He says that a new generation of black Cubans are looking at politics in another way.
It began with the black Cubans who had moved to the cities from rural areas.
Some black Cubans lived in separate communities and a few even funded their own educational institutions.
The building of this separate institution formalized the previously perceived divide between black and white Cubans.
However, black Cubans were developing their baseball skills playing for semi-professional and sugarmill teams.
The death of General Estenoz brought an end to the uprising, which killed 3,000 black Cubans.
You have a new generation of black Cubans who are looking at politics in another way.
This is not a place for tourists, but mostly for young, black Cubans.
Not only does racism persist, he lamented, but black Cubans lack the racial identity to do anything about it.
Once in South Florida, both white and black Cubans encountered prejudice.