Where else do you  find vintage American cars running off Russian Lada engines, ration  shops juxtaposed against gleaming colonial palaces, and revolutionary  sloganeering drowned out by all-night parties?
Habaneros  (inhabitants of Habana) love their city and it’s not difficult to see  why. Amid the warm crystalline waters of the sparkling Caribbean, over  500 years of roller-coaster history have conspired to create one of  Latin America’s most electric and culturally unique societies. The  stomping ground for swashbuckling pirates, a heavily fortified slave  port for the Spanish and a lucrative gambling capital for the North  American Mafia, Habana has survived everything that has been thrown at  it and still found time to innovate. At the forefront of modern Latino  culture, Habana has spawned salsa and mambo, Havana Club rum and Cohiba  cigars, mural painting and Che Guevara iconography… And the list goes  on.
But with its  crumbling tenements and increasingly traffic-clogged streets, Habana is  no conventional beauty. Despite boasting colonial edifices to  rival Buenos Aires and a dramatic coastline to match California, the  city lacks the jaw-dropping magnificence of Paris or the spectacular  physical setting of Rio de Janeiro. Instead, a large part of Habana’s  attraction lies in the visceral and the abstract. Walk the mildewed  neighborhoods of Centro Habana or Vedado and you’ll soon pick up the  scent – here a mysterious Santería ritual, there a couple of drummers  pounding out a rumba beat. The ins and outs are often hard to define and  the contradictions endlessly confusing – perhaps this is why Habana’s  real essence is so difficult to pin down. Plenty of writers have had a  try, though; Cuban intellectual Alejo Carpentier nicknamed Habana the  ‘city of columns,’ Federico Lorca declared that he had spent the best  days of his life there and Graham Greene concluded that Habana was a  city where ‘anything was possible.’
But thorn or flower,  Habana’s mesmerizing powers will quickly lure you in. The opportunities  to lose yourself in the melee are limitless – take a guided tour around  Habana Vieja’s enchanting colonial monuments, experience the pizzazz of a  late-night cabaret show, stroll along the Malecón (Av de Maceo) as the  waves crash over the sidewalk, or admire the skillful reconstruction job  on a sleek, streamlined 1956 Cadillac.
Traditional sights  aside, Habana’s greatest attraction is its earthy authenticity. This is  no trussed-up tourist resort or cynically concocted amusement park.  There are museums here, of course, along with beautifully preserved  palaces, top-notch hotels and rather tasty restaurants. But walk a  couple of blocks north of leafy Parque Central and you’ll suddenly find  yourself on the set of a real-life Elia Kazan movie, a dusty 1950s time  warp where workingclass mothers still go shopping with their hair in  rollers and young kids play baseball in the street with sticks and  rolled-up balls of plastic.
While 50 years of  Socialism have taken their toll on Habana’s fragile social and economic  fabric, the indomitable spirit of its citizens is a constant source of  inspiration. In a society that invented camel buses, stretch Ladas and  steaks made from grapefruit skin, survival is second nature and personal  sacrifice almost a rite of passage. But how ever much you fall in love  with this flawed yet utterly seductive city, capturing it in a sentence  will always be a conundrum. ‘Habana is very much like a rose,’ said Fico  Fellove in the movie The Lost City, ‘it has petals and it has thorns…so  it depends on how you grab it. But in the end it always grabs you.’






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