[NYTr] Cuba's CENESEX led the way on sexual rights
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Jul 30 02:21:58 EDT 2007
Workers World - Aug 2, 2007 issue
http://www.workers.org/2007/world/lavender-red-107
Lavender & red, part 107
Cuba's CENESEX led the way on sexual rights
By Leslie Feinberg
Cuba’s National Center for Sex Education (Centro Nacional de Educación
Sexual) carries out its important collective labor—including combating
what remains of pre-revolutionary prejudice against same-sex love—in
what was once a privately owned Havana mansion.
Mariela Castro Espín, director of CENESEX, stressed that sexologists
have a “scientific, social and political responsibility” to help raise
understanding and consciousness in the whole population.
(havanajournal.com, April 1, 2003)
CENESEX’s goal, Castro Espín explained, is to contribute to “the
development of a culture of sexuality that is full, pleasurable and
responsible, as well as to promote the full exercise of sexual
rights.” (MEDICC Review, Vol. VIII, No. 1, March-April 2006)
Since she and CENESEX are part of the revolution, they don’t have to do
this work alone.
“Historically speaking,” Castro Espín stated, “changing mentality is
one of the most difficult things to do, one of the slowest processes in
society. Even though we’ve made substantial political and legislative
strides, we’re still bound by aspects of roles defined long ago. This
subjectivity begins early, in the way children are raised, in how
they’re taught to play.
“We have to learn to recognize which elements of the traditional
masculinity or femininity are actually doing us damage. What parts of
the picture actually take away from our freedom, fulfillment and
dignity. We have to take a hard look at these things, or else we’ll
keep passing them down from generation to generation.” (MEDICC Review)
She offered a concrete example about AIDS safer-sex education. “We have
to include a gender perspective—promotion of new constructs of
masculinity and femininity—and not just take an epidemiological
approach.”
She said an epidemiological approach to prevent AIDS transmission might
simply suggest, “Use a condom.”
But the system of male chauvinism imposed on Cuba for centuries created
a mindset in which some males feel that condoms may be a sensation
barrier to full sexual enjoyment, to which they are entitled. Castro
Espín emphasized, “So for him to use a condom, he has to begin to
construct and define his masculinity in a different way, that doesn’t
put a premium only on his own pleasure. In the end, this stereotype is
very dangerous to his own health as well as his partner’s—and this can
be true for homosexual as well as heterosexual couples, whenever a
relationship defines that one partner has hegemony over the other.
“So you need to combine both an epidemiological and a gender approach
to these very intimate issues. This is why, for example, our posters
and other materials emphasize that protection of your partner against
HIV and STDs in general is a sign of caring, and that means it’s a
responsibility of both partners in a relationship.”
Castro Espín told MEDICC Review interviewer Gail A. Reed regarding
CENESEX: “We work with groups who promote safe sex among their peers:
men who have sex with men [MSM], transvestites and transsexuals,
adolescents and young people in general and then more broadly with
medical students. In each medical school, there’s a department of
Sexology and Education for Sexuality.”
All education in Cuba, it bears repeating—including medical school—is
free.
Castro Espín observed in 2006: “Regarding attitudes towards MSM and
bisexuals as well, there have been positive changes—I say empirically,
since we are still studying this. But at our conferences and workshops
that we hold with people from the whole country, it’s clear that
participants are more able now than 10 years ago to understand and
respect another sexual orientation. I think the work that’s been done
over the decade in health and by the Cuban Women’s Federation has
helped to bring about that change, and we’ve done it reaching out to
people’s sensitivity as human beings.
“In essence, our view is that any kind of prejudice or discrimination
is damaging to health.” ‘Modifying the social imagination’
As a revolutionary worker, Mariela Castro Espín demonstrates in every
interview that she has already rolled up her sleeves to do the next job
that needs to be done.
She talked about the revolutionary labor that is still required to make
progress in overcoming old prejudices about same-sex love. “First,” she
told MEDICC Review in 2006, “I think we have to work more and better in
the schools. We’ve worked with the Ministry of Education, but I’m still
not satisfied we’ve made enough progress, and so we need to deepen
understanding among teachers and other school staff; we need to carry
more on educational TV and so on.
“And this also has to do with a gender focus, of course. In the 70s and
80s, we found a lot of fear and resistance to a national program for
sex education with such a gender focus. The program was finally
accepted in 1996, and now it’s taught throughout the country; since
then it has reduced school dropouts from early marriages and childbirth
by one half.”
Castro Espín elaborated: “The country now has policies that legitimize
sexual orientations and also has brought laws in line with a gender
perspective. But on the legislative front, there is still a lot to be
done.”
She has proposed that when the Cuban Constitution of the Republic is
next revised, the category of “sexual orientation” be added. Castro
Espín said homosexual Cubans are protected, but “when something like
that is made explicit, it is official recognition that there is a need
to avoid any type of discrimination, like racism or sexism.”
Such a legal measure, she pressed, would make this protection even more
evident. And, she added, it’s important to protect against
discrimination, not just in public institutions “but also in the space
of the family, because it is often there that a homosexual is first
insulted or rejected.”
No Cuban of any sex has to marry in order to have economic support, a
job, a home, health care or other rights that are guaranteed to every
person. Castro Espín pointed out, though, that although homosexuals
live within the law in consensual relationships: “gay marriage is not
recognized, so you have many issues such as inheritance that aren’t
fully resolved. We need changes in the family code itself related to
these and other questions, including domestic violence. CENESEX has now
presented two bills in Parliament before the education and children’s
commissions that have to do with gender,” she noted in 2006, “and these
have been well received.”
Unofficial same-sex marriages have taken place on the island. For
example, four local young males ranging in ages from 17 to 22 held a
double same-sex ceremony outdoors, in front of loved ones and
neighbors, in the working-class suburb of San Miguel del Padrón,
southeast of Havana, in 2001. (workingforchange.com, July 13, 2001,
based on a report from the French Press Agency)
Castro Espín summed up, “By the 1970s, reforms to the penal code
excluded the classification of homosexuals as criminals [because of
their sexual orientation]; any word that discriminated against
homosexuals was modified.
“However,” she stressed, “that is not enough because I think our laws
should better reflect the respect that homosexuals deserve. Greater and
more professional work is needed at the micro-social level, because
what this is about is trying to change perceptions, modifying the
social imagination.” (Alma Mater, journal of the University of Havana,
CENESEX website: www.cenesex.sld.cu)
Next: CENESEX proposes groundbreaking transsexual rights.
To find out more about Cuba, read parts 86-106 of Lavender & Red at
workers.org.
Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email: ww at workers.org
Subscribe wwnews-subscribe at workersworld.net
More information about the NYTr
mailing list