‘The Sea Rejuvenates You’: Cuban Seniors Defy Aging By Diving In

Fernando Paneque, 84, is a regular at Havana’s Juventud Acumulada (Forever Young) swimming club (YAMIL LAGE)

By Jordane BERTRAND – Barron’s

June 03, 2025

It’s never too late to make a splash, as Orestes Quintana, one of the doyens of the Juventud Acumulada (Forever Young) swimming club in Cuba’s capital Havana discovered.

The 87-year-old former revolutionary, who helped Fidel Castro fight his way to victory over a dictatorship in 1959, took up swimming relatively late in life, in his sixties.

Before that, “I knew how to float, I used to bob about in the water like everyone else but I didn’t know the different strokes,” the silver-haired ex-soldier said.

Cuban seniors take the plunge to fight the effects of ageing with Havana's Juventud Acumulada (Forever Young) club

Cuban seniors take the plunge to fight the effects of ageing with Havana’s Juventud Acumulada (Forever Young) club Photo: YAMIL LAGE

Now, he spends a full two hours a day cleaving through the aquamarine waters of the Caribbean and has a bunch of amateur swimming titles to his name.

Advertisement – Scroll to Continue

“I have almost no challengers. In my age category, very few people know how to swim,” he confided with a smile.

Lazaro Diaz, 75, was also a pensioner when he learned to swim as a panacea for a weak heart and recurring back pain.

“I was starting to feel the effects of aging,” said Diaz, who undertakes a six-kilometer (3.7-mile) round trip from home every day to get in his vivifying 400-meter (1,300-foot) swim.

Advertisement – Scroll to Continue

“In the water I don’t feel (any pain),” he added.

Juventud Acumulada operates out of one of a string of leisure centers built for the Cuban elite along the coast west of Havana between the 1930s and 1950s.

A group of Cubans in their seventies and eighties keep fit by swimming every day in the Caribbean

A group of Cubans in their seventies and eighties keep fit by swimming every day in the Caribbean Photo: YAMIL LAGE

The centers were later nationalized by Castro’s communist government and transformed into “workers’ social circles” or CSOs.

The glamor of the Otto Parellada CSO — named after a young rebel killed fighting the Fulgencio Batista dictatorship — has long since been eroded by the elements and successive economic crises.

The pale green paint on the club house is peeling.

And the ladder that once led from the pier to the water was swept away by a hurricane, meaning swimmers now have to negotiate a slippery sea wall.

Photo: YAMIL LAGE

But the bronzed elder statesmen and -women of swimming remain undaunted.

This entry was posted in Cultural. Bookmark the permalink.