Colombian rocker Juanes says that despite the political
firestorm
surrounding the concert he has planned for Havana next month, he is
only seeking to connect with the Cuban people and to promote change
with his music.
``This is not about politics,'' he told The Miami Herald
Tuesday of his
decision to play a concert in Cuba in the historic Plaza de la
Revolución in Havana on Sept. 20.
``Nobody called us, nobody
invited us to Havana,'' he said. ``I am not a communist. I am not
aligned with the government. I'm not going to Cuba to play for the
Cuban regime.
``Our only message is one of peace,
of humanitarianism, of tolerance, a message of interacting with the
people,'' he said.
Juanes sells millions of albums, fills arenas across the
Americas, has
a shelf full of Grammys and is widely admired for his humanitarian work
in his native Colombia.
CONTROVERSY
His
stature has made his decision to play the Sept. 20 concert -- entitled
Paz Sin Fronteras (Peace Without Borders) -- a potential turning point
in the sometimes hostile relationship between Cuba and the exile
community, even as it has unleashed a storm of controversy in Miami and
beyond.
For some, a star like Juanes playing in Cuba lends
credibility to a dictatorial government and ignores the plight of
political prisoners and dissidents.
``He is playing the game of
those assassins,'' says Ana Margarita Martinez, well-known locally for
unwittingly marrying a Cuban spy who infiltrated the exile group
Brothers to the Rescue. ``He is going to a place where there are no
human rights. . . . I'm insulted.''
Juan Carlos Espinosa, an
associate dean of the Honors College at Florida International
University, says Juanes has every right to perform in Cuba, but ``what
I object to is that he says his performing in Cuba is not a political
act. Choosing to perform in Cuba, where everything is politicized and a
military regime has ruled for 50 years, is in and of itself a political
decision.'' Sitting in his sun-filled home in Key Biscayne on Tuesday,
Juanes said the concert is a way to go beyond politics, and to inspire
both sides to reach out to each other in a different way.
``I
cannot give answers to all these questions people are asking me'' about
politics in Cuba, he said. ``It's not my strength. It's not something I
can control. . . We are musicians, not politicians.
``It seems
to me that Cuba is a country that's been isolated for many years, for
historic reasons that we all know,'' he added. ``I respect that
profoundly. I know that what has happened has been hard. But we're
talking about now, the present, today.''
Juanes says what
matters is that he will be playing for an expected audience of more
than 600,000 Cubans who almost never have the chance to hear musicians
outside the island.
Juanes will be joined by pop singers Miguel
Bosé of Spain, Olga Tañon from Puerto Rico, and by the
Cuban artists
Silvio Rodríguez and Los Van Van. Unlike previous concerts
featuring
foreign pop stars -- a 1979 event with Billy Joel and one in 1999 with
Bonnie Raitt and members of The Police -- there will be no restrictions
on who can attend, he says. They will perform in front of the National
Library, the same location where Pope John Paul II gave a Mass in 1998,
instead of in front of politically controversial monuments to Che
Guevara and Jose Martí.