<p>Six decades on from Cuba's proclamation of equality and despite three top government officials being black, the Caribbean island nation has made little headway on racism.</p>.<p>"Racism in Cuba is very hypocritical ... No-one says they're racist, even if they are," researcher Tomas Fernandez, 79, an author of several books on the subject, told AFP.</p>.<p>Cuba used to have an open problem with racism until the communist revolution of 1959.</p>.<p>Some buildings had signs saying "no dogs or blacks" while there was also racial segregation that saw black people barred from some clubs and schools</p>.<p>The government has enacted policies to address centuries of inequality due to slavery, which was abolished in 1886, and to promote access to higher education and public office.</p>.<p>But racism persists. In local jargon, a white woman with a black boyfriend is "burning oil" or "holding back the race" while he is "advancing" his.</p>.<p>Ethnologist Jesus Guanche has identified around 20 definitions to describe skin color, including "blue-black" for someone with very dark skin, while Cubans often describe frizzy hair as "bad."</p>.<p>"There's something that is a burden, it's very subtle, but it's a prejudice that keeps going," said painter Salvador Gonzalez, 71, who exhibits his work in El Callejon de Hamel, a bastion of African heritage in the capital Havana.</p>.<p>Black activist Alexander Holl, 22, says skin color has a "huge influence" on relationships in Cuba.</p>.<p>"It's common for white families to tell (their daughters) not to get involved with that (black) lad," said the history student.</p>.<p>"When you want to be with a white girl, sometimes you realize this is an impediment."</p>.<p>Recognizing the magnitude of the problem, President Miguel Diaz-Canel announced in November a program to "definitively eliminate the vestiges of racism."</p>.<p>In Cuba, 9.3 per cent of the 11.2 million population identify as black, 26.6 per cent say they're mixed race, while 64.1 per cent claim to be white, according to a 2012 census.</p>.<p>Manuel Cuesta, 57, an Afro-Cuban government opponent, says "there are the vestiges and remnants of symbolically cordial racism, structurally hidden, installed in the economic, institutional and political dynamics" of the country.</p>.<p>The racial debate gained a new impulse following the murder of George Floyd in the United States, and the recent death of Afro-Cuban Hansel Hernandez.</p>.<p>The 27-year-old was accused of theft and died during an alleged confrontation with police.</p>.<p>"Both events have once again pushed the racial theme into the discussion, although the true debate is on social media," said Cuesta.</p>.<p>Those critical of the government find a link between the cases of Hernandez and Floyd. Fernandez however believes that's a mistake and that the Cuban's death "cannot be associated or analyzed as if it was a racial crime."</p>.<p>He says "racial hatred doesn't exist" in Cuba, but underlying racism does.</p>.<p>Roberto Zurbano, a black researcher into issues regarding race, says an "itinerary of deficiencies" as well as "his social environment and low level of expectations" contributed to Hernandez's death.</p>.<p>In 1962, revolutionary leader Fidel Castro considered racial discrimination over, but while active discrimination was outlawed, prejudice lingered.</p>.<p>According to the German institute, GIGA in 2019, 50 per cent of white Cubans said they had a bank account compared to just 11 per cent of blacks; 31 per cent of whites had travelled abroad compared to three per cent of blacks. And whites control 98 per cent of private businesses.</p>.<p>"We were romantics and we didn't realize that racial discrimination was much deeper (and) didn't disappear through one law," said Fernandez.</p>.<p>In 2003, Castro admitted there was underlying racism "associated with poverty and a historic monopoly on knowledge" in various fields by whites.</p>.<p>In parliament, 40.5 per cent of deputies are black or mixed race, including the president Esteban Lazo.</p>.<p>The country's Vice-President Salvador Valdes and the Deputy Prime Minister Ines Chapman are also black.</p>.<p>But Holl says no-one should fall into the trap of "counting the number of blacks and mixed-race people in parliament or the government to demonstrate that racism doesn't exist.</p>.<p>"The true racism is in the streets, in the feeble structural and economic conditions of the black and mixed-race population.</p>.<p>"You guaranteeing me a right by law doesn't mean that I have all the economic and social conditions to validate that right."</p>
<p>Six decades on from Cuba's proclamation of equality and despite three top government officials being black, the Caribbean island nation has made little headway on racism.</p>.<p>"Racism in Cuba is very hypocritical ... No-one says they're racist, even if they are," researcher Tomas Fernandez, 79, an author of several books on the subject, told AFP.</p>.<p>Cuba used to have an open problem with racism until the communist revolution of 1959.</p>.<p>Some buildings had signs saying "no dogs or blacks" while there was also racial segregation that saw black people barred from some clubs and schools</p>.<p>The government has enacted policies to address centuries of inequality due to slavery, which was abolished in 1886, and to promote access to higher education and public office.</p>.<p>But racism persists. In local jargon, a white woman with a black boyfriend is "burning oil" or "holding back the race" while he is "advancing" his.</p>.<p>Ethnologist Jesus Guanche has identified around 20 definitions to describe skin color, including "blue-black" for someone with very dark skin, while Cubans often describe frizzy hair as "bad."</p>.<p>"There's something that is a burden, it's very subtle, but it's a prejudice that keeps going," said painter Salvador Gonzalez, 71, who exhibits his work in El Callejon de Hamel, a bastion of African heritage in the capital Havana.</p>.<p>Black activist Alexander Holl, 22, says skin color has a "huge influence" on relationships in Cuba.</p>.<p>"It's common for white families to tell (their daughters) not to get involved with that (black) lad," said the history student.</p>.<p>"When you want to be with a white girl, sometimes you realize this is an impediment."</p>.<p>Recognizing the magnitude of the problem, President Miguel Diaz-Canel announced in November a program to "definitively eliminate the vestiges of racism."</p>.<p>In Cuba, 9.3 per cent of the 11.2 million population identify as black, 26.6 per cent say they're mixed race, while 64.1 per cent claim to be white, according to a 2012 census.</p>.<p>Manuel Cuesta, 57, an Afro-Cuban government opponent, says "there are the vestiges and remnants of symbolically cordial racism, structurally hidden, installed in the economic, institutional and political dynamics" of the country.</p>.<p>The racial debate gained a new impulse following the murder of George Floyd in the United States, and the recent death of Afro-Cuban Hansel Hernandez.</p>.<p>The 27-year-old was accused of theft and died during an alleged confrontation with police.</p>.<p>"Both events have once again pushed the racial theme into the discussion, although the true debate is on social media," said Cuesta.</p>.<p>Those critical of the government find a link between the cases of Hernandez and Floyd. Fernandez however believes that's a mistake and that the Cuban's death "cannot be associated or analyzed as if it was a racial crime."</p>.<p>He says "racial hatred doesn't exist" in Cuba, but underlying racism does.</p>.<p>Roberto Zurbano, a black researcher into issues regarding race, says an "itinerary of deficiencies" as well as "his social environment and low level of expectations" contributed to Hernandez's death.</p>.<p>In 1962, revolutionary leader Fidel Castro considered racial discrimination over, but while active discrimination was outlawed, prejudice lingered.</p>.<p>According to the German institute, GIGA in 2019, 50 per cent of white Cubans said they had a bank account compared to just 11 per cent of blacks; 31 per cent of whites had travelled abroad compared to three per cent of blacks. And whites control 98 per cent of private businesses.</p>.<p>"We were romantics and we didn't realize that racial discrimination was much deeper (and) didn't disappear through one law," said Fernandez.</p>.<p>In 2003, Castro admitted there was underlying racism "associated with poverty and a historic monopoly on knowledge" in various fields by whites.</p>.<p>In parliament, 40.5 per cent of deputies are black or mixed race, including the president Esteban Lazo.</p>.<p>The country's Vice-President Salvador Valdes and the Deputy Prime Minister Ines Chapman are also black.</p>.<p>But Holl says no-one should fall into the trap of "counting the number of blacks and mixed-race people in parliament or the government to demonstrate that racism doesn't exist.</p>.<p>"The true racism is in the streets, in the feeble structural and economic conditions of the black and mixed-race population.</p>.<p>"You guaranteeing me a right by law doesn't mean that I have all the economic and social conditions to validate that right."</p>