PEEKING OVER THE WALL
HackleyStudents VisitCuba andFaculty EighteenHackleystudentsandeleveno{ their teachersvisitedCuba in March,and gainednot onlyan appreciation{or Cuba and lor life underCastro,but perspectiveon their ownlivesasAmericanindependentschoolstudentsf rom WestchesterCounty. Thetrip was{acilitatedthroughthe efforts of JimAbernathy'59,whosework aschairman ol the publicrelationslirm Abernathy MacGregorFrankhasbroughthimto Cuba in recentyears.Hisfascinationwith the dynamicsof Cubancultureandpoliticsledto conversationswith Hackleyheadmaster WalterC. to thiseducational Johnsonand,eventually, expedition, "lt waslikepeekingoverthe wall,"said HackleyseniorDavidAranow.Cuba isa place youngAmericanshaveheardaboutandeven feared their whole lives,so close,yet inaccessible. Thevisitmadeit real. Thestudentssawgreaterracialequality thanin the UnitedStates.Theysawpeopleliving in extremepovertywhoare nevertheless extraordinarily well-educated, andencountered the absenceof freedomswe take for granted,suchasthe {reedomto travel. EleventhgraderAndrewKopelmanwrote in histrip journal,"TodayI went intoa restaurant andsatdownat the barto drink a FiestaCola.I ordered,andgot to talkingwith the bartender, Miguel.Likeme,hewaslearningltalian, and planningto learnFrenchnextyearat the same Havanalanguageinstitutein whichhe was learningltalian.His problemwasthat dueto Cubanlaw,he wasnot permittedto leavethe countryunlessinvitedby someonef rom ltaly, or whereverelsehe plannedto visit.Thissentimentof desireto leavethe island,i{ onlytemporarily,hasbeensharedby othersI havemet, andseemscommon."Thestudentstalkedwith these Cubansaboutthe dailydeprivations people{aceaswellastheirjoysin community andfellowship; theyalso{eltthe burdenol our responsibility asAmericanslor the absenceo{ medicalresourcesin Cuba,andthe envy Cubans{eelfor our freedomandwealth. Thefollowingpagesoffer snapshots of experiencethroughthe eyesandwordsof the participants.
Photography(exceptwhere noted) by Tamara Reichberg'00.
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