Women in Cuba: The Emancipatory Revolution

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.13169/intejcubastud.8.1.0109
Pages109-116
Published date01 April 2016
Date01 April 2016
AuthorSalim Lamrani,Translated by Larry R. Oberg
Subject Matterwomen,women's rights,equality,emancipation
IJCS Produced and distributed by Pluto Journals www.plutojournals.com/ijcs/
ACADEMIC ARTICLES
WOMEN IN CUBA: THE EMANCIPATORY
REVOLUTION
Salim Lamrani
University of La Réunion, France
Abstract
The triumph of the Cuban Revolution has created the most remarkable political,
economic and social upheaval in the history of Latin America. Since its beginning in
1959, the new government, led by Fidel Castro, has placed the poor – especially women
and people of colour, the principal victims of the discrimination inherent in patriarchal
and segregationist societies – at the centre of their reformist project. The Revolution ‘of
the humble, by the humble and for the humble’,1 was designed to lay the foundation
for a new era, one marked by equality and freed from the throes of the injustice linked
to the history and social structures of the country. Cuban women were the immediate
priority for the revolutionary government. In 1960, the Federation of Cuban Women
(FMC) was created. Its president was Vilma Espín Dubois, the wife of Raúl Castro and
a fully committed activist in the struggle against the dictatorship of General Fulgencio
Batista. This article examines the status of women at the triumph of the Revolution,
and assesses the concrete steps taken to disseminate and implement the idea of equal
rights and equal opportunities between men and women and to erase prejudice and
cultural stereotypes. Firstly, special attention is paid to the role of women before the
triumph of the Revolution. Secondly, the new government’s actions aimed at enabling
this sector of society to achieve true emancipation and full citizenship are analysed.
Finally, beyond the soaring declarations of principle, the article examines the status
of Cuban women today and assesses their integration into the political, economic and
social life of the country.
Keywords: women, women’s rights, equality, emancipation

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