``What about the case of the jailed Working Group of Four?''
People want to know who they are. They have an interest in the
plight of the three men and one woman who were prosecuted in a run-down
courtroom. They want information about The Four, because the official
government press calls them counter revolutionaries without a country
and cites only the title and fragments of the document that they wrote,
which led the government to arrest them and send them to prison. Merely
hearing the title -- ``The Homeland Belongs to Us All'' -- causes
uneasiness.
So people on the street repeat the title and cautiously look for
someone who might have a copy. The statement and its links with
declarations of Jose Marti (one of Cuba's founding fathers) causes some
people to say it with pleasure.
The three men and the woman are frozen in the memories of those who
saw parts of the trial broadcasted. But nobody can live only in a
memory, nobody can be reduced to just a succession of data and
adjectives.
Bonne is direct and pragmatic, and the group of professors that he put
together and directed always maintained a familiar relationship with
him.
He is demonstrative, but when he is presented as ``the carcass of
professor Bonne'' he throws a glance of reproach and timidity.
She is obsessed with gathering information and understanding it. She
uses lots of diminutives and still has the capacity to amaze
listeners.
These are my observations about The Four with whom I've become
acquainted during the past few years in my work as a journalist; I'm
offering a view that is partial, positive and without doubts about them.
I'm providing a personal portrait of people who are far superior to
their detractors. Their defects and errors already have been singled out
by enemies. Precisely because they have, I'm providing some balance.
©1999 Cuba Free Press, Inc.
Getting to know Cuba's Four
Havana -- The trials of the two Salvadoran
terrorists, the development of the gag law, the debate in Geneva on
human rights, the NATO attacks on Yugoslavia, the baseball game between
the Baltimore Orioles and a Cuban all-star team and the concerts in the
Karl Marx theater which brought dozens of North Americans here haven't
been able to divert people's attention. The question is still being
asked: