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8134: Mural unifies groups at odds (fwd)



From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>

Mural unifies groups at odds

By Charles Forelle
--Published Saturday, Tuesday 22, 2001, in the Miami Herald


Maximina González remembers the exact day she came to the United States from 
Cuba. It was May 17, 1980, and she was 52. She has lived in Miami since 1982 
and, she says, she had not interacted with a Haitian until this month.

Monday morning she found herself standing in front of a half-finished mural 
at Casa Grande Cultural Center in downtown Miami, speaking to a group of 
about 20 elderly Miami residents of Hispanic and Haitian descent who had put 
down their markers and glue to listen. Nearly all the Hispanics were Cuban 
Americans.

``I am very happy to come together as brothers and sisters,'' González said. 
Two students from Coral Park High School, Charlene Brown, 18, and Rony Die, 
16, translated her words into English and then Creole. There was vigorous 
applause.

The mural painting was a remarkable creation of two similar immigrant groups 
separated by neighborhood boundaries and U.S. immigration policy and torn 
far apart by the Elián González affair. Cubans who make it to the United 
States are generally allowed to stay. Haitians who try to come here are 
generally sent home.

While the nation focused on the Cuban community's struggle to keep the 
6-year-old Cuban boy in the United States, the Haitian community's 
resentment grew. It didn't help that when a boatload of more than 400 
people, most of them Haitian, tried to sneak into Florida under cover of 
darkness and New Year's Eve celebrations on the morning of Jan. 1, 2000, 
almost all were quickly sent back to Port-au-Prince.

``This project aims to heal the wounds of Elián,'' said Xavier Cortada, a 
Miami artist who painted the background of the mural, which depicts Cuban 
and Haitian men, women and children looking at a boat that is traveling 
forward, toward the viewer. ``Elián is the ultimate rafter.''

Through meetings started in April, first in their separate communities, and 
then together as a group, the elderly Haitians and Cubans met to write down 
their thoughts and stories. Monday, they taped their photographs and those 
words to the blank swaths of ocean and sky in the mural. They will finish 
today, and Cortada and several art students from Coral Park will glue the 
pieces of paper down and glaze the mural.

The project began with a $20,000 grant from the Dade Community Foundation to 
Hands On Miami, a nonprofit community service organization.

``The purpose of the project was to explore the similarities between the 
cultures,'' said Bobbi Wald, a volunteer coordinator for Hands On Miami. The 
mural brought together ``people who would never in a million years have had 
anything to do with each other.''

The idea for the mural's design came from Darline DeSil, a ninth-grader at 
Coral Park. She remembers when her mother woke her up in the middle of the 
night and said, ``We're going to some other place.'' She was 5 when she came 
to the United States from Haiti. Her sisters are still there.

At an early meeting of the two groups, DeSil told her story. Soon the 
Haitians and the Cubans recognized that it was everyone's story.

``We come from the same place - the Caribbean,'' DeSil said.

Cortada said he originally thought that the two groups would explore shared 
areas of cultural experience: their cuisines, their religions, maybe even 
their loneliness and isolation as elderly people in a foreign country that 
does not revere age to the same degree as their native lands.

``I expected to be painting roosters, virgins, and black beans and rice,'' 
he said.

Instead, he found something much deeper.

``It got rawer than that,'' he said. ``It became about the psycho-trauma of 
their lives.''

Maximina González said she came from Cuba with her husband in 1980.

``Life over there,'' she said, ``was impossible.''

Her husband left her for another woman in 1995, and life here has been 
difficult, she said.

One of her contributions to the mural was a photograph of herself at age 50 
accompanied by a short poem about Cuba:

``Verdant and lovely fields. Serpentine brooks. Lovebirds that sing and 
breezes that sweeten life.''

Marie Preal, 77, came to Miami from Haiti by plane on June 26, 1974. Monday 
afternoon, she was taping pictures to the mural. One showed her and her son, 
Romain. In another, she stood next to her daughter, her son and her son's 
girlfriend on board the Jungle Queen riverboat.

``It's the same,'' she said, waving her arms at the dozens of pictures and 
stories on the mural. ``Same problem, same everything. Leave Cuba, leave 
Haiti.''

The inclusion of the students, who acted as listeners as well as 
interpreters, was what made the project work for both the students as well 
as the elderly people, Cortada said.

And for the older Haitians and Cubans, the mural is a way to record their 
struggles.

``Their pain and suffering isn't lost. It doesn't evaporate - it's there 
permanently,'' Cortada said.


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