Travel & Learn: Cuba in Changing Times

A People-to-People Educational Program | July 14-22, 2016

Join KFLA, in partnership with trip leader Evelyn Hu-DeHart (KNFP-05), for an experiential and educational journey to Cuba. Over nine days, you will experience many of Cuba’s most beautiful and historical sites. People-to-people exchanges with local experts and leaders will give you first-hand insight into key topics, including: health, food & agriculture, history, education, race, economics and politics.

Fellows are welcome to bring a guest who is accustomed to the rigor of this style of experiential travel. Space is limited to 25 travelers.

Trip Highlights

  • 9 Days & 8 Nights
  • In-depth intellectual exchanges with local leaders
  • Tours, dialogues, and exchanges conducted in English
  • Includes all meals, lodging in 5-star hotels, and transportation in Cuba
  • Spend one night at an all-inclusive beachfront hotel
  • VIP reception, expedited immigration and customs at Havana Airport
  • Our Licensed Travel Services partner arranges your travel documentation and insurance policies

 

New book published by Arch Street Press in early-Spring 2018 with diverse chefs, nutritionists and food activists, all involved in the Beloved Community.

New Book Starts Conversation about Food Equity

“Our goal is to create a beloved community and this will require a qualitative change in our souls as well as a quantitative change in our lives.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

How can we emphasize the positive impact of family meals on physical and emotional health in our under-served communities? What about the negative consequences of not knowing where or how food is produced? Is there a way to provide practical details of mindfulness training to these communities at the same time?

A new book, Mindful Eating for the Beloved Community, wants to address these questions when it is published by Arch Street Press in early-spring 2018

A diverse group of chefs, nutritionists and food activists, all involved in the Beloved Community, contributed to the book and its pragmatic strategies, according to Kellogg Fellow David Castro (KNFP-13), founder of Arch Street Press.

“Mindful Eating is focused on the theme of food justice,” explains David. “This collection of essays considers questions, such as what happens to food in low-income neighborhoods? How is diet a reflection of inequality? What areas are food deserts? How have major corporations created a fast-food economy that is destructive to health?”

The book also looks at the way food has been disconnected from the family and community. “For a lot of our indigenous communities and communities of color, there are many traditions that are actually much healthier,” he says. “How can these communities return to these food traditions? The book urges mindfulness, because we want people to stop, slow down and remember these connections to family, faith and community. If we can achieve that, we will quickly take the food conversation to a different place, with different outcomes.”

Partnership Leads to Movement

The idea for Mindful Eating dates back to conversations between David and another Kellogg Fellow Alex Askew, a recent alumni of the WKKF Community Leadership Network, the latest group of Fellows to join the Kellogg Fellows Leadership Alliance.

AlexAskew Profile

“Alex is an award-winning chef, who founded BCA Global, Black Chefs Alliance,” explains David. “He has worked for decades to bring communities of color to the culinary arts, because the African-American and Latino communities are under-represented in those sectors. We started to talk about mindful eating and systems thinking, especially about nutrition in under-served communities of color. Mindful Eating was the result of those early talks.” At the end of the day, Mindful Eating is really about empowerment and social change work for the Beloved Community, according to Alex.

“We wanted to create something that could have a sizeable impact,” says Alex. “It’s up to individuals, families and communities to figure out how to help themselves. But we wanted to help show them ways towards that empowerment. I think that this book could be a change-maker in terms of empowering communities around health equity.”

So, how did Alex select the other contributors for the book? “I have a large rolodex of people, and I know a lot of people,” he admits. “But the three main criteria were that everyone should have a clear idea of food equity in the community, some understanding of racial equity and healing, and finally that everyone would like each other, even if I wasn’t in the room.”

Alex spoke with 30 people to decide on 11 contributors. “Half of the contributors are current or past Kellogg Fellows,” he says. “All of the contributors are social change agents with a spiritual side.”

Why was this synergistic approach so important? David says it comes out of the Kellogg Fellowship.

“Kellogg Fellows always try to focus on who is in the room,” explains David. “Do we really have the leaders of this community here? Do the voices at the table really represent the community stakeholders? That’s the spirit that we applied to this book. It’s not that we have all the answers here, but it’s more that we want to bring everyone together in the room to discuss these concerns.

Alex agrees. “Mindful Eating is a conversation-starter, not a conversation-ender,” he says. “We want to engage the community in a conversation. We want the community to collaborate together on this important issue, and we are excited by the potential results.”

What’s Next?

The team is working on a book launch on Martin Luther King’s Day in Atlanta in 2018. Also in spring 2018, they are launching an initiative in Michigan around the beloved community. With the Washington D.C. public school system, they are launching a pilot program for engaging teachers, parents and students. This model system can then be benchmarked, tested and replicated in other cities.

Would you like to support this effort and host an event? Contact Alex at Alex@bcaglobal.org.

Contributors to Mindful Eating

Alex Askew (CLN-01), Founder, BCA Global, Black Chefs Alliance; WKKF Community Leadership Network

Anzia Bennett (CLN-01), Principal of AMB Community Consulting; WKKF Community Leadership Network

Chris Block (KNLP-16), CEO of American Leadership Forum Silicon Valley; W.K. Kellogg Foundation Fellow

Jodi Brockington, “Judgement free” fitness and wellness trainer for busy New York City executives

Michael S. Easterling, Chairs academics committee of Farm School NYC, a two-year certificate program in urban agriculture funded by USDA New Farmer / New Rancher grant

Kevin Fong (KNFP-14), Nationally recognized and respected facilitator, trainer and speaker in leadership, executive development and organizational systems; W.K. Kellogg Foundation fellow

Adam Joseph, Culinary instructor at Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia

Njathi Kabui, Organic chef based in Durham, North Carolina, born in Kenya, where his family has been involved in food production for generations

Brealynn Lee, Le Cordon Bleu-trained executive culinary chef and executive pastry chef specializing in chocolate

Claude E. Nunn III, President of Nunn Better Nutrition and has been a certified executive chef/working chef for 45 years throughout the United States and internationally

Jonathan Rinehart Sr. (CLN-01), Case manager for Behavioral Health Department of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi Tribe, WKKF Community Leadership Network

Victor A. Ruiz (CLN-01), Executive director of Esperanza, Inc., working to improve academic achievements of Hispanics in Greater Cleveland, WKKF Community Leadership Network

Cost

$3425
Per Person, Double Occupancy

+$600-700
Miami-Havana Airfare, Billed When Ticket Issued
Tickets for charter flights to Havana are available ~45 days prior to travel. You will be contacted at this time with the exact price for your ticket purchase.

Payment Plan:
Due at Registration: $856 (25% deposit)
Due by April 1, 2016: $856 (second installment)
Due by May 1, 2016: $1713 (final installment)

 

Single Room Upgrade:
$645
per single room for the entire trip

 

 

 



The 2016 Cuba Travel & Learn is sold out!

We are currently creating another Cuba Travel & Learn in January 2017 (TBA). This trip will focus on the past and present of the Afro-Cuban diaspora. Click here to be notified when the trip is announced.

Letter of Invitation

Dear Fellows:

I am delighted to be asked by Martha Lee to take a group of Kellogg Fellows to visit Cuba next summer, July 2016. I have been going to Cuba since the late eighties—I’d like to say “before the Soviets, during the Soviets, after the Soviets”—and I just returned from spending 8 months in Havana directing an American study abroad program. Now, with the Chinese poised to invest heavily in Cuba, and the United States finally acknowledged that the long embargo had failed to isolate Cuba from the world, Cuba has reached another moment of transition. An ailing Fidel has stepped aside in favor of his younger brother Raúl, who is making plans for the transition of power to the next generation. This is a good time to visit Cuba and to witness, hear and feel some of the changes that the country and the Cuban people are experiencing.

We will do some sightseeing of course—from the magnificent colonial Old Havana—jewel of the Caribbean—to an evening in Varadero, home to some of Cuba’s most legendary beaches and the island’s tourist economy. In between, we will visit Santa Clara, at the heart of the sugar economy and the Cuban revolution as well as San Juan de los Remedios, one of the oldest towns in Cuba. In Havana, we will have dialogue about Health, Education, History and Politics with doctors, educators, journalists and more. We will be introduced to Cuban culture and visit an ecological site to learn about environmental issues. We will also visit historic sugar plantations and a traditional family-operated farm to discuss changes in agriculture and Cuba’s economy.

Of course, amidst our in-depth intellectual exchanges with local leaders, we will eat in some interesting places and spend a little time rejuvenating on Cuba’s beautiful beaches. And we won’t forget to pick up some Cuban rum and cigars!

Evelyn Hu-DeHart
KNFP-05

 

 

Details

LEGAL TRAVEL TO CUBA

This is a legal People-to-People Educational Program arranged by GoLatin Travel, a licensed Travel Service Provider, and customized for Kellogg Fellows Leadership Alliance. The Itinerary, presented in brief above, constitutes a full-time program of People to People activities undertaken in Cuba pursuant to the “People to People” general license of the United States Department of Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control.

ARRIVING IN MIAMI

  • Our departure from Miami to Havana, Cuba will be on the earliest available charter flight. Due to the special nature of the flight, you must be at the Miami Airport four hours in advance (about 5 AM) on Thursday, July 14.
  • If you wish to arrive in Miami the night before (Wednesday, July 13), KFLA is negotiating a group rate at an Airport hotel (estimated: $125/night). This option is also available following your return flight from Havana.

FLYING FROM MIAMI TO HAVANA

  • We will be flying with a US-licensed charter company on a flight chartered from a major airline carrier. Rest assured your charter flight adheres to all FAA regulations and will most likely be a Boeing 767 or similar aircraft.
  • Licenced charter companies release tickets for sale approximately 45 days in advance of travel. You will be contacted at this time with the exact price for your ticket purchase and to confirm your reservation.
  • Your round trip travel cost from Miami to Havana will be approximately $600-700 per person (including air fare, air taxes, and Cuba visa), billed when the ticket is issued.
  • Upon arrival in Havana, you will receive a VIP reception service and be escorted through expedited immigration and customs lines.

INCLUDED IN PACKAGE PRICE

  • All gratuities for guides, drivers, restaurants, and people-to-people sponsors
  • US and Cuban travel insurance policies
  • All meals in Cuba
  • English speaking Cuban guides
  • All transportation in A/C bus
  • Lodging in Standard Rooms (All Hotels are 5-Star, except Santa Clara, which is 3-Star)
  • VIP reception and expedited entry at Havana Airport upon arrival
  • 2 bottles of water (500mL) daily while in Cuba
  • Documentation to travel legally to Cuba for Americans

NOT INCLUDED IN PACKAGE PRICE

  • Airfare from your home to Miami, Florida
  • Charter Airfaire MIA/HAV/MIA. You will be billed separately for the ticket when it is issued. ($600-700 per person including air fare, air taxes, and Cuba visa)
  • Baggage fees of $20 per bag are additional, as well as overweight fees of $2/lb (44 lbs are exempt but include the weight of all hand carry bags and personal items)
  • Hotel night in Miami prior to the flight to Havana or after the return, if desired
  • Daily tips for hotel housekeepers; Additional tips at your discretion for outstanding service
  • Alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages throughout the trip unless specified by your guide
  • Personal incidentals (including transportation and admission/entertainment expenses during your free time)

Itinerary Overview


 

Pre-trip Briefing | 7PM | Wednesday July 13

Please plan to arrive in time our pre-trip briefing, 7PM at Miami Airport Marriott • We will review trip details and logistics.

If you would like to stay at the Miami Airport Marriott on Wednesday night, KFLA can arrange your reservation at a group rate of $99, payable upon check-in. Complimentary shuttle available.
 

Day 1 | Thursday July 14

Early charter flight from Miami to Havana • Complimentary transfer from Miami Airport Marriott to Miami International Airport at 8:00AM for 12:00PM charter flight landing in Havana at 1:00PM.

Walking tour of Old Havana with architecture professor Dr. Orestes del Castillo • Early dinner at local restaurants • Night visit to La Cabaña • Overnight in Havana
 

Day 2 | Friday July 15

Dialogue on health with Dr. Enrique Balderrain of the Instituto de Medicina and Prof. of Salud Publica • Visit to neighborhood clinic • Guided tour of Museo de la Revolucion • Free night
 

Day 3 | Saturday July 16

Dialogue with Cuban architecture specialist Ailin Robaina from the Office of the Historian • Visit to National Museum of Fine Arts of Havana with art specialist • Performance of Afro-Cuban music and dialogue on race in Cuba • Overnight in Havana • Overnight in Havana
 

Day 4 | Sunday July 17

Day tour of the Viñales Valley, a UNESCO World Heritage Site home to a multi-ethnic agricultural society • Visit to a family-owned farm • Community lunch on the farm • Overnight in Havana
 

Day 5 | Monday July 18

Tour of Zapata Swamp  • Lunch at private paladar restaurant • Visit to the Bay of Pigs museum for discussion with historical experts about the importance of this event in the bilateral relationship between Cuba and the USA • Overnight in Santa Clara
 

Day 6 | Tuesday July 19

Visit to the Che Guevara Mausoleum & Museum • Tour Sugar Museum and dialogue on modern Cuban agriculture • Travel to San Juan de los Remedios via a historic Sugar Train route • Walking tour and dialogue on the impact of sugar production with local historian • Overnight at an all-inclusive beachfront hotel in Varadero
 

Day 7 | Wednesday July 20

Free morning and lunch at hotel • Tour of Finca Vigía, Ernest Hemingway’s home/museum in Cuba • Dinner at seaside restaurant • Overnight in Havana
 

Day 8 | Thursday July 21

Dialogue about education in Cuba with Profs. Marta Nunez and Susana Haug at Havana University's Arts & Science's Library with tour to follow • Visit to the Angela Landa Primary School in Old Havana • Visit to the Partagas Cigar Factory to learn about the Habanos cigar-making process • Time to shop for Cuban art and goods at San Jose Arts Market • Farewell dinner • Overnight in Havana
 

Day 9 | Friday July 22

Discussion, exchange and lunch with writer and specialist on Cuban-US relations,  Mark Frank • Transfer to Airport for evening flight to Miami