Adios Havana! Hola Miami!

<p>The Miami streets steamed with anxiety. Rashes of new immigrants have flooded them, a steamroller of culture and language sweeping the streets inside the traffic-clogged, square grids of Miami&rsquo;s neighborhoods.</p> <p>The scent of sweet Cafe Cubano and grilled meat sandwiches called&nbsp;<em>media noche&nbsp;</em>filled the air of a small new enclave christened Little Havana, commonly known as&nbsp;<em>Calle Ocho</em>. It was 1967.</p> <p>Catholicism broke the foothold of the Protestant and Jewish immigrants who came several decades earlier. Churches named after saints sprung up among the coconut palm-covered flat lands of a new Latin populace.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/thenewnorth/adios-havana-hola-miami-c064108ec731"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>
Tags: Adios Havana