In a recent Havana Times diary entry, Cuban writer Fabiana del Valle argues that Cubans suffer from a 'beggar syndrome' ingrained by decades of socialist policies, calling for self-reliance. She details personal hardships and challenges dependence on foreign aid and remittances.
Fabiana del Valle, a 43-year-old Cuban raising her anemic teenage daughter amid hardship, published 'The Cuban Beggar Syndrome' on Havana Times on March 17, 2026. She explains how the socialist system has conditioned Cubans to rely on others for essentials like shoes or roof repairs, embedding phrases such as 'The State has to guarantee this for me' or 'I'm waiting to see if so-and-so sends me something' from relatives abroad. Del Valle notes this mindset lingers even among sea-crossing emigrants seeking immigrant aid. Acknowledging real desperation among hungry mothers and abandoned elderly, she questions the collective victimhood portraying Cuba as perpetual supplicants to nations like Mexico, Russia, China, or the United States, NGOs, or kin. Rather than awaiting donations that merely extend suffering, she urges escaping the 'it doesn't depend on me' comfort zone to take risks and innovate: 'perhaps stopping seeing ourselves as incapable (...) and beginning to ask ourselves 'what can I do?'' She asserts dignity is not begged, freedom does not arrive on an oil tanker, and prosperity cannot be begged, but built through personal choices breaking inertia.