Hirochi Robaina and Sila Blume

The culture I was born into was the Latino-Caribbean. Documents show that I reached this planet by way of Spanish Harlem to a Cuban father and a Puerto Rican mother. In my blood I carry in part the unity of a Chinese slave and his African slave wife. During my quarter of a century in Europe I deeply assimilated the German language. Still, with all of these genetic and cultural influences, I have always felt Cuban.

A Cuban great-grandmother smoked five cigars daily and lived to count 105 years. However, nobody in my immediate family smokes. Only I have been going deeper and deeper in the realms of gustatory pleasures, especially with coffee, alcohol and fine-tobacco.

May be this explains my deep joy meeting a man who is part of a long tradition in the production of cigars in Cuba. His handshake and hug made me wish once more that I could step off an airplane and kiss Cuban soil.

At the presentation of Hirochi Robaina’s HR Cigars / Nat Sherman, New York, NY / Leica D-Lux 4
At the presentation of Hirochi Robaina’s HR Cigars / Nat Sherman, New York, NY / Leica D-Lux 4
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