The
meeting, organized by the Caribbean Association of Cuba (ACC),
brought together the ambassadors from Jamaica, Trinidad and
Tobago, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Grenada, as well
as representatives from the diplomatic corps accredited to
Havana, ACC members and Afro-descendants from 26 nations of the
region.
Lina Turner Marti, President of Honor of the Association of
Latin American and Caribbean Educators (AELAC), highlighted the
importance of educating the new generations on the integrating
roots of Cuban identity as a support of the Cuban people’s
unity.
ACC President Maria Rollock noted that with this meeting her
organization thus joins other Cuban institutions that celebrate
the UN’s declaration of 2011 as the International Year of
Afro-Descendants, which aims at strengthening the
Afro-Descendants’ right to fully enjoy their economic, cultural,
social, civic and political privileges.
Representatives from the Association of Cuban Writers and
Artists (UNEAC), the Cuban Friendship Institute (ICAP) and
others, gave details of Cuba’s efforts in favor of the
preservation and promotion of cultural, cooperation and historic
elements linked to the African continent.