B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
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Hazel Dyer, director of tours and travel for the Jewish Community
Center of Orange County, recently escorted a contingent of Newport-Mesa
citizens to Cuba. The center is headquartered in Costa Mesa.
As the summer season beckons adventure for the local crowd, Dyer
shared the experience of a very special trip that introduced members of
our local society to a very different one.
“Perhaps the greatest realization was that all of the people born
after the 1959 revolution in Cuba know no other way of life than
communism under Castro,” shared Dyer, an energetic grandmother who
originally came to the United States from South Africa more than a decade
ago.
Dyer, who recently became a citizen of the United States, said she
found that freedom, opportunity and a society based on a rule of law
permitting individual growth are values that come into very real
perspective when visiting Cuba.
“We found a nation with a population of very beautiful people, happy
people, people who fill their daily lives with music, art, culture of
every form,” she said.
Dyer said she and her fellow travelers were impressed with Cuban
culture.
“There is flowing music and dance full of rhythm on every corner,” she
said. “A unique sensuality is in the air. Artists and caricaturists fill
the streets.”
The culture, however, does not obscure the poverty.
“Two Cuban pediatricians we met at Children’s Hospital, Havana, told
us that they each earn $50 per month. They were charming men, very
dignified and totally dedicated to their profession, trying to improve
the lives of Cuban children,” Dyer said. “Because of the American
embargo, they have very little medicine and no antibiotics. It is very
sad to witness these ill children lying in their cots under such
conditions.”’
Doris Chasin of Newport Beach was one of Dyer’s tourists.
Chasin shared, “I urge all of my friends to visit Cuba now, while the
tourism trade is still unpolished. The experience was illuminating in
many ways. For me, the opportunity to admire the indomitable human spirit
in such limiting conditions reinforces a belief in the basic goodness of
mankind. Further, we view as our birthright elements of life, daily
necessities, that these people do without.”
Others on the journey included Inga Behr, Milt Chasin, Marion Feldman,
Susan Glass, Mike Hakim, Martin and Florence Klein, Maxine Levine, Muriel
Rosen, David Shabtai, Vera Rosenberg, Latife Warshawsky, Seymour Wigler
and Claudia Cohen, who had a very special reason for visiting Cuba.
“In 1941, my parents and I arrived in Havana, Cuba, refugees from
Nazi-occupied Europe. We stayed in Cuba for about a year before leaving
for the United States,” Cohen said.
“We take everything for granted here in the United States,” added Mike
Hakim, who also went on the trip. “Compassion for one another is so
natural in Cuba, in a land of fear and suppression.”
Dyer is busy planning new adventures around the globe thatcombine
culture and education with tourism. Her trips are open to anyone in the
community interested in participating. For more information, contact Dyer
at (714) 755-0340.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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