Untitled Document
The U.S. has been pretty successful at mobilizing world opinion against Cuba since
the late 1980s. Emboldened by the fall of the Soviet Union it has gone to considerable
trouble and expense to bring down the revolution that refuses to be defeated a
scant 90 miles off the empire's shore. Part of this effort has involved creating
an artificial opposition movement on the island and enlisting liberal organizations
and intellectuals to support it. But U.S. librarians, targeted by name in the
State Department's 400-page destabilization blueprint, the Report to the President
of the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, not only refuse to play the game
but are trying to assist their Cuban colleagues to improve their libraries
The rent-an-opposition has several components: independent trade union groups,
independent journalists, independent political parties and independent libraries
all paid and directed by the U.S. Interests Section. They are also composed
of the same people; one person may be an independent press agency, a political
party, and run a library out of his house. The depth of U.S.-style "civil
society" was evident May 20-21 at the Congress of the Cuban Dissident Movement
in Havana. Financed with a special congressional grant of $6 million and featuring
a videotaped greeting from Bush himself, this gathering was supposed to bring
together 360 dissident organizations; it barely drew 100 people.
Cuba not only has libraries, it has a lot of them 400 to be precise,
plus 6,000 school libraries. So why has the State Department created a network
of independent libraries there? What exactly is an independent library? Rhonda
L. Neugebauer and Larry Oberg, both university librarians, went to Cuba to meet
with colleagues and study the library system in 2000. But they also visited
the so-called independent libraries run out of people's houses. What they found
were carefully-chosen drop-off and contact points for personnel from the U.S.
Interests Section and others, who visited them on a regular basis to deliver
materials and money. They also discovered that by keeping bookshelves with these
materials in their homes, the "librarians" qualified for a monthly
stipend "for services rendered," as one of them put it. They
found no evidence that anyone ever checked out a book, and when they enquired
of neighbors, nobody even seemed to know the libraries were there.
But the story doesn't end there. For years Neugebauer has been trying to set
up a program of exchange and assistance to Cuba's real libraries, which not
only lack funding for books and journals, but also for copying and computer
equipment, and phone lines and technical support for internet access. But she
and others are confronting a heated campaign to get the American Librarian Association
and related organizations to condemn the Cuban government and support the independent
libraries, waged by a New York librarian named Robert Kent.
Kent founded an organization called Friends of Cuban Libraries in 1999. When
he traveled to Cuba in May of that same year, Kent made contact with Aleida
Godínez, an intelligence agent posing as a dissident. According to Godínez,
Kent introduced himself as Robert Emmet and even held a passport with that name.
He said he had come as an emissary of ex-CIA agent Frank Calzon, executive director
of the Center for a Free Cuba.
"Robert Emmet" and Aleida Godinez.
"Emmet" didn't bring books or spend any time studying libraries; "He
put a lot of emphasis on the role of the independent press," says Godínez.
"He said absolutely nothing about the so-called independent libraries. He
barely mentioned to me that he was a librarian."
Instead, Kent arrived with surveillance equipment ("a camera, a shortwave
radio, a 10-band transmitter and receiver, and a watch, a Cassio brand")
and lots of cash, which he passed out to various dissidents. But the most disturbing
aspect of the librarian's visit was that he allegedly asked Godinez to help
him with drawings and photographs map out the security measures
at the home of Vice President of the Council of State, Carlos Lage Davila. Godínez
says he gave her $100 for film for that purpose. Understandably, "Emmet"
was detained and expelled for espionage.
As if this weren't weird enough, 1999 is the same year the founder of Reporters
Without Borders, Robert Menard, went to Cuba, and the behavior of the two men
was identical. Both came as friends of Calzón and both arrived with cash
and electronic equipment and sought out dissidents. Both asked questions unrelated
to the ostensible purpose of their trips: Menard asked his contact, also an
undercover agent, if he knew of any "disgruntled" people in the Cuban
armed forces. Kent says his numerous trips to Cuba were financed by Freedom
House, a Miami-based outfit funded by the State Department.
For an idea of the pressure Kent is putting on U.S. librarians, here is an
open letter from his web site sent on June 5 to the president of the ALA, titled
"Time to Take a Stand":
"[W]e in The Friends of Cuban Libraries are inviting you to make a decision
which will establish, for all time, your stand on one of the most important
intellectual freedom issues confronting librarians today: the persecution of
Cuba's independent library movement. We are asking you to use your authority
as ALA president to invite Ramon Colas and Berta Mexidor, the co-founders of
Cuba's independent library movement, to be speakers at the upcoming ALA conference
in Chicago.
"For six years, a small but powerful extremist group within the ALA has
used falsehoods, evasions and coverups to prevent the ALA from fulfilling its
duty to condemn the systematic persecution of people who, in an historic challenge
to tyranny, are opening uncensored public libraries for their fellow citizens
in Cuba. Exploiting the inattention of the majority of ALA members on this issue,
over the past six years the extremist faction in the ALA has tried to ignore
the numerous reports by respected human rights organizations and journalists
which have documented the systematic persecution of library workers in Cuba.
Sadly, for the past six years reports and resolutions engineered by the ALA's
extremist group to deny and coverup Cuba's grim reality have been naively and
unthinkingly approved by the well-meaning but negligent majority on the ALA's
governing Council."
This "extremist faction" Kent routinely lambasts includes Neugebauer,
who says Kent has traveled to Europe and enlisted support from individuals in
former communist bloc countries, including some library associations. Kent also
finds the time to write press releases full of wild disinformation and has gained
favorable coverage for his cause, putting the ALA on the defensive; Nat Hentoff
of The Village Voice has become one of his attack dogs against the organization.
For those who appreciate the art of propaganda, the reason Kent gives for refusing
to meet with Cuban librarians and virulently opposing professional exchanges
is that they are working for the "state." It seems to have escaped
him that at his job for the New York Public Library he also works for the state,
as do most of his colleagues. And given his possession of a fake passport and
shady activities and associations, "Agent Emmet" is undoubtedly a
lot closer to the "state" than any Havana bibliotecario.