A Black Soldier’s Story

A Black Soldier’s Story

The Narrative of Ricardo Batrell and the Cuban War of Independence

Ricardo Batrell

Edited by Mark A. Sanders

The autobiographical account of an Afro-Cuban soldier who fought in the Cuban War of Independence—available in English for the first time

288 Pages, 6 x 9 in

  • Paperback
  • 9780816650095
  • Published: October 11, 2010
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A Black Soldier’s Story

The Narrative of Ricardo Batrell and the Cuban War of Independence

Ricardo Batrell

Edited by Mark A. Sanders

ISBN: 9780816650095

Publication date: October 11th, 2010

288 Pages

8 x 5

"Black soldiers played a crucial—also inadequately appreciated—role in winning Latin American independence, and nowhere more so than in Cuba. Many thanks to Mark A. Sanders for giving Ricardo Batrell’s rare and remarkable testimony a vigorous, well-contextualized, and carefully-annotated voice in English." —John Charles Chasteen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill


"In an anticolonial army that was primarily black, Ricardo Batrell was one of only two black soldiers to write his own memoir of Cuba’s final War of Independence, the riveting story of his experience as a black soldier in a war that mobilized thousands of black men and that profoundly challenged racial hierarchies and assumptions. It is also a moving account of Batrell’s sense of betrayal as the promise of that movement gave way to U.S. intervention. An unusual and wonderfully rich source, available now more widely thanks to Mark Sanders’s lively and most welcome translation." —Ada Ferrer, NYU


In 1896, an illiterate, fifteen-year-old Afro-Cuban field hand joined the rebel army fighting for Cuba's independence. Though poor and uneducated, Ricardo Batrell believed in the promise of Cuba Libre, the vision of a democratic and egalitarian nation that inspired the Cuban War of Independence. After the war ended in 1898, Batrell taught himself to read and write and published a memoir of his wartime experiences, Para la Historia. Originally published in 1912-the same year in which the Cuban government massacred more than 5,000 Afro-Cubans-this work of both protest and patriotism is the only autobiographical account of the war written by an Afro-Cuban soldier.

After the war, Batrell became dismayed by the Cuban Republic's rapid retreat from the revolution's democratic ideals. Government corruption, racial discrimination, and the systematic exclusion of black veterans from public service had helped to reassert the racial hierarchy of colonial Cuba. With his memoir, Batrell hoped to remind Cubans about the participation of Afro-Cubans in the war (as much as 80 percent of the Cuban Liberation Army may have been Afro-Cuban) and to protest their subjugation in its aftermath.

Now available for the first time in English, Batrell's powerful memoir provides profound insights into the role of race in the nation's history. Deftly rendering Batrell's forceful and energetic prose into English, Mark A. Sanders also puts forth a critical introduction that contextualizes Batrell's perspective within Cuba's colonial history and its racial politics.

Mark A. Sanders is associate professor of African-American studies and English at Emory University.  His books include Afro-Modernist Aesthetics and the Poetry of Sterling A. Brown.

Contents
Ricardo Batrell and the Cuban Racial Narrative: An Introduction to A Black Soldier's Story
Mark A. Sanders
A Note on Translation and Editing
A Black Soldier's Story: The Narrative of Ricardo Batrell and the Cuban War of Independence
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Epilogue
Looking for Ricardo Batrell in Havana: An Appendix Essay
Acknowledgments
Translator's Notes
Works Cited
Index