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Title Foreign Correspondent: Cuba - Neighbours
Published Australia : ABC, 2015
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (28 min. 14 sec.) ; 170645445 bytes
Summary In Havana, you can feel the change in the air. For the first time in decades, young Cubans aren't just hoping for a better future. They're sure it's coming. With the US poised to lift its 55 year trade embargo, reporter Eric Campbell tells the remarkable story of how one American farming family befriended Fidel Castro and helped end Cuba's isolation.It was 2002 in Havana, Cuba. They didn't know it back then, but American farm boys Cliff and Seth Kaehler were making history. The brothers, aged 11 and 13, flanked President Fidel Castro in the front row at a state concert. At an official ceremony they stood beside him as he gently patted their heads and pointedly declared, in one of his typically marathon orations: "We are already negotiating with the future generation of American farmers."And indeed a deal was done, with the boys' father Ralph making the first US cattle trade with Cuba since Castro's revolution."He's the coolest world leader we've met with", jokes Ralph Kaehler. Now, 13 years on, the entrepreneurial Kaehlers are returning to Cuba to crank up business again - as Cubans await the lifting of the stifling trade ban. Reporter Eric Campbell follows the Kaehler family as they renew old acquaintances and make new friends - people like the Carriles family who are farmers like the Kaehlers but different in so many ways. While Ralph and Mena Kaehler employ the latest technology on their Minnesota farm, the Carriles men and women toil with basic tools and grow everything they eat. "We can't progress no matter how hard we work," says mother Kenia Carriles.As they share Cuban cigars and a freshly barbecued pig, both families agree that it's time to get trade humming again between their countries, despite human rights protests from Cuban exiles. "We need to end all this animosity", says Ralph Kaehler. "As our trade opens up, Cuba will be in our top 20 trading partners."In the capital Havana, Eric Campbell finds the locals keener to make money than revolution. These days there are fewer Che Guevara billboards. There are more classic 1950s American cars roaming the potholed streets, and funky bars are flourishing. As one Havana nightclub hipster put it: "We now see hope in showing our talent to the world. We Cubans are, how you say, cool. We are super cool."
Notes Closed captioning in English
Event Broadcast 2015-08-18 at 20:00:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Cattle -- Breeding.
Cattle trade.
Farmers -- Attitudes.
International relations.
Revolutions.
Tourism -- Economic aspects.
Australia.
Cuba -- Havana.
Form Streaming video
Author Campbell, Eric, reporter
Carriles, Kenia, contributor
Castro, Fidel, contributor
Hernandez, Tomas, contributor
Keahler, Cliff, contributor
Keahler, Mena, contributor
Keahler, Ralph, contributor
Keahler, Seth, contributor
Rossman, Jim, contributor
Ventura, Jesse, contributor