Lundy,
remembrance and oblivion
By Carlos Alberto
Montaner*
In his memoirs, President Clinton
mentioned one of his professors at Georgetown University with a
touch of admiration. It was writer Luis Aguilar León. The irony is
that Aguilar made a strong impression on the student, but the impact
was not reciprocal. Lundy,
as we his friends called him, did not exactly remember when that
rosy-cheeked and willowy young man attended his European history
classes, a collegian so alike the other young men who listened to
his brilliant dissertations, forever sprinkled with humor and juicy
anecdotes. Nor was it strange that
Lundy would dazzle his
interlocutors. It happened when he delivered lectures, when he
chatted in small groups, or when he was interviewed on radio or
television. Quite simply, the angel of communication had touched
him.
It is sad that
Lundy did not live to
see the end of this nigh-infinite Cuban tragedy. Because he knew
Fidel Castro back in elementary school and later went to high school
and university with him, he never held out much hope for the
revolution. The revolution was Fidel, and Fidel was a detestable
bully. At the time, Lundy
knew that Batista was a disgrace for Cuba, but he never doubted
that Fidel was a gangster who would irresponsibly destroy the
country, the consequence of the lethal sum of a bloodthirsty
temperament, ocean-deep ignorance, and a spellbound society. So, in
the early days, while he could, he denounced the way the
dictatorship was being forged and even took arms to combat it,
despite the deep repugnance violence caused in him. Finally, after
all was lost, he again followed the academic road -- he had been a
university professor in Cuba -- and began his long and
intellectually fruitful exile.
Lundy has died in Miami at the age of 82. It was the
worst of news, but 82 is a reasonable age. The way in which he met
his end was not, however. Alzheimer's disease struck him with the
methodical cruelty that form of senile dementia attacks its victims.
First, it erases words and whole sentences. Later, it trips the
tongue and muddles the thoughts. Later yet, in something like
successive waves, it makes faces, people and events disappear. The
past -- which is the only life we really carry inside -- vanishes.
The disease steals it and leaves us vulnerable in a world that
suddenly becomes foreign to us. It makes it disappear, like the evil
magicians do with the defenseless princes in the more harrowing
children's tales.
I really cannot think of a worse
punishment for Lundy,
a person blessed with a luminous intelligence and an invincible
sense of humor, cleverly buttressed by his contagious laughter and
his roguish glance. Ronald Reagan, who suffered from that disease
and who also poked fun at almost everything, had the courage to make
jokes about it. “It's not so bad,” he would say, consoling himself.
“Every day you meet someone new.” And so it is. A moment comes -- a
terrible moment for those who survive and love the patient -- when
everyone is new people, including Vera Mestre, that extraordinary
and beautiful woman who accompanied
Lundy for half a century
until she closed his eyes with her final kiss. There are no longer
any children or friends, because the memory is gone and the brain,
perplexed, cannot even accumulate new experiences and plunges the
person into a devitalized indifference. There is no life “back
when.” Nor is there a tomorrow. One's existence becomes a dense,
fleeting and slippery now.
In addition to his essays, lectures
and longer reflections, Lundy
deserves credit for two of the most disseminated and
successful articles in the history of Cuban journalism: “The time
for unanimity” (1960), the last critical column published in Cuba
against the dictatorship, on the eve of the confiscation of
Prensa Libre, the last
independent newspaper left in the country, in which
Lundy warned against the
horrors of totalitarianism, and “The prophet speaks about Cubans”
(1986), an ironic article about the paradoxical idiosyncrasy of his
compatriots, written in the style of Lebanese writer Khalil Gibran
but in a jocular tone that sweetens the criticism without reducing
its underlying severity.
Two years before his death, when
Lundy had lost many of
his faculties but still retained his charm, he asked me to send him
off with an article like this one, after he died. I agreed to write
it, but, to cheer him up, I begged him to join forces with me and
write Castro's obituary together. (In the end, these long political
duels are reduced to who dies first, because we are all exhausted.)
Lamentably, he declined.
In
My Life, Clinton says
that when he talked with his Cuban professor about his vocation, at
the time hazy and multiple, as happens to intelligent youths,
Lundy told him that
choosing a career was like choosing a wife from 10 beautiful brides.
You're always left with the painful memory of those you never
married. Lundy was a
good professor, the former president wrote, but the bride he truly
loved was Cuba, and he had lost her forever. He died with that
sorrow in his heart.
[©FIRMAS
PRESS]
_______________________
Coda. A few days after
Lundy's death, another
intellectual of great stature passed away: his schoolmate Gastón
Fernández de la Torriente, professor emeritus at the University of
Arkansas. In October 2006, Leonardo Fernández Marcané, former
professor at New York University and a regular contributor to
Diario las Américas,
also died. Like Lundy,
the two were part of that first batch of intellectuals who came into
exile in the 1960s, made a name for themselves in U.S. universities
and left behind a mountain of valuable writings. Both of them were
my friends. Both of them deserve an homage from Cuba, once the
country is free.