The old photos in the bar show the city as it was maybe thirty or forty years ago. I’ve seen similar photos in capital cities the world over. These photos become sentimental, tinged with history and desire for another age. The cars, the buildings, the way people dress. Except that here in Cuba, NOTHING HAS CHANGED. Yes, facades are crumbling, some buildings are being restored. But those same damned cars in the photographs are still running. It is nothing short of incredible. Maybe it is a consequence of the 1959 revolution, but I don’t know of any other country where socialism has stopped time.
Sexuality is normalised at a very young age. I pass a little girl dancing suggestively to music from a trishaw. Older girls around egg her on, gyrating with her. The men look on appreciatively. Young girls onwards are always in tight dresses. Crop tops seem to be the norm, even when the body begins to spill over.
I get drenched by a gutter, spewing water all the way onto the middle of the road. So much for waiting out the rain! After a refreshing shower, I head back to the paladar I tried to have lunch at earlier. It’s open this time, though just as empty. It is tucked away on the second floor, away from the tourist area, so perhaps this is a good thing. I try the ropa vieja, a traditional Cuban dish of pulled pork with rice, plantain chips and salad. It’s good, hearty food for a cold, drippy night, if a bit overpriced. Still, you do need a frame of reference to figure out relative prices.
Just a little way down the street, a real life Santeria celebration is going on inside the house. The Chango figurine is the centrepiece of the altar. I speak to a lady who is visiting from Canada. This is her mother’s house. The drums are a polyphony of voices. Making more than a beat, they speak with the singer, who enacts a kind of call and response with the crowd. They all speak in Yoruba. Neighbours come and go, some have clearly been here for hours. A woman pulls me in from where I stand outside, watching. Inside, the atmosphere is electric, alive with a different presence. A young man, his face painted white, is in a trance-like state, moving and contorting his body in strange positions. But he breaks from that to talk to people in very loud, animated terms. Almost berating them. A large woman talks to two tourists, a French mother and daughter, asking the mother if she experiences pain in her stomach. The mother says yes, sometimes, and she says, “Be careful.” This is the tail-end of the celebration. It’s been going on for close to four hours now. I am grateful to be able to have a partial audio recording.