Latest
-
Gov. Pritzker Joins DPI to Launch Cannabis Research Institute (CRI) November 21, 2024
-
Staying Clear and Protected from AI Scams November 21, 2024
-
Eden Career Institute Hosts Grand Opening November 21, 2024
Popular
Tags
Artistas Adolescentes Aprenden el Valor de un Arduo Trabajo
Artists Nationwide
Brazilian Students Tour Kirie Water Reclamation Plant
Challenges of Returning to School in Adulthood
Chicago
Chicago Air and Water Show
Chicago CPS
Chicago Dream Act
Comparta su Historia
CPS
Cultura Latina
Delicious Salad Meals
Dream Act
Dream Act chicago
Dream Relief
Dream Relief Chicago
El Alma de la Fiesta
Ending Summer on the Right Foot
Ensaladas sencillas y deliciosas como plato principal
Estudiantes Brasileños Recorren la Planta de Reclamación de Agua Kirie
Feria de Regreso a la Escuela de la Rep. Berrios
Festival Unísono en Pilsen
Grant Park Spirit of Music Garden
ICIRR
ICIRR Receives Criticism Over Dream Relief Day
ICIRR Recibe Críticas
Jose Cuervo Tradicional
José Cuervo
José Cuervo Tradicional Celebra la Cultura Latina e Inspira Artistas a Nivel Nacional
Latin Culture
Los Retos de Volver a la Escuela Cuando Adultos
Meijer Abre sus Puertas en el Distrito de Berwyn
Meijer Opens in Berwyn District
orth side Summer Fest on Lincoln Ave
PepsiCo Foundation Apoya Futuros Periodistas Hispanos
PepsiCo Foundation Supports Future Hispanic Journalists
Share Your Story
Show Acuático y Aéreo
Simple
StoryCorps
storycorps.org
Teen Artists Learn the Value of Hard Work
Terminando el Verano con el Pie Derecho
Unisono Festival in Pilsen
‘El Chente’
The Young Generation and the CDR’s
By Daniel Nardini
The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, also known as the CDR’s in Cuba, are the most basic component in how the Communist Party of Cuba governs the country. They can be neighborhood government committees in the country’s major cities, or the local government in the rural towns and villages. They are known for organizing sports activities, cultural events, helping to fund local projects, deal with local problems and issues, and help Cuba’s young people or the elderly. Unofficially, but very well known, is that the CDR’s are also the eyes and ears of the Communist Party’s security apparatus. The leadership of these committees keep watch on all of the people, and participation is required. These committees were originally created to “thwart counter-revolutionary activity” and instill the people with “values of the Cuban Revolution and socialism.”
These days, it is easier said than done. Today’s Cuban generation no longer feel any revolutionary anything. They only see extreme poverty, people barely making a living, and people barely eating. The Cuban economy is in crisis, and hundreds of thousands are fleeing Cuba every year. Many young Cubans know people who have left the island, and of so many more of their friends, family and neighbors who wish to flee. This is the reality they know. For the young generation of today, they see nothing but deprivation, repression and the Communist Party not doing much to significantly change their lives for the better. There is no “revolutionary spirit” left in the young generation of today. Whatever their parents and grand-parents may have felt in the early years of Communist rule, the young people of today could care less.
In so many ways, Cuba is at a breaking point. There is not enough housing, not enough food, poverty is worse than ever, people have had to make do with even less than a generation ago during what the Cuban government called the “special period” when the country was going through economic contraction due to the collapse of the former Soviet Union, and the inequality that young Cubans have experienced their entire lives has only gotten worse. However, it is easier said than done to bring about political change in Cuba. The Communist Party simply does not want to give up power, and it has turned the screws of political repression ever tighter. Getting rid of the Communist Party of Cuba may require a revolution, and this is something the Cuban government is making sure does not happen. Even with the Cuban government allowing more people to open their own businesses, buying their own homes, and freely exchange U.S. dollars if they can get them from their relatives in the United States, in too many ways it is too little and too late. The younger generation want real change, but this is not happening. As long as the Communist Party of Cuba is in power it will not allow it. Cuba could become a powder-keg, and we have no idea where this will go.