo
Florida, the aristocratic suburb of Havana,
established her there and cared for her
tenderly till she died. The cousins, though
on opposite sides of the war, befriended
each other in many instances, and it is said
that more than once Captain-General Campos
owed his life to his unacknowledged
relative.
His Brother
Captured
The latter's half brother, Jose Maceo, was
captured early in the war and sent to the
African prison, Centa; whence he escaped
later on with Quintín Bandera and others of
his staff. The last named Negro Colonel is
to-day a prominent figure. "Quintin Bandera"
means "fifteen flags," and the appellation
was bestowed upon him by his grateful
countrymen after he had captured fifteen
Spanish ensigns. Everybody seems to have
forgotten his real name, and Quintin Bandera
he will remain in history. While in the
African penal settlement the daughter of a
Spanish officer fell in love with him. She
assisted in his escape and fled with him to
Gibraltar. There he married his rescuer. She
is of Spanish and Moorish descent, and is
said to be a lady of education and
refinement. She taught her husband to read
and write and feels unbounded pride in his
achievements.
The noted General Jesus Rabi, of the Cuban
Army, is of the same mixed blood as the
Maceos. Another well-known Negro commander
is General Flor Crombet, whose patriotic
deeds have been dimmed by his atrocious
cruelties. Among all the officers now
swarming Havana none attracts more admiring
attention than General Ducasse, a tall,
fine-looking mulatto, who was educated at
the fine military school of St. Cyr. He is
of extremely polished manners and undeniable
force of character, can make a brilliant
address and has great influence among the
masses. To eject such a man as he from a
third rate foreign restaurant in his own
land would be ridiculous. His equally
celebrated brother, Col. Juan Ducasse, was
killed last year in the Pinar del Rio
insurrection.
Colored Men's
Achievements
Besides these sons of Mars, Cuba has
considered her history enriched by the
achievements of colored men in peaceful
walks of life. The memory of Gabriel
Concepcion de la Valdez the mulatto poet, is
cherished as that of a saint. He was accused
by the Spanish government of complicity in
the slave insurrection of 1844 and condemned
to be shot in his native town, Matanzas. One
bright morning in May he stood by the old
statue of Ferdinand VII. in the Plaza
d'Armas, calmly facing a row of muskets,
along whose shining barrels the sun glinted.
The first volley failed to touch a vital
spot. Bleeding from several wounds, he still
stood erect, and, pointing to his heart,
said in a clear voice, "Aim here!" Another
mulatto author, educator and profound
thinker was Antonio Medina, a priest and
professor of San Basilio the Greater. He
acquired wide reputation as a poet, novelist
and ecclesiastic, both in Spain and Cuba,
and was selected by the Spanish Academy to
deliver the oration on the anniversary of
Cerantes' death in Madrid. His favorite
Cuban pupil was Juan Gaulberto Gomez, the
mulatto journalist, who has been imprisoned
time and again for offences against the
Spanish press laws. Señor Gomez, whose home
is in Matanzas, is now on the shady side of
40, a spectacled and scholarly looking man.
After the peace of Zanjon he collaborated in
the periodicals published by the Marquis of
Sterling. In '79 he founded in Havana, the
newspaper La Fraternidad, devoted to the
interest of the colored race. For a certain
fiery editorial he was deported to Centa and
kept there two years. Then he went to Madrid
and assumed the management of La Tribuna and
in 1890 returned to Havana and resumed the
publication of La Fraternidad.
Another Exile
Another beloved exile from the land of his
birth is Señor Jose White. His mother was a
colored woman of Matanzas. At the age of 16
Jose wrote a mass for the Matanzas orchestra
and gave his first concert. With the
proceeds he entered the Conservatory of
Paris, and in the following year won the
first prize as violinist among thirty-nine
contestants. He soon gained an enviable
reputation among the most celebrated
European violinists, and, covered with
honors, returned to Havana in January of
'75. But his songs were sometimes of
liberty, and in June of the same year the
Spanish government drove him out of the
country. Then he went to Brazil, and is now
President of the Conservatory of Music of
Rio Janeiro.
One might go on multiplying similar
incidents. Some of the most eminent doctors,
lawyers and college professors in Cuba are
more or less darkly "colored." In the humble
walks of life one finds them everywhere, as
carpenters, masons, shoemakers and plumbers.
In the few manufacturies of Cuba a large
proportion of the workmen are Negroes
especially in the cigar factories. In the
tanneries of Pinar del Rio most of the
workmen are colored, also in the saddle
factories of Havana, Guanabacoa, Cardenas
and other places. Although the insurgent
army is not yet disbanded, the
sugar-planters get plenty of help from their
ranks by offering fair wages.--New York Sun.
Facts about Porto
Rico told in Short Paragraphs
Porto Rico, the beautiful island which
General Miles is taking under the American
flag, has an area of 3,530 square miles. It
is 107 miles in length and 37 miles across.
It has a good telegraph line and a railroad
only partially completed.
The population, which is not made up of so
many Negroes and mulattoes as that of the
neighboring islands, is about 900,000.
Almost all of the inhabitants are Roman
Catholics.
It is a mountainous island, and contains
forty seven navigable streams. The roads are
merely paths beaten down by cattle.
Exports in 1887 were valued at $10,181,291;
imports, $10,198,006.
Gold, copper, salt, coal and iron abound.
The poorer classes live almost entirely on a
variety of highland rice, which is easily
cultivated, as it requires no flooding.
One of the principal industries is grazing.
St. Thomas is the market for fresh meat.
Corn, tobacco, sugar, coffee, cotton and
potatoes constitute the principal crops.
There are no snakes, no beasts of prey, no
noxious birds nor insects in the island.
The trees and grass are always green.
Rats are the great foe of the crops.
The natives often live to be one hundred
years old.
The most beautiful flower on the island is
the ortegon, which has purple blossoms a
yard long.
Hurricanes are frequent on the north coast
and very destructive.
Mosquitoes art the pest of the island.
Spanish is the language spoken, and
education is but little esteemed.
Every man, no matter how poor, owns a horse
and three or four gamecocks.
The small planter is called "Xivaro." He is
the proud possessor of a sweet-heart, a
gamecock, a horse, a hammock, a guitar and a
large supply of tobacco. He is quick
tempered but not revengeful, and he is
proverbially lazy.
Hospitality is the rule of the island. The
peasants are astonished and hurt when
offered money by travellers. San Juan Harbor
is one of the best in the West Indies, and
is said to be the third most strongly
fortified town in the world, Halifax being
the strongest and Cartagena, Spain, the
second.
Ponce de Leon, between 1509 and 1518 killed
off the natives.
The De Leon palace, built in 1511, is of
great interest to tourists.
The climate is warm but pleasant. At night
thick clothing is found comfortable.
All visiting and shopping are done after
sundown.
Slavery was abolished in 1873.
The women are rather small and delicately
formed. Many of them are pretty and they are
all given to flirtation.
Men and women ride horseback alike. Wicker
baskets to carry clothes or provisions, are
hung on either side of the horse's
shoulders. Back of these baskets the rider
sits.
It is the custom of travelers on horseback
to carry a basket handled sword a yard and a
quarter long, more as an ornament than as a
means of defense.
The observance of birthdays is an island
fashion that is followed by every one.
A Governor, appointed by the Crown, manages
affairs. His palace is at San Juan, the
capital, a town that has 24,000 inhabitants.
Upon the Rio Grande are prehistoric
monuments that have attracted the attention
of archaeologists.
Following the Spanish custom, men are
imprisoned for debt.
In the towns houses are built with flat
roofs, both to catch water and to afford the
family a small roof garden.
All planters have town houses where they
bring their families during the carnival
season.
San Juan is filled with adventurers,
gamblers, speculators and fugitives from
justice.--New York World. History of
Negro Soldiers in the Spanish-American War,
and other items of Interest, 1899
History of the Negro Soldier in the Spanish
American War Genealogy | African
American Genealogy |
History of the Negro Soldier in the Spanish
American War
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