Gusano (lit. worm, fem.gusana)[1] is the Spanish language term for "worm". It is a name for Cuban counter-revolutionaries and those whoemigrated fromCuba following the rise ofFidel Castro after theCuban Revolution.[2][3] The word was used as early as 1960 as a name devised by Fidel Castro to refer to his opponents within Cuba.[4]
The phrase "gusano" has been argued to mean more than just a political insult, but to also be an ethnic slur againstLatino Americans, and more specificallyCuban Americans andCubans, when used by those sympathetic to the Cuban government to generally insult Cuban exiles and their descendants.[5][6]
Cuba experienced several waves of emigration after the revolution, with political dissidents and wealthy Cubans leaving in the first waves during the 1960s. By 1962, over 200,000 had already left the country.[7] The number increased to 500,000 by the beginning of 1969.[8] During the 1990s, many poorer Cubans left due to economic stagnation, especially following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Out of these exiles, the first waves of exiles in the 1960s first bore the termgusano.[9] By the 1960s and 1970s, Castro and his supporters had widely adopted the term in speeches and discussion to refer to Cubans that have fled the country, as well as the Cubans that applied to leave.[10][11] The term supposedly originated in a 1961 speech that Castro gave where he discussed "shaking the rotten tree, and thegusanos will drop out",[12] in reference to the counter-revolutionaries. Many chants would evolve from the phrase, such as "Con saya o pantalón,gusanos al paredón." (If wearing skirts or if wearing pants,gusanos [will turn] towards the wall [to be executed]).[13]
During the first wave of exodus from Cuba, reports came out from theHavana Airport stated that insults towardsgusanos were being blared from the loudspeakers by airport officials.[14]
To a lesser extent, many Cubans who stayed in the country, but were against the revolution, adopted the label as a badge of honor (or a symbol of oppression),[15] referring to themselves asgusano orgusana to state their dissatisfaction with the Castro regime.[16][17][18][19] Despite that fact, many pieces of Cuban propaganda contained imagery of thegusano and the desire to crush anti-revolutionaries.[20] In response, anti-revolutionaries began distributing "gusano leaflets" with political cartoons involving worms.[21] Throughout the years of Cuban exile, many alleged raids and attacks by defectors from Cuba, according to theAP, were utilized by Castro in propaganda to further strengthen their position as an enemy of the current Government.[22] Throughout the 1960s, reports came out of the Cuban government encouraging public attacks of people branded with the label.[23]
In the 1960s, the Cuban state-run newspaper,Revolución, had a daily column which featuredpolitical cartoons that featured drawings of worms, paired with a list of activities of Cubans in exile. In response, many self-identifiedgusanos bought and sold keyrings with worms on them to demonstrate pride in the label.[citation needed]
The military fort,Castillo del Príncipe, was used in the 1960s to house political prisoners of Castro that had been captured. Their wives would frequent the establishment in hopes to see their husbands and sons, and due to the large amount of anti-revolutionary women loitering around, the prison became colloquially known asLa Gusaneria.[24]
By 1961, several thousand Cubans were employed at The United StatesGuantanamo Bay Naval Base. They were referred to asgusanos by the public. This exists as an early example of Cubans being assigned the term who were not necessarily anti-revolutionary or in exile.[25][26][27]
The term was also prevalent in hate crimes against anti-revolutionary Cubans. In September or October 1961, over the course of a week, 12 deceased bodies were discovered overHavana with notes attached to them that said "gusanos with pro-revolutionary [ideologies], CIA agents, who tried to escape to the United States."[28] In a mass-jailing of political dissidents in 1961, Castro's regime used defunct sewers as prisons for accused anti-revolutionaries. In one of the sewers, a Canadian priest who had been imprisoned dressed anicon in a dress and called her "The Virgin of theGusanos".[29]
During the 1962 wildfires that destroyed sugarcane plantations, locals in Cubas were reported saying that "gusanos have infiltrated the canefields."[30] This led to quickmilitary tribunals resulting in death by firing squad for "gusanos" who sought to destroy Cuban farms.[31] In a 1961 speech inSantiago de Cuba,Raúl Castro said, "Our motherland will be attacked again by thosegusanos allied with [American] imperialism, who will try to bring back all the bad things that the revolution is dominating. Our country will [be prepared] to eliminate them."[32] Vigilante groups were formed for people to report their neighbors for "anti-revolutionary behavior", labelling themgusanos. According to Miami Herald report Al Burt, the government could detain such people arbirtrarily.[33][34] Imprisoned political dissidents awaiting trial are recorded to have carvedSoy Gusano on their jail cells.[35]
In an interview with theTampa Tribune, Cuban professional boxerLuis Manuel Rodríguez, who had supported the Batista regime, recalled a time when a Cuban soldier came up to him with a machine gun, called him agusano, and put a threat on his life.[36]
Anyone who was accused or revealed to be building a stockpile of food outside ofgovernment rations were also labeledgusanos.[37] The20 and 25 Centavo coins were givengusano as a nickname due to a shortage of the coins that was rumored to be caused by anti-revolutionaries hoarding them for personal use.[38] Many in the late 1960s who applied to leave the country were forced to work farms asgusano laborers before their departure was approved by the Cuban government.[39] According to British reporterMichael Frayn of theLondon Observer, in 1969, there were as many as 200,000 laborers working in the agricultural camps at any given point, and that only a quarter could expect to be granted leave by the end of the year.[40]
In 2021 Cubans who attended an anti-government protest inMatanzas in response to the governments handling of coronavirus, energy shortages and the economy, were detained and interrogated in a local facility called "Técnico" run by Cuba's state security services. While detained a man, Michel Parra was beaten with a baton, repeatedly called agusano and threatened to have he and his family shot.[41]
The use of the word was exacerbated by theBay of Pigs Invasion, when many Cuban dissidents were taken prisoner by Castro's government. The term then began to develop heavier connotations with the portrayal of dissidents as "American puppets".[42] In May 1961, that stigma continued when a state-run radio station calledCosta Rican politiciansgusanos in response to a call from their government urging theOAS to take action against the Cuban government.[43] Over 1,000 men were captured during the invasion, and Castro issued a ransom to the United States, saying "Si los imperialistas no quieren que susgusanos trabajen, que los cambien por tractores." (If the imperialist [Americans] do not want their [prisoners] (gusanos) to labor, let them be exchanged for tractors).[44]
The invasion sparked mass hysteria among revolutionaries, who locked up between 150,000 and 200,000 Cuban citizens who were accused of beinggusanos. Many public buildings, such as theSports City building, were converted into makeshift prisons to hold all the detainees.[45]
In relation to the anti-American and anti-revolutionary ties, the term was stigmatized further upon the labelling of terrorists asgusanos who sought to destroy the country. In November 1961, Pedro Arias Hernandez, who was stationed atGuanabacoa's Nico Lopez Refinery, was killed when 3 people attacked the state-run business. The killers were labelledgusanos by the media, and were accused of working for theCIA.[46] Many protests, including demonstrations against the famine, unrelated to Socialism directly, had their protestors classified asgusanos. In 1962, Castro said that "thosegusanos must be stopped. The street belongs to us, thegusano parlachin, thequintacolumnista must be punished physically, but without taking him to the wall. Now, if they engage in sabotage, that is another matter..."[47]
Starting as early as the late 1950s, after the settlement of theCuban diaspora, large portions of Cubans settled in Florida, andspecifically in Miami. Florida's proximity to Cuba naturally led to a large influx of Cubans in the region, hence, much of the use of the wordgusano was found in those areas with a high concentration of Cubans.
In 1970, Spanish Tampa newspaperEl Sol received messages from pro-Castro Cubans who threatened the paper's advertisers, saying "Merchants who advertise in El Sol sink to the level ofgusanos, and will be boycotted if they persist, [be] warned."[48]
Evidence of usage of the word towards the religious was shown in the same year, when Hispanic Chicago street gang,The Young Lords, referred to the First Spanish United Methodist Church congregation as being agusano establishment.[49]
In a piece calledIntolerancia,Miami Herald writer Roberto Luque Escalona describes his frustration with the term, with it being prevalent among supporters of Castro and often targeted at Cuban entrepreneurs in Florida. Escalona showed an example of the caricature ofla gusanera de Miami, with a stigma being attached to Cubans who moved to Florida and make their own livings under private enterprises, compared to thegovernment-run economy of Cuba.[50][citation needed]
In modern times Gusano has been used as a slur againstLatinos,Cuban Americans andCubans by non-Cuban Latinos sympathetic to the Cuban government to target Cuban exiles and their descendants.[5] The modern usage intent of the slur has been used to question the "authenticity" of someone as a Cuban or part of the wider Cuban community based on their ethnicity and ideological support, mainly anti-communism.ref name=latinorebels></ref>
The use of the term is not only limited to Cuba and Cubans. In 1962, The Chilean state-run press accused "Cubangusanos in Miami" of having planned an attempt on the life of then-presidentJorge Alessandri during his stopover inWashington, D.C. on December 10.[51]
During the late 1960s, former Bolivian Minister of the Interior Antonio Arguedas gave press interviews following his involvement in the publication ofChe Guevara's diary in late 1967. He reported that prior to his fleeing of Bolivia to Chile, it was a common occurrence in theBolivian Cabinet to refer to their Cuban colleagues in exile asgusanos.[52]