A Transgender Elected Official Reflects an Evolving Cuba [View all]
A lot of the usual cut and paste claptrap from the NYT, but there's this ...
A Transgender Elected Official Reflects an Evolving Cuba
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/16/world/americas/a-transgender-elected-official-reflects-an-evolving-cuba.html
Ms. Hernández was more than a little tickled when she became the first transgender person to be elected to public office in Cuba, a country whose government once viewed homosexuality as a dangerous aberration and, in the 1960s, packed gay men off to labor camps.
Its a huge achievement, said Ms. Hernández, referring to her election in November to the municipal council in this coastal town where she represents the 2,000 or so residents of her destitute neighborhood. She raised her painted eyebrows, saying, For a country that has been so homophobic to change so dramatically its unheard of.
As modest as Ms. Hernándezs official new powers are, her ascendance to the first rung of Cubas political ladder is a measure of how attitudes have evolved here, especially in the past decade, as the Cuban leadership gradually moved away from old prejudices, the Internet created new connections among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, and Raúl Castros daughter, Mariela Castro Espín, took up their cause.
Times have changed, said Alberto Hernández, 53, a farmer who lives near Ms. Hernández, but is no relation. He nominated her because she was blunt and hard-working, he said, adding, Her sexuality is her business.
NOT everyone shares this view. Luisa Cardenas Del Sol, 72, a retired nursery school teacher who lives outside Ms. Hernándezs constituency, said she would not have voted for her.