of Soviet past in Cuba's present.http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/cuba/100510/soviet-russia"She’d only been in Cuba a few days, but for Maria Malysheva, the memories came flooding back at the sight of Cuban schoolchildren, all dressed in the neat uniforms that identify them as "pioneros" — communist pioneers. “I was a pioneer leader when I was a little girl growing up in the Soviet Union,” said Malysheva, now the general manager of a Russian travel website, sounding wistful. “The children were playing and laughing. They seemed so happy.”
"...with expanding direct-flight service to Havana from Moscow and St. Petersburg, the number of Russian tourists is projected to climb from 30,000 to 45,000 in 2010. That’s a small share of the roughly 2.5 million tourists Cuba receives each year — the majority from Europe and Canada — and the 12-hour flight from Moscow is likely to remain an obstacle to mass tourism. But Russians visitors in town last week said Cuba offers more than sun and sand to their sentimental countrymen. It’s a place to experience a part of their own history — one that they’re still grappling with."
Just as U.S. visitors are stirred by the sight of Cuba’s old American automobiles and Eisenhower-era hotels, Russians find elements of their own past in Cuba’s present, even if the memories aren’t all good ones. “Cubans still use ration cards, like they did in the Soviet Union after World War II, so that’s a bit negative” said Anna Martynova, a tourism official with a Soviet-sounding federal agency called the Ministry of Sport, Tourism and Youth Policy of the Russian Federation. “There aren’t so many Russians who are nostalgic for the socialist stuff,” she continued. “They want to get a glimpse of times gone past. They want to feel something inside, something bittersweet.”
For nearly three decades, the Soviet Union propped up Cuba’s socialist system with generous oil subsidies, food imports, manufactured goods and — for a short time — nuclear missiles. “The Soviet Union was a closed country, a very closed country,” he said. “The Russian people love to travel. And now Russian people have some money, so it is like there are no borders.” Among Cubans, the sense of nostalgia for the Soviet era isn’t universally shared. Russians were sometimes disparagingly referred to as “bolos” (bowling pins), for their pale skin and sometimes-spherical appearance. But they are also remembered for their generosity.