University of Miami Special Report: Cuba and the Caribbean

Cuba & The Caribbean Special Report

  • The Environment
    • A Museum of Marine Life
    • Exploring Energy Options for Cuba
    • Working Together to Build a Sustainable Future
    • Influencing Hurricane Intensity
    • Finding Keys to Coral Survival
    • A Pregnancy Exam for Jaws
    • Protecting Flora, Fauna, and Humans in the Caribbean Biological Corridor
    • Father of Dust
    • Science as Diplomacy
  • The People
    • A Conversation with Yoani Sánchez
    • – Conversando con Yoani Sánchez
    • A Unique Cultural Perspective
    • – Una Perspectiva Cultural Única
    • Unearthing the Mysteries of the Caribbean
    • El Mar y Él
    • Helping Hands in Haiti
    • Tracing Circuitous Lines of the Black LGBTQ Experience
    • Student Organizations Embrace Caribbean Culture
    • A Winning Team
    • Exploring Shipwrecks in the Caribbean
    • Language and the Negotiation of Identities
    • Cuban Lecturer Inspires Students through Stories of Resilience
    • Chinese Influences on Life and Religion in Cuba
    • A Chinese-Cuban Secret Society in Havana
  • Business & Economy
    • Restoring Cuba’s Historic Infrastructure
    • Serving the Underserved in Dominican Republic
    • A Bright Future for Caribbean Fish
    • A Close Look at Cuba’s Health Care System
    • Studying Caribbean Currency
    • Haiti After Hurricane Matthew
  • Health Care
    • Sharing Ideas Amid a Changing Culture
    • Cuba Water Hassles
    • Sharing Insights On Trauma Care
    • Delaying Motherhood for Childhood
    • There’s Something in the Waters of Puerto Rico’s Guánica Bay
    • Health Care in Haiti
    • Missions of Mercy
    • Transforming Nursing Education in Guyana
    • Creative Insight on Cuba’s Wastewater System
    • A ‘Living Laboratory’ for Studying Multiple Sclerosis
    • A Hemispheric Approach to Bioethics and Health Policy
    • Campeche and UM Join Hands to Improve Public Health
    • Comparative Studies Could Identify IBD ‘Triggers’
    • A Close Look at Cervical Cancer in Haitian Women
  • Politics & Policy
    • A Renewed, Tenuous Relationship
    • A Trusted Ally for Leftists
    • GTMO: Mayberry with a Caribbean Breeze
    • On the Frontlines of Immigration
    • Marrying Science and Policy in The Bahamas
  • Arts & Culture
    • A UM Architect’s Connection to Cuba
    • Digital Home for Cuban Theater
    • Football Flashback: ‘Canes vs. Cuba
    • An Interdisciplinary Hemispheric Collaboration
    • Exploring Architectural Wonders
    • Sanctuaries Reveal ‘Otherworldly’ Past
    • Unexpected Reception
    • Connections to the Past
    • Havana: The ‘Rome of the New World’
    • The Lowe Features Caribbean Art
    • A Musician Grows in Cuba
    • Afro-Cuban Religion: Surviving and Thriving Underground
    • The Musical Divide of Charismatic Worship in Haiti
    • Impresiones: Sights and Sounds from Travels in Cuba
    • The Fruits of Caribbean Literary Studies
    • Jazz Cubano!
  • Centers & Institutes
    • ICCAS: A Hub for Information on Cuba at the University of Miami
    • Abess Center: Saving Coral Reefs
    • CCS: Hemispheric Collaboration
    • – CCS: Colaboración Hemisférica
    • UMIA: Collaborative Scholarship in the Americas
    • CCS: Using Computational Mapping to Communicate Culture
    • CHC: A Collection of Historical Gems
    • – CHC: La “joya” de las Colecciones Cubanas
    • UMIA: A Hub for Caribbean Research
    • UM Hillel: Connecting to Jewish Cuba
    • UM Hillel: A Vibrant Patronato, the Cuban Jewish Community
    • UM Hillel: Student Perspectives from Cuba
    • ‘Cane Talks: Examining the Culture of Cuba

Unexpected Reception

Unexpected Reception
Unexpected Reception

UM School of Architecture student Lok Chan found that her Chinese ancestry was of great interest to many in Cuba.

“China, chinita."

TThe words followed University of Miami School of Architecture student Lok Chan as she walked the streets of Santiago de Cuba in Cuba’s easternmost province, Oriente.

Her trip was part of an architecture class, but her 11 days on the island became a cultural experience she would never forget.

Everywhere she went Cubans acknowledged her roots by calling her chinita, or little Chinese girl, an endearment popular on the island.

"I knew there were many Chinese in the Caribbean but I did not know there would be such an influence in Cuba," says Chan, who was born in Hong Kong but has been in the United States since she was 11 years old.

About the Photo

Santiago de Cuba, in Oriente, Cuba's eastern most province, at dusk. Photo credit: Lok Chan.

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Lok Chan, UM architecture student, takes notes during a studio class in Santiago de Cuba.
Lok Chan, UM architecture student, takes notes during a studio class in Santiago de Cuba.

“She was quite a sensation,” says Cuban-born Professor Jorge Hernandez, who was the group leader. “People would just single her out.”

Prior to her trip, Chan’s knowledge of Cuba was limited to the colorful pictures of the capital Havana. But she found Santiago, nestled next to the Caribbean Sea, so special: children playing on the streets, families congregating in the plaza, new friends near the church where she and her architecture classmates were working. It was more down-to-earth and homier than she had envisioned.

Toward the end of the trip, the group visited Casa de la Trova, a popular bar with local singers. As the three lady singers on stage crooned their ballads, she noticed tears in her professors’ eyes. Both Hernandez and Carie Penabad, UM professor of architecture, are of Cuban descent and as they listened and sang along to the boleros they recalled their childhoods and upbringings.

“That was the best part of the trip for me,” she says. “Seeing Cuba through my professors’ eyes.”

And then one of the singers came to Chan and told her that she was also of Chinese ancestry.

“You could see she was emotional about it,” says Chan. “And that brought me thoughts of my grandparents who lived in mainland China. I wonder if I would feel that way if I went there, a bit nostalgic.”

- BARBARA GUTIERREZ / UM News

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