{"id":48194,"date":"2022-04-13T10:00:35","date_gmt":"2022-04-13T15:00:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/?p=48194"},"modified":"2026-01-16T20:17:01","modified_gmt":"2026-01-17T02:17:01","slug":"cuba-ada-ferrer-1619-project-nikole-hannah-jones-slavery","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/cuba-ada-ferrer-1619-project-nikole-hannah-jones-slavery\/","title":{"rendered":"Cuba &#038; the US: Necessary Mirrors"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In November 1898, white men in Wilmington, North Carolina, overturned the election of Black officials to local government, sparking a riot that led to the burning of the city\u2019s Black business district and the <a href=\"https:\/\/time.com\/5861644\/1898-wilmington-massacre-essential-lesson-state-violence\/\">murder of at least 60 Black people<\/a>. At the very same time, congressmen in the United States were debating how to treat the Indigenous, Black, and <em>mestizo <\/em>citizens of their new Caribbean possessions following the Spanish American War: Cuba and Puerto Rico. In order to prove their ability to govern themselves\u2014that is, in order to placate the US government\u2014the light-skinned leaders of Cuba\u2019s independence movement pushed aside some of the island\u2019s Black citizens\u2019 ideas about racial democracy and equality.<\/p>\n<p>Thus, 1898 was like so many other moments in US and Cuban history: then, as now, it was impossible to fully understand the history of one nation without the other.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe share the same blood,\u201d Barack Obama told Cubans, when he visited Cuba in March 2016\u2014the first US president in almost 100 years to do so. \u201cWe both live in a new world, colonized by Europeans. Cuba, like the United States, was built in part by slaves brought here from Africa. Like the United States, the Cuban people can trace their heritage to both slaves and slave-owners.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The story of Obama\u2019s speech is told by Ada Ferrer in the final pages of her new book, <em>Cuba: An American History<\/em>. For Ferrer, Obama\u2019s visit to Cuba and his remarks there were a perfect example of a dynamic she describes throughout the book: Cuba and the United States hold up a mirror to one another. The history of the two countries has been intertwined. Cubans and Americans see themselves through each other\u2019s eyes.<\/p>\n<p>Looking into this mirror, Ferrer explained in a <a href=\"https:\/\/5g.wilsoncenter.org\/event\/cuba-american-history-0?1643662800\">recent webinar<\/a> about her book, allows us to see history \u201caskew.\u201d In other words, it has the effect of challenging the familiar stories Cubans and US Americans believe about their countries, enabling them to see the familiar from new angles. Obama\u2019s speech, and the mirror that Ferrer writes of, underscore the profound connection between nations that, for the past few decades, have seen themselves, and have been seen by others, as antagonists.<\/p>\n<p>To see history askew is likewise the goal of Nikole Hannah-Jones in <em>The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story<\/em>. Understanding the pivotal\u2014indeed, central\u2014role that African enslavement has played in the making of the United States necessarily transforms how we regard the treasured myths of our country\u2019s founding in 1776.<\/p>\n<p>Unlike Ferrer, Hannah-Jones doesn\u2019t explicitly use the metaphor of the mirror; still, I suspect she would like it. In her preface to <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>, she suggests that the experiences of Black people have always been a kind of mirror the United States could hold up to itself, so as to reveal a much less perfect union. Non-Black citizens of this country might not like what they saw if they were able to look at the United States through the eyes of Black Americans.<\/p>\n<p>Black people, Hannah-Jones writes, \u201care the stark reminders of some of [the United States\u2019s] most damning truths.\u201d One of these truths is that \u201ceight in ten Black people would not be in the United States were it not for the institution of slavery in a society founded on ideals of freedom.\u201d US Americans try to hide histories of slavery because it \u201cshames us.\u201d When Black people have used the rhetoric of freedom and rights that appears in the founding documents of the United States, it has been, at least in part, \u201cto reveal this nation\u2019s grave hypocrisies.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>If nations and their peoples hold up mirrors to one another, so, too, do <em>Cuba <\/em>and <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>. More to the point, <em>Cuba <\/em>offers yet another reflection of just how important <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> is; specifically, by demonstrating the centrality of slavery in the evolution of the Americas. In Cuba, too, the enslavement of Africans made possible the wealth of European empires; it fired the desires of US Americans to annex Cuba and maintain plantation slavery on the island, when they worried this institution would be abolished in their own country; and it animated independence movements against Spain in the 19th century. The afterlife of slavery is an urgent debate in Cuba today, just as it is in the United States.<\/p>\n<p>And yet, <em>Cuba <\/em>also reflects how much more <em>The 1619 Project <\/em>could have been, and should have been. This is especially true if we\u2019re to take seriously the book\u2019s central historical claim: that we should view 1619 as a new origin story for the United States\u2014an origin story that acknowledges the role slavery has played in the making of everything since that date. While Obama connected Cuba and the United States through their shared history of colonization and slavery, Hannah-Jones\u2014judging by what she writes in this book\u2014isn\u2019t concerned with such ties.<\/p>\n<p><em>Cuba<\/em> and <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> are both essential books. Even so,<em> The 1619 Project <\/em>is simultaneously sweeping and narrow. It aims to offer a fundamental retelling of US history but focuses exclusively on the introduction of African enslavement by the British empire. In doing so, it myopically pushes aside the Spanish and Indigenous slaveries that also shaped the country we\u2019re living in today. By contrast, <em>Cuba <\/em>is broad and expansive and inclusive, telling a hemisphere-wide story of colonialism, enslavement, and entangled empires, nations, and peoples\u2014the legacies of which are still with us.<\/p>\n<p>Over the course of the era of the transatlantic slave trade, as Ferrer shows, exponentially more enslaved Africans were brought to the lands that now make up Latin America than were brought to the British Colonies and the United States. These people were forced to participate in the patterns of capitalist exploitation that have since become a hallmark of the Americas; they \u201cmixed\u201d (a highly sanitized word, to be sure) with Indigenous and European populations; and they introduced linguistic, musical, and religious practices that endure today, including in the United States. The histories of Latin Americans, Latinos, and Black people\u2014and, of course, Afro-Latin Americans and Afro-Latinos identify with more than one of these labels\u2014have been intertwined in ways that one wouldn\u2019t understand from reading <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p>Ferrer\u2019s narrative history of Cuba\u2019s past 500 years is epic, authoritative, and deeply insightful. Our popular understanding of the island has been dominated by the Cuban Revolution of 1959; so, it is refreshing that\u2014chronologically speaking at least\u2014the years since that undeniably important historical event only account for some 10 percent of Ferrer\u2019s story.<\/p>\n<p>The island is much more than Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. In fact, it is impossible to understand the revolution without understanding its deep roots in Spanish colonialism and enslavement, as well as the 19th-century movements to upend those institutions by the likes of Afro-Cuban military leader Antonio Maceo or newspaper publisher, intellectual, and independence leader Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed. Cubans continue to invoke the names of both figures as guiding lights in their struggles for justice today.<\/p>\n<p>Throughout her book, Ferrer doesn\u2019t let us lose sight of how important race and slavery have been in the making of Cuba. Nor does she allow us to cast aside as inconsequential the relationship between Cuba and the United States.<br \/>\n<\/p>\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote\">\n<blockquote>\n<p>The history of African enslavement in the Americas did not begin in what would become the United States. It began with Spanish and Portuguese colonization.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<\/figure>\n<p><br \/>\nThe centrality of race and racism to the nation\u2019s history is exactly what Hannah-Jones seems to want us to understand about the United States as well. Ever since 1619, the desire, or the felt need, to safeguard slavery in the United States motivated the building of institutions, establishment of laws, and development of habits and traditions designed to achieve this goal. Slavery may have been abolished in the 1860s, but that didn\u2019t put an end to assertions of white supremacy through institutions, laws, habits, and traditions.<\/p>\n<p>Moreover, the efforts by the \u201censlaved and their descendants\u201d to combat white supremacy, Hannah-Jones writes, also \u201cplayed a central role in shaping our institutions, intellectual traditions, culture, our very democracy.\u201d This, then, is the story told by Hannah-Jones in her three essays (as well as by many of the nation\u2019s leading thinkers, scholars, journalists, and writers in the other essays, poems, and short stories assembled in <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>): the racist roots of the United States, Black-led efforts to combat the discrimination stemming from this history, and the enduring legacies of both.<\/p>\n<hr\/>\n<p class=\"nonindented\"><em>The 1619 Project<\/em> makes a critical political intervention. We need to understand how race and slavery stood at the center of our nation\u2019s history, and we need to remember that this legacy didn\u2019t end with the Civil War, Reconstruction, desegregation, or the civil rights movement. Instead, race and slavery have continuously seeped into every corner of American life: economic mobility, health outcomes, white fears, police violence, mass incarceration, the infrastructure of cities, and a litany of legal injustices (despite claims\u2014today, at any rate\u2014that our laws are race neutral). This is just a partial list of the subjects <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> touches upon.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, we should knock the founding fathers off the pedestals we\u2019ve built for them. When we carve them in stone as infallible supporters of democracy, freedom, and equality, we are not telling the whole truth about them or any other human beings. But worst of all, when we lionize these figures from the past, as all of the critics of \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.theatlantic.com\/magazine\/archive\/2003\/09\/founders-chic\/302773\/\">Founders chic<\/a>\u201d have argued, we also erode our own ability to decide what is right and just in the present. Moreover, as Hannah-Jones suggests, enslaved Africans were also founders of this country\u2014as were, I would argue, native peoples, Spaniards, and many others.<\/p>\n<p>So, to hold up <em>Cuba <\/em>and <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> as mirrors to one another is not to offer the same critique of <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> as that <a href=\"chrome-extension:\/\/efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj\/viewer.html?pdfurl=https%3A%2F%2Ftrumpwhitehouse.archives.gov%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2021%2F01%2FThe-Presidents-Advisory-1776-Commission-Final-Report.pdf&amp;clen=2326589&amp;chunk=true\">articulated by the authors of <em>The 1776 Report<\/em><\/a>. Nor is it meant to rehash the arguments of the mainly older, mainly white historians whose cherished facts about the American Revolution Hannah-Jones has reframed.<\/p>\n<p>No, the questions that keep lingering for me are different. Reading <em>Cuba <\/em>and <em>The 1619 Project <\/em>together made me wonder what the latter would have been had Hannah-Jones integrated into her analysis of race and slavery in the United States the perspective offered by Ferrer of race and slavery in Cuba and throughout the Americas. What if Hannah-Jones had integrated the history of slavery in other parts of the Americas before 1619 not simply as \u201cmore information,\u201d as she writes in her preface, but as a core part of the book\u2019s argument? And what would it have cost <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> to wrestle with and incorporate histories outside of its current frame?<\/p>\n<p>To have expanded <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>\u2019s incisive expos\u00e9 from the United States to the Americas would only have strengthened the case Hannah-Jones makes. So, why wouldn\u2019t she have told this expanded story; the story that Barack Obama told in Havana in 2016, that the Americas\u2014Cuba and the United States, in particular\u2014have a shared history of race and slavery, and that these histories are linked?<\/p>\n\n    <div class=\"wp-block-group pattern related-reading has-oat-background-color has-background has-global-padding is-layout-constrained wp-block-group-is-layout-constrained\" style=\"padding-top:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40);padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40);padding-bottom:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40)\">\n\n        <div class=\"block-heading\">Related readings<\/div>\n\n        <div class=\"wp-block-columns wp-block-post gap-tight is-layout-flex wp-block-columns-is-layout-flex\">\n\n            <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\">\n                <figure class=\"wp-block-post-featured-image\">\n                  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/and-cuba-shall-lead-them\/\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1000\" height=\"500\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/04\/Venceremos-Brigade-e1554911458544-1000x500.jpg\" class=\"attachment-feature_img_crop size-feature_img_crop wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/><\/a>                <\/figure>\n            <\/div>\n\n            <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\">\n\n                <div class=\"taxonomy-category wp-block-post-terms\">\n                    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/category\/reviews\/\" rel=\"tag\">Reviews<\/a>\n                <\/div>\n\n                <h5 class=\"h6 wp-block-post-title\">\n                    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/and-cuba-shall-lead-them\/\" target=\"_self\">And Cuba Shall Lead Them<\/a>\n                <\/h5>\n\n                    <div class=\"pb-author-block\">\n                  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/andrew-klein\/\" class=\"pb-author-img-link\">\n            <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/04\/Klein-headshot-e1554828975513-300x300.jpg\" class=\"pb-author-avatar wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/>          <\/a>\n                <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/andrew-klein\/\" class=\"pb-author-name\">\n          Andrew Klein        <\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    \n            <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n  \n<p>For one, Hannah-Jones might have had to title her book \u201cThe 1492 Project\u201d instead, even if that would have engaged in the same narrative mythmaking involved in the choosing of any single moment as original. The history of African enslavement in the Americas, after all, did not begin in what would become the United States. Instead, it began with Spanish and Portuguese colonization.<\/p>\n<p>Enslaved Africans, Ferrer tells us, first arrived in Cuba during the mid-16th century. Indigenous communities were decimated by violence and disease, even as Spaniards, only after serious debate, concluded they were humans who had souls that were worthy of conversion. The decimation of Indigenous populations and the new letter of the law mandating that Indians be treated more humanely was, in part, what led Spaniards to bring enslaved Africans to the Americas.<\/p>\n<p>During the 16th and 17th centuries, the numbers of Africans in Cuba paled in comparison with what they became during the industrial boom of later centuries. Yet, however few there were, their presence instigated and embedded patterns of capitalist exploitation, racial inequality and violence, and cultural mixture and erasure\u2014and did so decades before the arrival, in 1619, of more than 20 Africans off the coast of Virginia, on a vessel named the <em>White Lion<\/em>. And they weren\u2019t only in Cuba. Enslaved Africans were also brought to Spanish territories that later became Mexico, Panama, Peru, and so on.<\/p>\n<p>Maybe, just maybe, Americans are beginning to understand, largely through the work of Indigenous scholars and activists, as well as historians of colonial Latin America, that Christopher Columbus did not \u201cdiscover\u201d \u201cAmerica.\u201d As Ferrer notes, he didn\u2019t even set foot on the land that became the United States.<\/p>\n<p>Yet many US Americans still consider Columbus\u2019s arrival in the \u201cNew World\u201d to have made possible the later settlement of the Americas by Europeans, including the British colonists who are at the center of <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>. Our entrenched understanding of Columbus as a harbinger of the United States is why many people in this country continue observing Columbus Day, instead of Indigenous Peoples Day, on October 12. He is the namesake for an early version of our national anthem, our federal district, a prestigious university, and so many other Columbias. Ferrer argues that at least part of why we see Columbus\u2019s landing in the Americas as one of the first episodes of US history has to do with our nation\u2019s imperialist ambitions from the very beginning.<\/p>\n<p>Columbus did not so much discover a new world as stumble upon a very old one. Still, it is his arrival that launched centuries of harm to Indigenous societies, through disease, forced acculturation, forced labor, pillage, rape, and murder.<\/p>\n<p>New World Africans include the Moroccan Estevanico, who accompanied Alvar Nu\u00f1ez Cabeza de Vaca on his journey across the North American continent in the 1520s and 1530s, and who set foot on the lands that became Florida, Texas, and New Mexico. The numbers of New World Africans grew, especially after the writings of the Spanish priest Bartolom\u00e9 de Las Casas, the first bishop of Chiapas, brought widespread attention to the mistreatment of Indigenous peoples.<\/p>\n<p>As captive Africans were traded within the Americas, some who spoke Spanish and Portuguese were brought to the British colonies, where they encountered English speakers. They are the ancestors of Afro-Latin Americans and Afro-Latinos living throughout the Americas today, who continue to be pushed to the margins of discourses on both Blackness and <em>Latinidad<\/em>\u2014or, Latino-ness. A couple of the essays in <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>, most notably the ones by Khalil Gibran Muhammad and Tiya Miles, address these wider histories\u2014but Hannah-Jones herself does not.<\/p>\n<p>After the colonial period, <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> continues to sharply focus on Africans brought to the United States by the British empire. But a considerably broader, pan-American perspective is offered in Ferrer\u2019s <em>Cuba<\/em>. Ferrer demonstrates how Thomas Jefferson always intended his \u201cempire for liberty\u201d to include the Caribbean isles. After the Spanish empire began to fall, he wanted to claim its former possessions \u201cpeice by peice [<em>sic<\/em>].\u201d Here, again, one can\u2019t fully understand the United States without understanding Cuba, and vice versa.<\/p>\n<p>The United States, Ferrer writes, did try to annex Cuba in the early 19th century. But it was not to extend liberty. Instead, slaveowners wanted to extend Jefferson\u2019s empire because they fretted over the future of slavery in the United States. They tried to protect the institution by moving it elsewhere. Putting slavery beyond the reach of abolitionists was their goal in Texas, the former Mexican territories, and Nicaragua as well. Some Cubans, Mexicans, and Nicaraguans supported slavery, or at least turned a blind eye to it, because they thought they might benefit financially.<\/p>\n<p>Events in the United States echoed beyond its borders in other ways as well. When the 14th Amendment was ratified, in 1868, it made Black people citizens of the United States and gave them equal protection under the law. Soon after, enslaved Africans in Puerto Rico and Cuba initiated uprisings against Spain that over time led to the abolition of slavery on those islands. As with the anti-Black violence in 1898 that affected Black leaders in newly annexed Cuba, seeing beyond the state helps us understand what happened within it.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p>To be sure, it was not incumbent upon Hannah-Jones and <em>The 1619 Project<\/em>\u2019s other contributors to include everything that Ferrer addresses in <em>Cuba<\/em>. All books have a focus, and no book can do everything.<\/p>\n<p>But shouldn\u2019t a book that asks us to embrace \u201ca new origin story\u201d for our country help as many of us as possible feel included in that story, especially in a country as diverse as ours? Shouldn\u2019t a book like that have a more rigorous and wide-ranging approach to what\u2019s included and what\u2019s left out\u2014to reconstitute the United States as a whole, rather than leaving it in atomized parts? Shouldn\u2019t that be the goal for a truly multiracial democracy?<\/p>\n<p>Mutuality and solidarity must flow in multiple directions. As the historian Frank Guridy, who teaches and writes about the connections between Afro-Cubans and African Americans and US social movements, told me, \u201cReading <em>The 1619 Project<\/em> obscures the fact that the Black freedom struggle, however substantial, is but one part of the larger struggles for freedom waged by Indigenous peoples, Asian Americans, Latinos of lighter and darker hues, and other marginalized people in this country.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Understanding the experiences of different groups in relation to one another\u2014and, in fact, how the lines between different groups could be more blurred than we often assume\u2014certainly broadens and deepens how we think of injustices across American history. But it also expands the possibilities for the fight against injustice.<\/p>\n<p>Consider the 1947 <em>M\u00e9ndez v. Westminster<\/em> Supreme Court case, a school desegregation case involving Mexican American students in California that set a precedent for <em>Brown v. Board of Education <\/em>(1954). The head lawyer of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Thurgood Marshall, filed an amicus brief in <em>M\u00e9ndez v. Westminster<\/em>; he then argued the <em>Brown v. Board<\/em> case before becoming a Supreme Court justice, in 1967.<\/p>\n<p>Or, consider the case of the Black jazz drummer Chico Hamilton, from Los Angeles, who in 1965 recorded an album called <em>El Chico<\/em>, which featured songs titled \u201cConquistadores\u201d (Conquerors) and \u201cEl Moors\u201d (the Moors, although in Spanish it would be <em>los Moros<\/em>). This album by a Black musician was influenced by Latin jazz and the Brazilian bossa nova; in turn, it went on to influence the Chicano rock star Carlos Santana, who covered it at his famous 1968 concerts at the Fillmore in San Francisco. Likewise, the Afro-Cuban musician Chano Pozo wrote songs for Dizzie Gillespie and was a percussionist in Gillespie\u2019s band. Pozo practiced the Afro-Cuban religion Santer\u00eda, which has many thousands of devotees in the United States.<\/p>\n<p>In her book\u2019s final chapter, titled \u201cJustice,\u201d Hannah-Jones writes about how the \u201cBlack nationalist\u201d Marcus Garvey supported reparations in the early 20th century. She doesn\u2019t mention, however, that one of the ships in Garvey\u2019s Black Star Line fleet, which he established so Black-led nations could trade with one another, was named the SS <em>Antonio Maceo<\/em>, after the Afro-Cuban hero who helped win Cuba\u2019s independence from Spain. A Cuban chapter of Garvey\u2019s organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association, <a href=\"http:\/\/latinamericanstudies.org\/slavery\/Caribbean%20Studies-June-2003.pdf\">referred to Maceo<\/a> as one of the greatest leaders of the Black race. There is a school in Jamaica today called Garvey Maceo High, highlighting the close association between these two leaders.<\/p>\n<p>Toward the end of <em>Cuba<\/em>, Ferrer writes about a bust of Maceo that, during the 1940s at least, was displayed at Howard University\u2014where Hannah-Jones works today. I don\u2019t know if the bust of the fierce antislavery advocate is still on display, or if it\u2019s stowed away somewhere, though I\u2019ve tried to find out. Still, it is tempting to wonder if Hannah-Jones knows about the statue and what she thinks about how someone like Maceo might fit within her narrative of US history, and American history more broadly.<\/p>\n<p class=\"nonindented\"><em>This article was commissioned by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/marlene-l-daut\/\">Marlene Daut<\/a><\/em>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Exponentially more enslaved Africans were forced to the lands that now make up Latin America rather than the United States. Where is their story?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":29,"featured_media":48207,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[2497],"tags":[1702,966,1717,56,347,14,336,58,1197,1990,204,149],"pbpartner":[],"section":[1138],"pbseries":[],"class_list":["post-48194","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-reviews","tag-america","tag-barack-obama","tag-british-empire","tag-cuba","tag-global-black-history","tag-history","tag-latin-america","tag-latino","tag-one-world","tag-scribner","tag-slavery","tag-spain","section-global-black-history"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Cuba &amp; the US: Necessary Mirrors - Public Books<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Exponentially more enslaved Africans were forced to the lands that now make up Latin America rather than the United States. 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