Title: A Political Division in a Family
1- A Political Division in a Family
Pablo C. Avila
2Photograph by E. Wright Ledbetter
1999
3(No Transcript)
4Dreaming in Cuban by Cristina Garcia
Family Tree
5Our journey begins in Cuba in 1959. Celia is a
grandmother who supports the Cuban Revolution and
sees her family division due to political and
social issues
Her husband travels to the United States selling
electric brooms and portable fans. He later dies
in Brooklyn. After his death, Celia involves in
the cause for the revolution even more,
dedicating most of her time.
Celias daughter, Lourdes, moves to Brooklyn with
her daughter Pilar. There she owns a bakery that
will give the family a good support and a prosper
life in the United States.
6The first conflict within the family
I was sitting in my grandmothers lap . . . When
my mother told her we were leaving the country.
Abuela Celia called her a traitor to the
revolution. Mom tried to pull me away but I clung
to Abuela and screamed at the top of my legs. My
grandfather came running and said, Celia, let
the girl go. She belongs with Lourdes. That was
the last time I saw her. (26)
7Lourdes and Felicia
- Lourdes thinks Cuba is a prison. She is
constantly asking her mother why she supports the
revolution. Lourdes does not believe in the
social change Castro promises since the
beginning. - Lourdes constantly shows her anger at the
revolution. As Pilar says, Can you believe this
mierda? My mother snatches the picture of El
Lider off Abuelas night table (219). - Felicia believes in Santeria, black magic, and
finally dies in one of those sessions. This fact
is something Celia never liked. For her, the
sessions were a kind of poetry that connected
her to larger worlds, worlds alive and infinite.
Our rituals healed her, made her believe again
(186). - Felicia ends up being possessed by a spirit and
dies.
8Celia and Pilar A Constant Connection
- Throughout the story, Celia shows a deep feeling
for the Cuban Revolution. - Pilar shows a strong connection between herself
and her Cuban roots when she says, Even thought
Ive been living in Brooklyn all my life, it
doesnt feel like home to me. Im not sure Cuba
is, but I want to find out. If I could only see
Abuela Celia again, Id know where I belonged
(58). - Celia and Pilar are very connected. My
grandmother is the one who encouraged me to go to
painting classes (29). - Celia starts to have a change after her husband
dies. She starts to involve herself even more in
the revolution. In 1972, she becomes a civilian
judge. She is pleased because what she decides
makes a difference. (111)
9Pilars Grandpa
- After he died, Lourdess father continues to talk
to her in a different dimension. His spirit is
coming back and talks to her about different
things she doesnt know and some others she
doesnt understand. - After we married, I left her with my mother and
my sister. I knew what it would do to her. A part
of me wanted to punish her. For the Spaniard. I
tried to kill her, Lourdes . . . I left on a long
trip after you were born . . . (195).
10Pilar The link between generations
- Pilar finds many ways to make her way to Miami
and escape to Cuba. She misses her grandmother
and her Cuban roots as well. - Pilar is the clear connection with her
grandmother, not because she believes in the
revolution as her grandmother, but because she
loved her Cuban roots. - This connection is showed throughout the book. I
feel much more connected to Abuela Celia than to
Mom, even though I havent seen my grandmother in
seventeen years. We dont speak at night anymore,
but shes left me her legacy nonethelessa love
for the sea . . . (176).
11Final Letter
- The book begins around the 1960s with a
description of Celias life and her love for the
sea along the Cuban coast. By the end of the
book, we still see Celia in one of her letters in
1959. - January 11, 1959
- My dearest Gustavo,
- The revolution is eleven days old. My
granddaughter, Pilar Puente del Pino, was born
today. It is also my birthday. I am fifty years
old. I will no longer write to you, mi amor. She
will remember everything. - My love always,
- Celia
- (245)
12Pilar
- Pilar seems to represent the center of the story
because on her, we can see the source of the
Cuban roots that are finally the main reason to
reunite the family despite their differences in
terms of politics. - Im glad you remember, Pilar. I always knew you
would (218).
13Important events in Del Pinos family
- Celias Spanish lover. P.36
- Celias letters to Gustavo. P.49
- Lourdes against Fidel Castro. P.177
- Pilars boyfriend. P.179
- Felicia is back to the religionSanteriablack
magic. P.185 - Last revelations of Lourdess father. P.195
- Pilar as a musician. P.198
- Pilar and her mother is back to Cuba. P.215
- Celias condition decays. P.218
14Why should we read this book?
- Because it demonstrates the difficulties many
families go through when looking for better
opportunities. - It also shows how a girlPilardiscovers her
Cuban roots and overcomes her difficulties with
her mother reunifying the family despite their
political differences. - Because it not only represents the struggle of
many Cuban families, but also the struggle many
families from different countries have when
looking for better options. - Finally, it shows how we struggle to find our
identity. Who we really are and where we come
from.
15Dreaming in Cuban by Cristina Garcia
Publisher Ballantine Books New York,
1992. ImpressiveHer story is about three
generations of Cuban women and their separate
responses to the revolution. Her special feat is
to tell it in a style as warm and gentle as the
sustaining aromas of vanilla and almond, as
rhythmic as the music of Beny Moré. Amelia
Weiss Time
16Cristina Garcia
Cristina Garcia was born in Havana, Cuba, in
1958, and grew up in New York City. She attended
Barnard College and the Johns Hopkins University
School of Advanced International Studies. Ms.
Garcia has worked as a correspondent for Time
magazine in San Francisco, Miami, and Los
Angeles, where she currently lives with her
husband, Scott Brown, and their English bulldog.
Dreaming in Cuban is her first novel.
17Works Cited
- Dreaming in Cuban by Cristina Garcia. Ballantine
Books New York, 1992. - Cuba Picturing Change by E. Wright Ledbetter
- Photographs by E. Wright Ledbetter
- Pablo C. Avila CEP121
- 27 May 2008
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