Long before the resorts and the umbrellas existed, the north coast of Holguín, where Playa Esmeralda stretches today, was one of the great centers of indigenous population in Cuba. The region was densely inhabited by farming and fishing communities, especially Taíno, drawn by the abundance of the bay, the rivers and the fertile lands of the interior. This area is, in fact, one of the richest in aboriginal archaeological finds in the whole country.
The most extraordinary testimony is a few kilometers from the beach: the site of Chorro de Maíta, considered one of the most important indigenous cemeteries in the insular Caribbean. There, dozens of burials have been excavated that have allowed the reconstruction of how those communities lived, what they ate and how they treated their dead, in addition to finding objects that reveal contacts and exchanges. Today a site museum recreates that life and displays part of the finds.
The nearby city of Banes, known as 'the archaeological capital of Cuba', houses the famous Baní Indocuban Museum, with one of the best collections of aboriginal archaeology in the country, including the famous gold idol (a small object of guanín gold of indigenous manufacture). All this richness recalls that, beneath the placid green of Playa Esmeralda, beats a deep pre-Columbian past: the first layer of the history of a land that, centuries later, would reinvent itself as a tourist paradise.
After the Spanish conquest of Cuba in the 16th century, the eastern region, far from the great centers of colonial power concentrated in the west, lived centuries of relative tranquility and isolation. The indigenous population was drastically reduced by disease, forced labor and racial mixing, and the area was marked by an economy of cattle ranches, small crops and, later, plantations.
The north coast of Holguín, with its jagged bays —like that of Naranjo, where Esmeralda is located—, was for a long time a peaceful shoreline of fishermen, mangroves and hills, far from the main routes. Holguín province, in the heart of eastern Cuba, developed above all inland, around the city of Holguín ('the city of parks') and a rich agricultural and, in the 20th century, agro-industrial activity, tied to sugarcane and bananas.
That long stage of rural and coastal life left the Bahía de Naranjo area in a state of remarkable natural conservation: pristine beaches, intact reefs and green hills. Precisely that scenic and ecological value —a beautiful and little-touched shoreline— would be, well into the 20th century, what would attract the attention of those seeking to develop a new economic engine for Cuba: beach tourism.
The great turn in the history of Playa Esmeralda came in the last decades of the 20th century, when Cuba —especially after the economic changes of the 1990s— bet decisively on international tourism as a source of foreign currency. The north coast of Holguín, with its natural beauty and its beaches of crystalline waters, became one of the chosen hubs, with Guardalavaca as the spearhead and Esmeralda as one of its most exclusive enclaves.
Unlike the big mass developments, in Esmeralda and its surroundings a more careful model was sought, integrated into the Bahía de Naranjo Natural Park, a protected area of mangroves, islets and sheltered waters. The all-inclusive resorts were built behind the strip of vegetation, seeking to preserve the natural character of the beach. The bay added attractions like the dolphinarium and the boat rides, combining rest and nature.
Today Playa Esmeralda is one of the go-to beach destinations of eastern Cuba, valued for its green water, its protected setting and its quiet atmosphere. Its history condenses, in a few decades, the path of much of the Cuban shoreline: from indigenous coast and then rural and dormant, to a tourist paradise. The closeness of archaeological treasures like Chorro de Maíta also allows the visitor to combine the pleasure of the beach with a journey to the island's most remote past.
A few kilometers west of Playa Esmeralda, on the same north coast of Holguín, opens the bay of Bariay, pointed out by tradition and by much of Cuban historians as the place where Christopher Columbus first set foot on Cuban soil, on October 28, 1492, on his first voyage. Amazed by the landscape, the admiral is said to have written in his diary that famous phrase: 'this is the most beautiful land that human eyes ever saw'. The exact identification of the landing point has been discussed for centuries, but Bariay is the most accepted candidate and today houses a commemorative monumental park.
That landing marked the beginning of the encounter —and the clash— between the European world and the Taíno communities that inhabited the region, the same ones whose vestiges are preserved in Chorro de Maíta and Banes. In the following decades, the conquest completely disrupted that indigenous universe: epidemics, encomiendas and violence decimated the native population in barely one or two generations.
That one of the founding episodes of the history of America —the first contact on Cuban soil— occurred precisely on this stretch of coast adds an extraordinary historical dimension to a region today known above all for its beaches. The visitor who stops at Esmeralda is, without knowing it, a step from the scene where the modern history of Cuba began to be written.
If Playa Esmeralda has a history that deserves to be told, much of it is buried barely fifteen kilometers from the sand. Between 1986 and 1988, a team of Cuban archaeologists excavated on a hill near Guardalavaca the site of El Chorro de Maíta and brought to light something exceptional: the largest known aboriginal cemetery in the Antilles, with 156 individuals buried in 111 tombs. Nothing similar had been documented before in Cuba, and the find turned this corner of Holguín into a world reference point for understanding how the native peoples of the Caribbean lived and died on the eve of the conquest.
The radiocarbon datings place the burials between the late prehistoric period and the first years of contact with the Europeans, that is, right at the hinge between two worlds. The bodies appeared in different positions —flexed, extended, some with the hands crossed—, accompanied by objects that speak of beliefs, hierarchies and exchanges: beads, ornaments and, above all, metal pieces. Among them stand out objects of guanín and brass that, by their composition, were not of local manufacture: they reveal that these communities were connected by exchange networks that reached very far, even to the American mainland.
But the greatest surprise came decades later, when new research applied analysis of strontium and oxygen isotopes to the teeth and bones of the buried. The results showed that several of the individuals were not from the area: they had been born far away and migrated here. One of them was studied as a possible native of Mesoamerica —there was even talk of a 'Maya burial' in Cuba—, a hypothesis that, though disputed, shows the extent to which the pre-Columbian Caribbean was a mobile and connected world, and not the set of isolated islands that was imagined for a long time.
Today El Chorro de Maíta is an open-air site museum —a National Monument of Cuba— where the burials are displayed protected under a cover, next to a reconstructed Taíno Village that recreates the daily life of those inhabitants. For the traveler who arrives at Playa Esmeralda seeking sun and sea, the visit is a revelation: beneath the emerald green of the water and the discreet luxury of the resorts, this land keeps the most complete archive that exists about the first Cubans, the same ones who saw appear, in the neighboring bay of Bariay, the sails of Columbus's caravels.