Home > People Index Page > Fidel Castro
A Conversation With Fidel
Marvin R. Shanken, editor and publisher of Cigar Aficionado,
interviewed Cuban President Fidel Castro in Havana on Feb. 3, 1994 at
the Palace of the Revolution.The interview focused on cigars, but
touched on the United States trade embargo and President Castro's
future.
Shanken: How important are cigars to Cuba?
Castro: It is one of our most important export items. It is also one
of our main sources of revenues. It is also an important factor for us
in the domestic market. In addition to that, we have the hard currency
which comes from exporting cigars. Cigars are one of the four or five
most important items of export that we have. First, it's sugar, then
nickel, fish, tourism. These are the main items that provide
revenues. Biotechnology is gaining ground as well as the
pharmaceutical industry. And now cigars are more or less in the fifth
place. Historically it has been very important.
Shanken: Is there any Cuban export that carries as much prestige
today?
Castro: The cigar has made our country famous. It has given prestige
to our country. Cuba is known among other things for the quality of
its cigars.
Shanken: It's also a craft with great tradition. When you feel it,
when you smell it, when you look at it, you realize that great
dedication has gone into the creation of every cigar. People have
spent their lives making the cigars--some of the rollers have been
making cigars for 30, 40, 50 years. To an aficionado, cigar making is
like one of Beethoven's symphonies.
Castro: You are right. Lots of things go into making Cuban cigars,
both in cultivation and in the manufacturing. To tell you the truth,
it is very hard work, especially growing quality tobacco. It requires
a lot of operations. The cultivation and choosing the right leaves for
the cigars are really an art. And then making cigars is really
beautiful. It also very much relates to the history of Cuba and to the
struggle of independence for Cuba. Many of the people who migrated to
Cuba later worked in the cigar factories, and they were very active in
the struggle for independence during colonial times.
Shanken: When you build a warehouse or a road, it's hard work, but
it's much different than making a cigar. Cigar lovers appreciate the
craft. Other people, nonsmokers, have no idea about the labor and
passion that goes into tobacco farming and cigar making.
Castro: Yes.
Shanken: For many years, the world saw photographs of you smoking a
cigar or holding a cigar in your hand, as you did just a moment
ago...as you are now doing. (Castro picks up a Cohiba Esplendido with
his right hand.) For the past seven or eight years, you have stopped
smoking cigars. Don't you miss them?
Castro: I should explain that. I got used to smoking in my early
years. My father was a cigar smoker, and he really appreciated a fine
cigar.My father was Spanish, and he originally came from Galicia. He
was from the countryside. I remember when I was a teenager in high
school. I was about 15 years old. I had lunch with my father when he
presented me with a cigar. So he introduced me to cigars and he also
taught me to drink wine....
Shanken: So he was a wine lover.
Castro: He used to smoke Cuban cigars and drink Spanish wine. And he
taught me about both things. He liked wines from Rioja. I always
smoked cigars and, on very few occasions, cigarettes. But I always
kept the habit of smoking cigars. So I was always a cigar smoker, as
far as I can remember, since I was 15 years old until I was about 59
years old. That's about 44 years of being a cigar smoker.
On two occasions in my life I didn't smoke. Once was during the
Revolution because there was a great movement against cigars as a
result of an uprising of the peasants on the plantations, and tobacco
production went down. There was a great spirit against cigars. In
order to be in solidarity with them, I quit for some time. But that
was the only reason. Soon production recovered, and I started smoking
again.
Later I did not smoke because of reasons of health. Many people in our
country were against smoking. I didn't not smoke because I didn't like
cigars. I was very much in the habit. But there was a whole national
movement against smoking.
Shanken: In what year was this?
Castro: I can't remember exactly. It was '84 or '85. No. It was on
Aug. 26, 1985. It was when there was a general health issue in Cuba
against smoking. At first, I thought that I would simply try not to
smoke in public for this campaign against smoking, and I did not make
a commitment to it. I used to be with a cigar in my mouth all the
time. I always had a cigar. When I was with a foreigner in a meeting
like this, I would be smoking my cigars. Pictures would show me
smoking cigars, or in an interview on television I was smoking
cigars. And then the interview would be shown on television here, and
you can imagine what people would think watching me smoke my
cigars. Then I came to a decision that to really launch a campaign
against smoking, I had to set the example and quit smoking. That was
why I quit smoking. As I had a very strong motive, it was easier for
me. I not only had a strong commitment; I had a strong motive. So, it
was not so hard for me to stop smoking.
People used to ask me if I still smoked when I was alone because it
seemed impossible to them that I could quit smoking cigars after all
those years. I must be smoking at home.
Shanken: I question that, too. It's hard to believe that you've
stopped completely.
Castro: I said, look, in order to smoke, you need some
accomplices. You need somebody to buy the cigars for you. You need
somebody to hide the ashes that are left around. You need at least
three, four, five accomplices who know that you are smoking
cigars. They would know that you are doing something like that. They
would know that you are smoking behind closed doors, and I wouldn't
want three, four or five people knowing that I was deceiving
others. So I chose not to do that.
Shanken: You are saying that you do not smoke even in the privacy of
your home by yourself?
Castro: No.
Shanken: Not even a puff?
Castro: No. No.
Shanken: Not even a little puff?
Castro: Not one....A few days ago, I was in a meeting with a large
Spanish firm. It was Tabacalera [the Spanish tobacco monopoly]. And
they were analyzing different cigars and all that. And I did not try
any cigars, even though it might have benefited our economic relations
with them. I remember the quality of cigars and how a great cigar
should be. (He picks up a Cohiba Esplendido.) They should not be too
compact. And they should burn very evenly. Even if you light them in
one corner, they soon come to an even burn. With other cigars, if you
do that, they continue to burn unevenly throughout the smoke.
What I used to smoke was the Cohiba, which was the one that was
developed in the last 23 years. It was the 23 years that I smoked
after the victory of the Revolution. It was the Cohiba that I
preferred.
Shanken: Which size did you prefer?
Castro: It wasn't this one [points to the Esplendido (Churchill
size)]. It was the smaller one [the Corona Especial]. I'll tell you
something about the Cohiba. The Cohiba did not exist as a brand in
Cuba. But one man who used to work for me as a bodyguard, I used to
see the man smoking a very aromatic, very nice cigar, and I asked him
what brand he was smoking. He told me that it was no special brand,
but that it came from a friend who makes cigars and he gave them to
him. I said, let's find this man. I tried the cigar, and I found it so
good that we got in touch with him and asked him how he made it. Then,
we set up the house [the El Laguito Factory], and he explained the
blend of tobacco he used. He told which leaves he used from which
tobacco plantations. He also told us about the wrappers he used and
other things. We found a group of cigar makers. We gave them the
material, and that was how the factory was founded. Now Cohiba is
known all over the world. That was over 30 years ago.
Shanken: Where does the name Cohiba come from?
Castro: It is a native name. It was the name the native Indians gave
to cigars.
Shanken: Was it the generic name for cigars or tobacco?
Castro: I am not sure exactly. So the new brand was created based on
the experience of a tobacco grower who used to make cigars for
himself. And in my view, it was the best cigar available. I did not
like any others after that.
When I was a student before the Revolution, I used to smoke different
brands. Sometimes I used to smoke Romeo y Julieta Churchill,
H. Upmann, Bauza, Partagas, but ever since I found Cohiba....It was so
soft--and it was not an overly compact cigar. It was easy to smoke.
Shanken: When Cohiba became a brand, was it made exclusively for you?
Castro: At first when the tobacco grower used to make it, he used to
make it for himself and the bodyguard. And then for some time, he used
to send me the same cigars, but I found it so good that I thought it
could be a new brand. I thought that it would be worthwhile setting up
a new factory to make this cigar.
Shanken: You sound like a businessman.
Castro: I thought it was worth its own factory. All it needed was a
name. And based on the type of cigars from that man, I had the factory
established.
Shanken: This brand today is considered by many cigar lovers to be the
finest brand of cigars in the world.
Castro [holds a Cohiba Esplendido]: This particular cigar is too tight
in my opinion. The Cohiba should be easy to smoke. And it should burn
very evenly, almost like a cigarette. I don't know much about the new
Cohibas, but that was how the old ones were.
Shanken: I accept that you don't smoke cigars now, but do you ever
dream about cigars?
Castro [laughs loudly]:Well, I have had dreams about cigars. Sometimes
I used to dream that I was smoking a cigar. The funny thing is that it
doesn't happen to me anymore. I think it happened to me in the first
five years. Even in my dreams I used to think that I was doing
something wrong. I was conscious that I had not permitted myself to
smoke anymore, but I was still enjoying it in my sleep.
Shanken: I think tonight you may again dream about cigars.
Medical research is inconclusive regarding the health hazard of
smoking cigars, if they are not inhaled. Why does the Cuban government
take such a hard-line position against smoking cigars? I understand
cigarettes, which are inhaled and may cause lung cancer, but why
cigars?
Many intelligent people around the world, including doctors, smoke
cigars. They understand that there are risks. And many doctors say
that the risks of smoking a cigar are no greater than riding a
motorcycle or speeding down a mountain on skis. So why are cigars
lumped together with cigarettes?
Castro: It seems that we are having a real conversation here. We have
the publisher of a magazine on cigars and a citizen of a country whose
economy depends on the production of cigars. [Everyone laughs.] I
think that we based the decision on the conviction that cigars are bad
for your health. That was when we launched our campaign. I think that
cigarettes are more harmful than cigars. Even if a cigarette has a
filter or not, people inhale them. I have never in my life inhaled a
cigarette or a cigar. I simply enjoyed a cigar after lunch. You have
to improve your digestion. I enjoy a cigar because of its aroma, its
taste and watching the smoke.
Of course, don't forget that my lung capacity was always good because
I always exercise and I never inhaled smoke. I have preserved my
health. Cigars are less harmful to your health, but according to
doctors, many people who don't smoke are affected by smokers who sit
nearby to them over a period of time. Anyway, we couldn't make a
different policy for cigars or cigarettes, and I think that it is
proof of the ethics of our country because from an economic point of
view we want people to smoke cigars. Also, I couldn't be seen in
magazines or anywhere else smoking cigars.
Shanken: It's a noble sacrifice.
Castro: I did it for reasons of health, even though my health was
OK. It was a moral duty to contribute to the campaign against
smoking. The World Health Organization had a campaign against smoking,
and we were the first ones to support it. One day, in the same place
that we are sitting now, a representative of the WHO came here to
present me with two medals--one for not smoking and the other one for
the government programs after the Revolution, which have turned Cuba
into one of the countries with the best health ratings of Third World
countries in the world.
So, you see, I can't smoke anymore. My commitment is very strong. It
is final. It is a kind of commitment that I can't change. Anyway, I
may not smoke. I agree with you that there are many things that
endanger men's lives such as traffic accidents or diseases. And many
things can be done for health that are unrelated to cigars.
Shanken: There are many educated people who are willing to take
whatever the calculated risk is because they love cigars so much.
Castro: It's a person's right. They know how they feel about it--not
to drink, not to smoke, whatever.
Shanken: Have you spent much time in the Vuelta Abajo or visiting the
cigar factories?
Castro: Yes. I have visited the Vuelta Abajo very often. I like it
there. [Tobacco growing] is a very complicated and sophisticated
cultivation process, one of the most complicated that I know.
I forgot to mention something more about cigars. When I was in the
mountains during the war, people used to send me cigars. Sometimes I
would run out of cigars, and when I only had one left, I would put it
in my shirt pocket and keep it. When did I finally smoke it? I would
smoke it when I had very good news or very bad news. If it was good
news, I would celebrate with a cigar, but if it was bad news, it
really compensated for the bad news.
Shanken: Do you remember signing a box of 50 Cohiba Lanceros? It was
recently auctioned at a charity dinner in London to benefit medical
relief for Cubans. Do you know how much the box sold for?
Castro: I heard it was very expensive.
Shanken: £12,000 ($18,500).
Castro: I never heard how much it finally went for, but that is very
impressive. I heard it was a record.
Shanken: Let's move on to something a little more serious. The
embargo. How has the production of cigars for export been affected
because of your inability to get enough fertilizer, gasoline,
tarpaulin and other resources for the growing of tobacco? You could
export more cigars by lowering the standard of quality, but apparently
you are not. I've been told that quality is your top priority.
Castro: We feel that it is fundamental to maintain the quality of our
cigars, which is an important legacy that we must preserve. And I
think that the quality can even be improved. We are more worried about
the quality than the quantity of cigars that can be produced. We feel
that the best cigars come from small areas, certain regions and
climates where the finest tobacco can be grown. The great cigars of
Havana come primarily from the tobacco of Pinar del Rio. It is
difficult in other regions. We are familiar with the different soils
that give the best kind of tobacco leaves.
For analyzing the locations, I have said that we have to do it like
the wine producers. We have to preserve the uniqueness of our
cigars. If you have a certain piece of land, let's say 20 or 30
hectares, and it makes a certain excellent quality of tobacco,
we should grow tobacco there. You shouldn't go and grow it
elsewhere. Many things contribute to this quality: the climate, the
soil, the amount of sunshine. It is exactly like wine. The same things
happen for the best-quality wines. However, there is more
standardization of quality with tobacco than wine in my opinion. Wine
can have an exceptionally fine harvest one year and then standard or
worse the rest of the years.
In general, if tobacco is grown in the same soil, you can grow the
same-quality tobacco leaves. It of course depends on the cultivation
and technique, but this is a question of if you can grow more or less
tobacco. It is also not a matter of the variety, as it is with other
crops like wheat, which is a matter of producing more quantity. In
this case, you have to find the best variety of tobacco to produce the
best quality of cigars. That is our policy. In the case of the finest
export cigars, we are taking measures that guarantee and improve the
quality of the cigars that we are producing.
We have a very traditional cultivation. Many of the cigar-tobacco
growers used to walk like this because of the number of hours they
spent working in the fields. (He stands and walks hunched over like a
field worker.) We should say that the tobacco growing takes many man
hours. In terms of how much they are paid, it is not very fair. It's
almost like slavery, but you cannot make a life out of it. But if you
mechanize it, like the blond tobacco for cigarettes, you can make a
living. But you cannot mechanize tobacco for cigars because it would
sacrifice the quality completely. Tobacco for cigars is not a question
of quantity. It has to be planted in a certain place, and it is a
selected product. It is economic. It is not something to be exported
as a raw material, but to be exported as cigars. This makes it
worthwhile in terms of economics.
Shanken: Trinidad. We understand that it is a brand of cigar that is
your own personal brand, which you give to diplomats and friends as
presents.
Castro: No. I principally give Cohibas for presents.
Shanken: You don't give Trinidads?
Castro: No. I don't give Trinidads. I give Cohibas. I have been
advising the people who are in charge of tobacco production,
Cubatabaco, that they should come up with new brands and new
blends. This would help the situation with the conflicts over the
brands [with similarly named cigar brands from such countries as the
Dominican Republic and Honduras]. If we have the best raw material, we
have the best soils and the best know-how, why shouldn't we create new
brands?
Shanken: The El Laguito factory has a brand called Trinidad, which
they say is for you to give as personal gifts. It has become a legend.
Castro: I am not fully aware of that brand, but I assume it is like
the Lancero in size from Cohiba.
Shanken: It is the same size, but with a little darker wrapper. Are
you going to allow Cubatabaco to sell it?
Castro: I don't know about that cigar. I always had the Cohiba like
this (points to a Lancero) and sometimes a little smaller.
It is really unfortunate that the American cigar smoker cannot
purchase cigars from Cuba.
But I will tell you an anecdote about that. You know that [President
John F.] Kennedy was the one that set up the blockade. Every time a
friend of his came back from Cuba, he made sure that he brought back
some Cuban cigars.
Shanken: There are many Americans who buy Cuban cigars when traveling
internationally. It is estimated that 8 million to 10 million Cuban
cigars a year are smoked by Americans.
Castro: That's very interesting.
Shanken: On to another subject. Did you smoke a lot of cigars with Che
Guevara?
Castro: Yes. Che used to really enjoy smoking.I think he appreciated
it as much as he appreciated Argentine beef.
Shanken: After the Revolution, we have read that the government
decided to stop using the traditional brand names, and that they would
have one brand name, called Siboney, for all export cigars. That never
happened. Do you have any recollection of that?
Castro: That would have been insanity! That would have been crazy. I
always wanted them to create new brands.
Shanken: If you and President Clinton ever get together, would you
smoke a cigar with him, symbolic of peace at last between our two
countries?
Castro: Now that would be an interesting thing. As I told you, when I
was in the Sierra Maestras [mountains of Eastern Cuba] during the
Revolution, and I had good moments, I would smoke my last
cigars. Perhaps something like that would bring back my old habit from
the days of the Sierra Maestras, but I would have to ask for
permission from the World Health Organization. I wouldn't want to lose
my medal.
Shanken: I know the issues are great and complex, but do you see the
day soon when America and Cuba will work together as neighbors and
friends as they did many years ago?
Castro: I hope that day will come sometime, but no one will be able to
say when that will happen. It is not an easy thing to happen. As for
our side, we do not have any particular objections, nor do we lack the
will.
Shanken: Have there been any private negotiations to try to come to a
mutual understanding that will result in the elimination of the trade
embargo?
Castro: No. No, not at this time.
Shanken: The American trade embargo against Vietnam is ending. Russian
and U.S. relations have been turned around. Even Israel and Palestine
are trying to get together. Why is it, in your opinion, that Cuba
continues to be embargoed? It is a question that we all ask. What do
you think?
Castro: It is difficult to answer. It doesn't stand up to
logic. Perhaps it is because we are too close geographically to the
United States. Perhaps [because] we have resisted the blockade for
over 30 years. Perhaps it is a matter of national pride for the
U.S. government that has turned us into an exception and has given us
the honor to be its only long-standing adversary. I think it is not
logical. I don't know what history will say though.
Shanken: There would be many benefits to both sides, if you were
willing to take the first step.
Castro: How can we take the first step? We are the ones whom the
blockade is imposed against. If we had a mutual blockade, then we
could take the first step. But how can we? The first step should be
taken by the U.S.
Shanken: From what I read, the American government is looking for Cuba
to undergo political reform and improvement in its human rights.
Castro: That is the pretext that they use, and for many years they
have used many different pretexts. At one time when we were in Africa,
they used to say if the Cubans withdrew from Africa, then the
relations would improve. That pretext was left behind. Later they said
that when the links with the Soviet Union were cut off, then our
relations would begin with the United States. Now the Soviet Union is
not supporting us anymore, and nothing has changed. They keep on
moving the goalposts back. Before it was Latin American subversion,
the situation in Central America...and when they talk about reforms in
Cuba, it is a precondition that we cannot accept because it has to do
with independence and the sovereignty of our nation. It would be like
if we were to give a precondition to the United States that it must
change something in the Constitution in order for us to open up
relations again. That's absurd.
As far as human rights, and I will try to keep my answer brief, no one
in the world has done more than Cuba has done for human beings, for
its citizens--no one else, in every sense. The best evidence of that
is that our health programs have saved the lives of over 300,000
children, and we have been helping out in other places around the
world with our doctors, medicines and knowledge, more than any other
country in the world. So, I think that no other country has as
unblemished behavior about human rights considering how much we have
done for man. That is a legend. It is a fabrication. It is an
unjustifiable pretext.
Shanken: There are two issues that seem to come up. The first is about
the Soviet missiles [in Cuba] in the '60s aimed at the United States.
Castro: There are not any missiles anymore.
Shanken: The second issue regards compensation for the properties
taken from private Cuban citizens at the time of the Revolution. I
would like to know your thinking as to whether or not there is any way
to satisfy the Cuban-Americans whose properties were taken so that we
can move on to the bigger agenda of living together in a neighborly
way?
Castro: Those thousands of Cubans whose economic situation were
affected by the Revolution were people who had experience in business,
and thanks to the Revolution, they were given facilities in the United
States that they would have never received if the Revolution had not
been victorious. Those people are wealthier now than they were in
Cuba. That they owe to the Revolution.
It would be to create a hope that our country were in an economic
situation which would allow it to compensate those people whose
property was taken. We cannot create that expectation because we do
not have the resources and, also, because of the blockade, our country
has been suffering great losses, several billion dollars' worth. We
are a small country, and the blockade has been very harmful to us. Now
we are suffering more with the demise of the Soviet Union and the
socialist states, with which we supported ourselves. But we are still
striving. We are putting up a fight, and we are trying our best.
You can be assured that, if, instead of Cubans there were Americans
here setting the example that we are setting as far as our capacity
for struggle and resistance, the American nation would be proud.
Shanken: Perhaps people in Washington will read this interview and
begin to think more about how this impasse can be overcome.
Castro: It is a struggle between Goliath and David. Let's see if they
wish one day to leave David alone. You say that Clinton smokes cigars?
Shanken: Yes. He has smoked for many years. But his wife, Hillary, has
created a no-smoking policy in the White House. So now he just chews
cigars, it seems.
Castro: Then I guess President Clinton and I will not be able to smoke
our peace pipe or cigars in the White House.
Shanken: The American press repeatedly refers to the very poor
conditions here in Cuba. The enormous shortages. The human
suffering. Some are convinced you will fall soon or your government
will be overthrown or perhaps you will step down. Like a great
Broadway show, you have had a long run. Is it time to give someone
else a turn? Do you have any such plans?
Castro: I wish I could. I wish I were free to do what I want to do. In
easy times, you know, it is easy to talk about that, but in the hard
times that we are living now, I would be shrugging off my
responsibilities to my country if I did this. It would be like
deserting the front line in the heat of the battle. I could not do
that. I am not the owner of my life anymore. The most I can do is
accept the responsibilities that I have been invested with by my
fellow citizens and try to carry out those responsibilities for as
long as I have them. But believe me I would enjoy now to be free to do
what I would like to do; however, it is not possible for me to have
the freedom in the hard times that I am living in now.Perhaps I could
even smoke cigars again without all these very important obligations.
There are many things I would like to do. I wish I were the
problem. The problem is the Revolution, and the problem is our
ideas. The United States, or some people in the United States, they do
not just want Castro's retirement. They want the total destruction of
the Revolution. And that is what the majority of our people would not
accept.
There is a new generation of Americans, and in the history of America,
many similar things happened. First, you had the struggle for
independence against the British with a long struggle that had great
repercussions on the world. There was the Civil War in the days of
Lincoln, which brought about great changes in American society.
Now in the United States there is not a revolution but an
evolution. But there are still many injustices to be changed. There
are many people who are struggling in the United States for equality
and social justice. One of the countries in the world where there are
more social differences is the United States. The difference between
the average salary of the workers and the executive. The executive
makes 90 times' more than the average worker.
There are many injustices in the United States, but that is your task
to change and not mine. I would not set up preconditions for relations
based on these injustices. On a realistic basis, we should respect
each other, and, in the world, peace should prevail. There was a great
Mexican leader who said that respect for other peoples' rights is
peace. So peace should be based on mutual respect.
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