World War Turning Point Europe, Significant Change Occurred Emergence Legitimate Revolutionary Regimes
Self-Determination in Cuba
There are few who would dispute the fact that following the conclusion of World War II and prior to its revolution (which began in 1953 and concluded on January 1 of 1959) Cuba was a prosperous region of the world that was certainly worth fighting for. The country's leader prior to the ascendancy of Fidel Castro, Fulgencio Batista, had cleverly manipulated the assistance of a number of external forces, primarily that of the United States, to assist the country in achieving a degree of economic gain and modernity the likes of which were comparable to, if not surpassing, those of other parts of the world.
Its economic prowess may be demonstrated from the following quotation. "Cuba in 1958, prior to the government of the Communist Fidel Castro, paid its employees an average of $3.00 per hour, which was higher that year than that of Belgium ($2.70); Denmark ($2.86); France ($1.74; West Germany ($2.73); and comparable to the United States ($4.06)" (Epperson, 1985). In terms of standards of living, there is documentation to support the fact that among South American countries, Cuba was third in the percentage of literacy, first in the percentage of education, lowest in mortality rates, second in the amount of doctors per 1,000 people, third in the number of dentists per 1,000 people, second in per capita income, and fourth in wages per employee (Epperson, 1985).
However, it should be noted that such figures may be misleading when it comes to representing the daily life lived by the majority of the Cuban population, who did not factor into the labor union largess and see the apparent boons from benefactors such as the United States commerce and government. Income disparities existed, and despite the presence of a mercurial middle class, there were still vast amounts of impoverished people in agrarian environments who did not enjoy any of the aforementioned benefits. Therefore, when Castro's regime was able to oust Batista from the country, it was able to legitimize its revolution under the banner of self-determination of a nation that would be (largely) free of external influences and one which would redistribute its resources and commodities to the vast majority of the people, who had previously only labored to produce them and not been able to utilize them in a significant capacity. This argument was justified to the masses by a number of nationwide reforms that took place shortly after the Cuban Revolution had resulted in triumph for Castro's regime.
Justification
Some of the most convincing evidence for many of the concepts that have been used to substantiate the overall goal of self-determination for Cuba came directly from Castro's regime itself. The following quotation from Castro's brother, Raul, is indicative of the ideology that was used to validate the Cuban revolution in the eyes of the masses. This quotation was issued in defense of the July 26, 1953 assault on the Moncada barracks in Santiago, which many historians have recorded as the opening salvo of the Cuban Revolution. "…it marked the start of an action to transform Cuba's political, economic and social system and put an end to the foreign oppression, poverty, unemployment, ill health and ignorance that weighed upon our country and our people' (Rayne, no date). There are a number of salient points for this quotation, which in many ways provides a verifiable outline for the justification of the Cuban revolution. The first is the ready acknowledgment of penury and its accompanying ills, which Raul explained as "unemployment" and as "ignorance." The second is that the source of such negative occurrences is due to a "foreign" influence -- which of course implies that a dissolution of such an influence will allow Cuba to gain its own degree of self-determination, and right many of these inequities by doing so with the revolution.
Consequently, many of the earliest efforts of Castro's regime were targeted towards those who lived in rural communities -- and who potentially had the most to gain from the loss of Batista's decidedly corporate reign. Conditions in such areas were largely deplorable, and evidence of the fact that the preceding statistical evidence was not entirely inclusive for everyone living within Cuba, as the following quotation indicates. "At the time of the Revolution, the largely rural population had an average annual income per person of $91.25 - an eight of that of Mississippi, the poorest state in the U.S.A. Only 11% of Cuba drank milk, 4% ate meat, 2-3% had running water, and 9.1% had...
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