Director: Jihan El Tahri’
Also known as “Cuba, an African Odyssey”
This documentary offers an excellent account of Cuban involvement in Africa. The documentary accounts for a long period in this “Chapter of Cold War history” (thus is too much to sum up in one post here). The documentary is in two parts and covers the time from when Che first went to Africa to help with the conflict in the Congo all the way until the fall of Apartheid.
The documentary also does an excellent job at contextualizing Cuba’s involvement as an anti-imperialist endeavor. It is very sympathetic and honest about the fact that Cuba was instrumental in ending colonialism in Africa (especially via Cuba’s invovlement in Angola) . It’s hard to explore this topic and not come to the conclusion that Cuba’s involvement in Africa was anything but liberating to the people of Africa.
The most interesting thing about the documentary is its account for the relationship between the USSR and Cuba in the context of involvement in Africa. The documentary portrays the USSR as not really wanting to get too involved in Africa for various diplomatic reasons, yet Cuba was the driving force here. Cuba was acting independently and even trying to use its relationship with the USSR to help liberate Africa from colonialism by playing cold war politics very intelligently. This certainly dispells the myth of “all allies of the USSR just took dictates from Moscow” as Cuba, in this case, was the real driving force.
I highly recommend this documentary to those interested in Cuba and anti-imperialist struggles in general.
Further Reading:
Africans call for BBC to screen “Cuba! Africa! Revolution!”
(Edit: the original publishing of this I was under the impression that this was a BBC documentary, which it is not. I have edited the post to reflect this)