Yahoo – AFP,
Carlos Batista, March 10, 2016
Havana (AFP) - They have lived through dictatorship, the Cuban Revolution, the Missile Crisis, the Cold War, the near-starvation of the "special period" and rapprochement with the United States.
![]() |
Elderly
Cubans wait for help at La Milagrosa Grandparent House in Havana
(AFP
Photo/Adalberto Roque)
|
Havana (AFP) - They have lived through dictatorship, the Cuban Revolution, the Missile Crisis, the Cold War, the near-starvation of the "special period" and rapprochement with the United States.
Now, many
of Cuba's senior citizens are alone, left behind by an exodus of younger
generations that has given the country a rapidly aging population.
"I'm
88 years old. My son doesn't send me anything. At first he sent a little money,
but I don't even hear from him now," said Leocadia Aguila, whose son
Valentin, a martial arts expert, left two years ago for the United States.
Leaning on
her cane, the brown-skinned, white-haired former hospital janitor said she was
scraping by with the help of the Catholic Church, which supplements her tiny
pension from the state.
The average
retiree in Cuba gets a pension of $10 a month.
![]() |
Cuban
emigration has resulted in abandoned elderly
people and government-run
retirement homes tend
to be overcrowded and poorly maintained (AFP
Photo/Adalberto Roque)
|
"My
'brothers' here are the only family I have," said 93-year-old Raimundo
Aleman, who arrives at the center every morning at dawn to help out in the
kitchen.
The retired
delivery-truck driver's only close relatives are his three children in the US.
Politics
drove the first major wave of Cuban migrants to the United States, after Fidel
Castro's band of rebels overthrew dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959.
More
recently, it is the communist island's economic woes that have sent younger
Cubans abroad.
Cuba is
doing better than during the economic crisis in the 1990s provoked by the
collapse of the Soviet Union, its main benefactor -- the so-called
"special period."
The economy
grew a respectable four percent last year.
But tentative
economic reforms by Castro's successor, his 84-year-old younger brother Raul,
have so far failed to deliver the hoped-for results. This year, the government
is forecasting just two-percent growth.
And the
thaw with long-time enemy the United States has only accelerated the Cuban
exodus.
Last year, 43,000 Cubans entered the US, a new record.
Last year, 43,000 Cubans entered the US, a new record.
The
restoration of US-Cuban ties after more than half a century of enmity has
raised fears on the island that Washington will soon change its preferential
policies on Cuban immigrants, which fast-track them for permanent residency.
Loneliness and poverty
"Today,
emigration mainly involves the relatively young, from 20 to 45 years old,"
said demographer Alina Alonso.
Often,
those who reach the US then bring over family members, but senior citizens are
frequently left behind.
Today, 12.6
percent of Cuban households consist of just one person, a retiree.
The
government runs some 150 retirement homes, but they tend to be overcrowded and
poorly maintained.
Many would
rather scrape by on their meager pensions and the money they get from the
Church, which receives state funding and foreign donations to assist the
elderly.
"They
take good care of me here," said Maria Angelica Vidal, a 72-year-old
former English teacher with a son in Haiti and grandson in the US.
At the
Grandparents' House, she gets food, clothing, medical care and most
importantly, affection.
Cuba, where
nearly 20 percent of the populace is over 60, is on track to have the oldest
population in Latin America by 2030. It is currently second only to
Uruguay.


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