Saturday, January 3, 2015

A peso, or a CUC, for his thoughts




And just like that, the engine coughed up a quiet growl and the ferry slipped from the dock through muck laden waters on its tack across the bay.

We bid adios to La Habana Vieja, Cuba’s Old Havana, setting our sights on the next stop, the City of Regla. ‘We’, were a tossed salad of passengers; some of the faithful making their way to Santeria Church, some delivering pizza-style cartons of fish stacked and loosely tied on the front and rear of bicycles, some like the legendary chicken, just wanting 'to get to the other side’, and a dozen or so Americans on a people-to-people mission of discovery to this island vestige of the Cold War. We were definitely a mix, but for a few moments in time we were as one, sharing the same steerage-level space.

The voyage was slow, even keeled, and brief. Even so, one face from the grey mass grabbed my attention and held it all the way. It was of a guy, my guess about twenty-something, perched at the open-air doorway. By the downward tilt of his head, stone motionless expression, and half-closed eyes, I imagined him surely to be deep in thought. But about what … the task ahead, who he was meeting, his future, or perhaps regrets for deeds done? If my Spanish was up to snuff, I would have offered a peso, or better yet a valued tourist CUC, for his thoughts. Instead I remained focused on his demeanor, continuously searching for clues and imagining scenarios. In the last moments before docking, I emerged from my trance, moved camera into place as I am accustomed to doing, and recorded an image to at least capture the essence of moments we anonymously just shared.


Epilogue: Less than two weeks after that bay crossing, the US announced an end to five-plus decades of embargo, signaling resumption of diplomatic ties with Castro’s Cuba. There would now be much more for that guy, and all Cubans, to ponder … for Americans as well.

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