Student conference highlights issues facing Cuban youth

Photo by Nicole Llera

Awarding-winning singer Gloria Estefan accepts a T-shirt from organizers of the Princeton and Harvard Cuba Conference.

The nonprofit student organization Raíces de Esperanza sponsored its third Princeton and Harvard Cuba Conference this past weekend, with more than 150 students representing 44 universities across the country participating.

 

Joanna Gonzalez, the spokeswoman for the group, said the goal of the conference was to "empower youths to feel for their counterparts in Cuba."

 

The conference, titled "Juventud Despierta," or "Youth Awaken," was designed to "appeal to cultural identity as a catalyst for greater individual identification with the pursuit of a pluralistic and democratic Cuban society," according to conference organizers.

 

Alana Greer, a junior from Boston College who helped organize the event, said the importance of the conference for young Cuban Americans is to realize the differences between their lives and the lives of youths in Cuba.

 

"This could be us," Greer said. "We have such different lives. We want to forge a new identity for the next generation of Cuban Americans."

 

The conference featured speakers, including singer Gloria Estefan, panel discussions, a musical performance by the SPAM Allstars, conference calls with youths in Cuba and a screening of Andy Garcia's new film, "The Lost City."

 

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