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Florencia Arbiser
 
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Group back from ‘eye-opening’ trip to Cuba

Cover StoryPublished: 19 June 2009

CARTAGENA, Colombia – The recent thaw in relations between Cuba and the United States is being greeted with caution by some Jews in Cuba.

In April, the Obama administration announced it was moving to ease restrictions on American travel to Cuba and money transfers to the island. Then, earlier this month, the 34-nation Organization of American States agreed to conditionally accept Cuba if Havana was interested. Cuban officials in the past have said they are not interested in membership and denounced the OAS, which receives about 60 percent of its funding from the United States, as a tool of American domination.

“We would very much like to receive more visitors,” William Miller, the vice president of the House of the Hebrew Community in Cuba, one of the nine Jewish congregations in the island, told JTA. “Most Cuban Jews rarely travel abroad; the foreign Jewish visitors nourish our souls.”

 
 

Argentine journalist lives in fear

LocalPublished: 18 October 2006
BUENOS AIRES – An Argentine Jewish journalist who criticized local elected officials was attacked and now lives under police protection. Carlos Furman, 33, who lives in Santa Elena, came under attack after making anti-government comments on a local radio station. Furman criticized the city's mayor, Domingo Daniel Rossi.

 
 
 
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