Dubai Telegraph - 'La bolita,' Cuban lottery offering hope in tough times

EUR -
AED 4.201855
AFN 82.066555
ALL 98.326526
AMD 446.304273
ANG 2.061798
AOA 1043.317386
ARS 1261.807954
AUD 1.792326
AWG 2.059179
AZN 1.947808
BAM 1.947413
BBD 2.309653
BDT 138.99139
BGN 1.955421
BHD 0.431131
BIF 3401.450587
BMD 1.143988
BND 1.495879
BOB 7.904542
BRL 6.560776
BSD 1.143973
BTN 97.396571
BWP 15.62783
BYN 3.74059
BYR 22422.165913
BZD 2.297804
CAD 1.580831
CDF 3288.965864
CHF 0.935336
CLF 0.0284
CLP 1089.831879
CNY 8.365182
CNH 8.361243
COP 4914.195176
CRC 575.123052
CUC 1.143988
CUP 30.315684
CVE 110.794607
CZK 25.072821
DJF 203.30976
DKK 7.467062
DOP 67.895442
DZD 151.211822
EGP 58.397625
ERN 17.159821
ETB 152.620886
FJD 2.580149
FKP 0.854907
GBP 0.857441
GEL 3.140205
GGP 0.854907
GHS 17.619148
GIP 0.854907
GMD 81.223031
GNF 9901.814942
GTQ 8.812048
GYD 239.973891
HKD 8.875712
HNL 29.65528
HRK 7.528814
HTG 149.62559
HUF 408.539845
IDR 19266.932453
ILS 4.232721
IMP 0.854907
INR 97.445133
IQD 1498.546042
IRR 48176.192396
ISK 144.897963
JEP 0.854907
JMD 181.309135
JOD 0.811429
JPY 161.550594
KES 148.149046
KGS 99.383944
KHR 4594.256503
KMF 491.341013
KPW 1029.658241
KRW 1632.161923
KWD 0.349945
KYD 0.953245
KZT 593.264919
LAK 24710.141797
LBP 102444.130598
LKR 343.062494
LRD 228.168593
LSL 21.370279
LTL 3.377899
LVL 0.691987
LYD 6.217558
MAD 10.543989
MDL 19.5669
MGA 5085.785275
MKD 61.555611
MMK 2401.85185
MNT 4049.635083
MOP 9.139737
MRU 45.321807
MUR 50.919088
MVR 17.618418
MWK 1983.574454
MXN 22.407958
MYR 5.023822
MZN 73.106511
NAD 21.323663
NGN 1838.353785
NIO 42.098689
NOK 11.878171
NPR 155.84381
NZD 1.911507
OMR 0.440463
PAB 1.143804
PEN 4.239641
PGK 4.732617
PHP 64.611307
PKR 321.28918
PLN 4.286547
PYG 9157.560096
QAR 4.17004
RON 4.977039
RSD 116.737234
RUB 93.265219
RWF 1648.101932
SAR 4.291298
SBD 9.525719
SCR 16.611721
SDG 686.965409
SEK 10.915128
SGD 1.499316
SHP 0.898995
SLE 26.054339
SLL 23988.83898
SOS 653.784273
SRD 42.166217
STD 23678.243072
SVC 10.008894
SYP 14874.076575
SZL 21.307234
THB 38.255529
TJS 12.182831
TMT 4.003958
TND 3.387112
TOP 2.679332
TRY 43.763251
TTD 7.769538
TWD 37.212215
TZS 3071.608521
UAH 47.572116
UGX 4186.967512
USD 1.143988
UYU 48.301972
UZS 14767.399564
VES 92.501307
VND 29639.586563
VUV 137.713219
WST 3.188644
XAF 653.109923
XAG 0.034754
XAU 0.000337
XCD 3.091685
XDR 0.812185
XOF 653.14403
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.562755
ZAR 21.272001
ZMK 10297.266771
ZMW 32.57201
ZWL 368.363688
  • RBGPF

    0.1400

    63.59

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.1610

    21.871

    +0.74%

  • RYCEF

    0.2900

    9.58

    +3.03%

  • AZN

    0.9300

    67.83

    +1.37%

  • VOD

    0.3350

    9.565

    +3.5%

  • RIO

    1.1900

    59.66

    +1.99%

  • NGG

    1.8400

    74.74

    +2.46%

  • SCS

    0.1800

    9.6

    +1.88%

  • GSK

    0.2550

    36.705

    +0.69%

  • RELX

    1.0300

    53.1

    +1.94%

  • CMSD

    0.1500

    21.97

    +0.68%

  • BCC

    1.8400

    92.64

    +1.99%

  • BTI

    0.2250

    42.775

    +0.53%

  • JRI

    0.3160

    12.446

    +2.54%

  • BCE

    -0.1450

    22.235

    -0.65%

  • BP

    0.8350

    28.915

    +2.89%

'La bolita,' Cuban lottery offering hope in tough times
'La bolita,' Cuban lottery offering hope in tough times / Photo: ADALBERTO ROQUE - AFP

'La bolita,' Cuban lottery offering hope in tough times

Every day, as he has done for 20 years, Carlos makes the rounds collecting bets in central Havana for "la bolita" -- a clandestine national lottery that provides a sliver of hope for Cubans struggling to make ends meet.

Text size:

Betting has been illegal on the communist island for the past 66 years, but "la bolita" has persisted, and even grown, as Cubans see few other ways out of economic misery.

"People are betting more than ever," said Carlos, who like others interviewed by AFP withheld his real name for fear of getting into trouble.

Carlos, in his 40s, is a "pointer" -- the human interface for Cubans who place bets that start at just a few pesos they hope to multiply with the intervention of Lady Luck.

There are also "collectors" and "bankers" who handle daily bets amounting to millions of Cuban pesos (tens of thousands of dollars) nationally and disburse the winnings neighborhood by neighborhood in a system with no oversight and based entirely on trust.

Carlos points to bets rising in lockstep with a growing hopelessness as Cuba battles its worst economic crisis in 30 years, with shortages of food and medicines, skyrocketing inflation, and daily power outages.

"When you know that your salary isn't enough to make it to the end of the month, the only option left is to bet on luck," he told AFP.

The average salary in Cuba hovers around $42 per month.

As there is no official draw, "la bolita" is decided by twice-daily lottery results from Florida, Georgia or New York.

To find out if they won, Cubans follow the lotteries on the internet, via mobile apps, on Facebook, WhatsApp or on X groups.

- 'Luck can change your life' -

The arrival of mobile internet in Cuba in 2018 injected new life into the lottery that has been played here since the 19th century -- an adaptation of gambling games introduced by Chinese and Italian immigrants.

It is played with numbers from 1 to 100, each with an association such as a horse for 1 or a butterfly for 2.

Players often rely on dreams or experiences to choose their numbers and in the time of Fidel Castro, anyone lucky enough to set eyes on the revolutionary leader -- nicknamed "The Horse" -- would elect the number 1 as part of their grid.

Islander Rogelio, 47, told AFP he won the equivalent of $2,250 in two weeks recently -- a sum equivalent to 61 times his monthly salary as a civil servant.

"Good luck can change your life," he said.

But Ruben, 32, said he had not won anything in a while.

"People no longer say good morning. They ask you which numbers came out," he said.

Carlos concedes there is a problem of people becoming deeply indebted because of "la bolita."

He himself makes a living from a 10 percent cut on each day's takings, but is forced to ply his trade in obscurity.

Castro banned gambling as soon as he took power in 1959, and the country's penal code prescribes a penalty of three years in prison and a fine of 300,000 pesos (about $2,500) for anyone who "performs activities as a banker, collector ... or promoter of illicit games."

It was not always like this.

In the 1940s and 1950s, gambling had its golden age in Cuba, when Havana, with its casinos, betting houses, and game rooms linked to the American mafia, became the most important gaming center in the Caribbean.

Castro's revolution ended the dream of gangsters Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano, who had enjoyed close ties with dictator Fulgencio Batista, of building a chain of hotel-casinos on Havana's Malecon waterfront, American journalist TAJ English wrote in his 2007 bestseller "Havana Nocturne."

Las Vegas took over instead, and became one of the largest gaming centers in the world.

I.Mansoor--DT