Showing posts with label Cuban Independence from Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuban Independence from Spain. Show all posts

Thursday, June 04, 2009

Cuban Soil: Visit the Isla de Cuba... in Tampa



The softly clacking Ybor trolley, brightly painted yellow gold, its brass and woodwork gleaming, looks factory fresh as it glides slowly to a stop at the corner. It seems as if its from another time and era. The motorman helps passengers on and off and briefly waits at the intersection before making the right on the tracks and moving east on 8th Avenue. I watch through the tall iron fence, strongly attracted to its arresting color and strong ties to Tampa’s and Ybor City’s past. I was standing in a very unusual park, a tiny plot of land. Very unusual if one knows a bit of their world and American history. Historians and different departments of local county government have searched records more than once to verify its origins, its unique history and its current ownership. It measures just 0.14 of an acre. Rupert and Paulina Pedroso, an Afro-Cuban family, lived during the 1890s in a house on this corner of 13th Street and 8th Avenue, at 1303 East 8th Avenue. The house faced an imposing cigar factory built in 1885 by Vincente M. Ybor – the man whose vision built the city and began its world famous cigar manufacturing industry. The quiet park, which faces that same factory building today, features the flags of both Cuba and the United States, a life-size statue of Cuban patriot and hero Jose Marti and this interesting wall map of the Isla de Cuba with each province of the island outlined. It’s a fascinating place and so unexpected. Jose Marti came to Tampa in 1891. With fiery speeches to the Cuban community, it’s said that his staunch support of his homeland’s independence from Spain helped start the revolution. His speech on the steps of Ybor’s factory to the cigar workers helped raise money and gained strong support for the cause. Marti died before Cuban Independence was won from Spain, but is credited with beginning the movement for freedom.

So why is this small piece of land important and so unusual? Title to the park is in the name of the Cuban government. It's the island laid out before your eyes. Stones sit in six plots of dirt on either side of the walkway and each plot represents soil taken from the six original Cuban provinces. But, you ask, how did this come to be? When Marti came to Tampa he would often stay in the Pedroso’s home; Ruperto was a cigar roller in the factory. Marti died in battle against Spanish troops on May 19, 1895 and the house and property were sold when the Pedrosos moved back to Cuba in 1910. Now the story grows more amazing. In 1951, a Cuban couple gave the property to the Cuban government to be used as a memorial to the great freedom-fighter, Jose Marti. In 1956, ownership was transferred to the Republic of Cuba. President Fulgencio Batista accepted the property and the American consul certified the real estate transaction. The final deed was recorded in Hillsborough County, FL in 1957 and remains unchanged. It’s a part of Cuba and has been for over half a century. You must visit to experience its solemn presence on American soil and the reverence shown by those who honor their homeland and worship the memory of Marti.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

"Kaleidoscope: A Heritage of Color" and hard charging basketball

I was flipping through one of the Bay area's glossy, slick lifestyle magazines, the best one actually, and was enjoying the fashion spread, the gorgeous women in fine couture, the food and fine art when I came to the last page and was stopped by the photo and story of Jason Busto, a fifth generation West Tampa native. Terrific guy, but what caught my eye was something I had never seen before, the incredibly colorful mural behind him. Why hadn't had seen it before? Kaleidoscope: A Heritage of Color, a mural by local artists Edgar Sanchez Cumbas and Guillermo Portieles, working as a team, created the monumental artwork. The photographer's credit in the magazine led me to West Tampa and the mural which was commissioned by the City of Tampa Public Art Program in 2007. It is big and covers an entire wall and stands majestically alongside a basketball court in Macfarlane Park. According to the city's press release when it was unveiled, the artists' concept was to represent the hard working individuals in West Tampa “who embraced a thriving social and cultural community through its broad mix of nationalities and religions.” (Clich HERE to see the entire mural and get more information.) José Martí (on the left with the mustache), the leader of Cuban Independence from Spain who came to Tampa to rally support for his cause, is so well represented. So, when I set out to find the mural in the park I was hoping to find people interacting with it in some way. I didn't know it faced the basketball court or that several powerful players from Tampa's Howard Blake High School would be working the court. Blake is one of our super creative performing and visual arts high schools which teaches and nurtures music, chorus, theater, dance, drama and the visual arts, including photography. Plus, obviously, some great weekend basketball. These guys can really play, hard. They made an incredible foreground to the mural behind. And an outstanding contrast and a compliment to the artists' work. The mural is exactly where it should be. What pure excitement and the moves on the court are pretty creative, too.