° "T'he Battalion/Friday, August 1, 1986 $$$$§$ Cuban prisoner's tale reveals true nature of Castro regime Shortly after a C u b a n t r i b u n a 1 sentenced Hum berto Sori Marin to death, his mother went to visit Fidel Castro to plead for her son’s life. Marin a n d C a s t r 6 had fought as com rades in the m o u n t a i n s, and after the revolution they often dined to gether at Marin’s home with Senora Marin doing the cooking. At the meet ing Castro assured her: “Don’t worry, nothing will happen to Humberto.” The next night Castro himself ordered the execution. That incident comes from the pen of Armando Valladares, whose book, Against All Hope, is an account of the 22 years he spent in various Cuban pris ons for the “crime” of speaking out against communism. To say that the book is compelling is to understate its power; to say that it is horrific is also an understatement. With this book, Fidel Castro takes his place as yet another of this century’s mass murders. The execution of Sori Marin was just another day’s work for Castro. Turning on enemies and former colleagues alike, the Cuban dictator dispatched several thousand political prisoners (the exact figure is unknown) and imprisoned countless others. Valladares gives an ac count of a Latin Gulag where prisoners were terrorized, beaten, starved, tor tured and casually executed, often on. the caprice of some uniformed sadist. Many were like Valladares — convicted by tribunals that, for the sake of effi ciency, handed down their verdicts be fore the trial had begun. One of the benefits of being a liberal in a conservative era is that easy assump tions get challenged. One of those as sumptions has been that Fidel Castro was not, all in all, such a bad guy. He was credited with improving the stan dard of living — particularly health care — for most Cubans, with cleaning up notorious Havana (the prostitution capi tal of the Western Hemispere) and, of course, with toppling the repressive Ba tista regime. It was conceded that he was a dicta tor, that he was responsible for human rights abuses. But it was argued that these were insignificant and paled in comparison to what was happening else where in the hemisphere — Chile, Ar gentina, Guatemala and El Salvador. Liberals held their fire. In an essay in a recent issue of The New York Review of Books, Aryeh Neier tries to account for such a double standard. Neier, vice chairman of the American Watch Committee, attributes the left’s preoccupation with atrocities by rightist regimes to the tendency of those regimes to label their own enemies Castroites. It seemed that to concede the case against Castro would also concede the case, right-wing dictators were making against their own dissidents — not to mention the case being made by Ameri can conservatives. The reasoning is no more sophisticated than the old maxim that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. Neier’s credentials as a critic of all op- presive regimes are beyond reproach. He offers some reasonable justifications for what amounted to Castro playing American liberals for a patsy, but they in no way take the left off the hook. In fact, not only were Castro’s crimes ig nored, but the man himself was de picted as the romantic revolutionary —a baseball-playing companero, a macho Hemingway type in the land of “Poppa” himself. Castro’s compelling and attrac tive antics totally overshadowed the si nister aspects of his reign — so much so that even conservatives, who loathed Castro for his communism, remained ignorant of the true nature of his re gime. For whatever reason, the Ameri can left is at last coming to terms with Castro. The Neier essay, plus the re views that Against All Hope received in The Washington Post and The New York Times, has done much to rectify matters. Now it is the conservatives who follow false messiahs. President Reagan’s char acterization of virtually any Third World anti-communist as a “Freedom Fighter” is the moral equivalent of call ing Castro an agrarian reformer. We await patiently the mea culpas from the right. According to America Watch, at least 110 political prisoners remain in Cuban jails and hundreds more in so-called “political education programs.” Some of them have been incarcerated for more than 25 years — old men whose execu tions effectively have been played out in slow motion. In Against All Hope, Valladares tells their story just as surely as he tells his own. Through the personal intercession of French President Francois Mitterand, Valladares was freed from Castro’s grasp. Through his book, so have we all. Copyright 1986, Washington Post Writers Group Richard Cohen r V'LUO-nncL lenocu -Hit'ncis I like. one of dboot CJel/j evercj dacj as J sor-^ 4/Lrot^gA- my w\cl\ t f as I pass a Ca/V. --- Study measures economic status by assests instead of income A new Census ' Bureau study has John created a stir in Cunniff political and eco- AP ciruthst nomic circles be- cause, among other things, it reveals a sharp disparity of assets between white and blacks. But it does something more as well: It removes the focus from income, which long has been the primary measure of economic status, and shifts that focus to The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of lex as Press Association Soulhwcst Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Michelle Powe, Editor Kav Mallett, Managing Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Scott Sutherland. 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