NACLA Report on the Americas, March 2001 v34 i5 p24
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2001 North American Congress on Latin America, Inc.
Prostitution was a profitable profession for some women prior to the Cuban Revolution. So lucrative was this vocation that those who engaged in sex for money knew no other trade and it was not uncommon to see a young child in her preteens soliciting men in one of the red-light districts. Class distinction and poor social conditions influenced those who decided on this vocation; it was a way to escape poverty and hunger. Men from all over the world came to the island to visit well-known establishments to satisfy their sexual appetites, choosing women--whose colors ranged from porcelain white to ebony black--from a catalogue.
All this changed when Fidel Castro and the July 26 Movement took power in 1959. Viewing prostitution as degrading to women, the new revolutionary government set about eliminating the business and with the founding of the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC) in 1962, they embarked on a campaign of education and vocational training for those who knew no other skill other than selling their bodies.
The campaign was a success, and though it is impossible to say that prostitution was totally eliminated, there was soon no visible evidence of it. Red-light districts, houses of ill repute and open solicitation no longer existed.
That is, until the early 1990s.
Following the dismantling of the
Jinetero is the modernization of the word jinete, which means "jockey." The use of this
Unlike the jinetera or prostitute of yesterday, today's "working girls" have access to education, housing and medical care. Many are university students or graduates, or have certificates of completion in vocational programs. Like those of the 1950s, these women will cite economics and inaccessibility to certain goods or establishments as the reasons why they do what they do. The only way they can buy new clothes, go dancing or purchase food that is not allotted on the ration card is, they say, by befriending a foreigner--and if that means going to bed with him, so be it.
As the "Special Period" worsened, the jinetero
trade flourished. The profession that was formerly made up of mostly women from
A look or a nod was sufficient to get almost any woman the Pepe wanted. Competition kept the prices down, so a night
of fun for the customer could be had for as little as $10, and sometimes for
the price of a drink and a sandwich. European men--especially Italians and
Spaniards--come to
For a long time the Cuban government refused to acknowledge that as the
tourist industry expanded, prostitution went along with that growth arm-in-arm.
As women got younger, however, and
According to many jineteras, the government's attempt to eliminate prostitution was to criminalize the women. After receiving four police fines or warnings for soliciting foreign tourists, it was possible that a woman could be sentenced to a prison term of up to four years for antisocial behavior.
When that did not curb the problem, report the women, the next solution was
to forcibly send all those who were not from

In the last two FMC congresses the number-one agenda item has been prostitution
and its eradication. Members discussed its causes and the effects it has not
only had on the women involved, but also on the moral fiber of
Today, if a woman is believed to be a prostitute, an FMC worker will visit the family to investigate. If needed, a "re-education" process begins with the whole family, reinstating values that are written in the FMC's "Family Code"--a set of rules and regulations to be used as a guide to protect the institution of the family. In the, Federation's Family Houses, which exist in most municipalities, counseling and therapy is available as well as school and job placement.
The involvement of the FMC has helped to arrest the problem of prostitution, but has not eliminated it. The problem is abating, but remains serious. It is particularly disturbing that one of the dramatic gains of the Revolution, the re-education of prostitutes, needs to be taken on again 40 years later.
Nehanda Abiodun is a member of
both the Black Liberation Army and New African People's Organization. She has
lived in exile in