In Search of the Cuban Paso Fino
Equus|March 2017

After 20 years of chasing scant evidence, a determined woman finally gains access to one of Cuba’s best-kept secrets.

María del Carmen Martínez, PhD
In Search of the Cuban Paso Fino

I first traveled to Cuba in the summer of 1995 to find my grandparents’ relatives. The two sides of the family---those who emigrated to Florida after the 1959 revolution and those who stayed behind---had had no contact for 36 years.

Still, I had grown up hearing stories of my family: My grandfather came from mariners who fished the waters around Baracoa, a small town near the eastern tip of the island. My grandmother’s people were flinty, plainspoken farmers who lived in the interior, many miles from Baracoa. Here, I was told, my great uncles farmed a homestead with little more than the sweat of their brows and the strength of their horses, animals central to their way of life and sense of self. I longed to meet them, to see the place of my grandmother’s childhood and to learn about their horses.

I had no address, but I did have the name of the family farm, La Merced, and a working knowledge of the family tree. So I made my way into the countryside by bus, then car, horse-drawn carriage and on foot. I was rewarded at every turn with jaw-dropping vistas: verdant fields presided over by hundred-foot royal palms. Every so often I encountered a campesino with a little horse carrying a load of firewood or pineapples. Invariably, the locals tipped their hats to me, surprised to meet a sweaty, flushed foreigner.

Finally, near the region called Veguita del Sur, I knocked on the door of a farmhouse, my heart in my stomach. These people had no way to know I was coming. A wizened man and woman with kind eyes appeared in the doorway. Before I could say a word, my aunt reached out and hugged me. Apparently, the family resemblance was strong enough to be met with celebration.

“THOSE WHO RIDE”

This story is from the March 2017 edition of Equus.

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This story is from the March 2017 edition of Equus.

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