In my life, I have taken many journeys
without which I would not have experienced important truths. My father started
us off early, taking us on many journeys to help us understand that true
knowledge comes only from experience. We took trips every winter break to
Madrid, Mexico, Costa Rica, and to Jamaica and Trinidad, my parents’ homeland
for Christmas. Silly things I remember from those trips include the mango chili
sauce on the pork in Maui, the names of the women who gave out the towels by
the pools in Selva Verde, Costa Rica, eating dinner at 10 p.m. in Spain. These
were all tourist experiences that I, at first, found spellbinding. My truths
were the truths of the tourist brochures: beautiful hotels, beaches, and
cities. I did not see the blindfolds. I did not appreciate how being held
hostage by the beauty of the surface—the beaches and cities—blinded me to the
absence of Puerto Rican natives on the streets of San Juan; I did not
understand how the prevalence and familiarity of English conspired to veil the
beauty of the Spanish language beneath volumes of English translations.
I learned more about these truths in my
sophomore year of high school, when I was among a group of students selected to
visit Cuba. My grandmother was born in Cuba, yet I had never thought to
research my own heritage. I have remained the naïve American who saw Castro as
some distant enemy of my country, accepting this as fact because this seemed to
be the accepted wisdom. I soon became intrigued, however, with this supposed
plague to my freedom, my culture, and everything good and decent. I began to
think, just what is communism anyway? What’s so bad about Castro and Cuba—and I
hear they have good coffee. I believed that what was missing was a lack of
understanding between our two cultures, and that acceptance of our differences
would come only with knowledge.
My first impression of Cuba was the
absence of commercialism. I saw no giant golden arch enticing hungry Cubans
with beef-laced fries; I did see billboards of Che Guevara and signposts
exhorting unity and love. I realized, however, that much of the uniqueness that
I relished here might be gone if the trade blockades in Cuba were ever lifted.
The parallels and the irony were not lost on me. I was stepping out of an
American political cave that shrouded the beauty of Cuba and stepping into
another, one built on patriotic socialism, one where truths were just as
ideological as, yet very different from, mine.
History, I recognized, is never
objective. The journeys I have taken have been colored by my prior experiences
and by what my feelings were in those moments. Everyone holds a piece of the
truth. Maybe facts don’t matter. Perhaps my experience is my truth and the more
truths I hear from everyone else, the closer I will get to harmonization. Maybe
there is no harmony, and I must go through life challenging and being
challenged, perhaps finding perspectives from which I can extract—but never
call—truth. I must simply find ways to understand others, to seek in them what
is common to us all and perhaps someday find unity in our common human bond.
This is what life has taught me so far, my sum of truths gleaned from
experiencing many cultures. I don’t know if these truths will hold, but I hope
that my college experience will be like my trip to Cuba—challenging some
truths, strengthening others, and helping me experience new ones.
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