| The Bolivarian Revolution and the Antilles |
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| Escrito por Fidel Castro Ruz | |||||||
| Lunes, 08 de Febrero de 2010 08:08 | |||||||
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As was to be expected, further on I eagerly read the history of Alexander, Cesar, Hannibal, Bonaparte and, of course, every other book that fell into my hands about Maceo, Gomez, Agramonte and other great Later on I focused on Marti. As a matter of fact, it is to him that I owe my patriotic feelings and the profound belief that "Homeland is humanity". The audacity, beauty, courage and ethics of his ideas helped me to become what I think I am: a revolutionary. If you don't share Marti's ideas, you can not share Bolivar's. If you don't share Marti's and Bolivar's ideas, you can not be a Marxist. And if you don’t share Marti’s and Bolivar’s ideas and you are not a Marxist, you Hardly two centuries ago, in the 1820s, Bolivar had intended to send an expedition commanded by Sucre to liberate Cuba, which so badly needed it, for it was a Spanish colony devoted only to the production of sugar and coffee, where 300 000 slaves worked for their white masters. After Cuba's independence attempts failed, the country was turned into a neo-colony. Te full dignity of man could never be achieved without a Revolution that could put an end to the exploitation of man by man.
For centuries, progress and development served to justify the hateful latifundia system and slave labor that were preceded by the extermination of the aboriginal inhabitants of these islands. Marti said something wonderful about Bolivar, which was worthy of his glorious life: "…what he did not do, still remains undone today: because Bolivar still has things to do in the Americas".
Except for one part to the North of the hemisphere, the huge territory of Our America was in the hands of two kings of the Iberian Peninsula. We can categorically assert that, for centuries, our countries and the fruits of their peoples' labor have been plundered - and continue to be so- by the big transnationals and the oligarchies to their service. Back in those times, oil and ethanol were not marketed in the world; the WTO did not exist either. Sugar cane, cotton and corn were grown with slave work. The machines were still to be invented. Industrialization pushed forward with the use of coal. Wars propelled civilization, and civilization propelled wars. The latter changed in nature and became all the more terrible. Finally they turned into world conflicts. We were at last a civilized world. As a matter of principle, we even believe we are.
Under such circumstances, an unprecedented catastrophe has taken place in Haiti, while at the opposite side of the planet three wars and an arms race continue to evolve in the midst of the economic crisis and The credibility of the world’s community has just been dealt a hard blow at Copenhagen, and our species is not showing its ability to survive. Haiti’s tragedy makes me address this point of view, based on what Venezuela has done for all Caribbean nations. While in Montreal the big financial institutions are hesitant about what should be done in Haiti,
It is well known that when the United States spent hundreds of billions of dollars in its genocidal war against Vietnam, which killed and maimed millions in that heroic nation, it also unilaterally cancelled the Other developed countries eliminated tariff preferences for Caribbean agricultural export products, such as banana. Venezuela had an unprecedented gesture: it guaranteed a reliable oil supply and special However, no one ever bothered about the fate of those peoples. Hadn't it been for the Bolivarian Republic, a terrible crisis would have hit the independent Caribbean States, with the exception of Trinidad and Tobago and Barbados. In the case of Cuba, after the collapse of the USSR, the Bolivarian government promoted an extraordinary growth in trade between the two countries, including the trade in goods and services, which enabled us to struggle on through one of the toughest periods of our glorious revolutionary history. The US best ally –and also the most abject and vile people’s enemy-was the fake and pretender Romulo Betancourt, who was Venezuela's president-elect at the time when the Revolution triumphed in Cuba in 1959. He was the main accomplice to the pirate attacks, terrorist actions, aggressions and economic blockade against our homeland. The Bolivarian Revolution finally broke out when our America needed it the most. After being invited to travel to Caracas by Hugo Chavez, the ALBA members committed to offer maximum support to the Haitian people at the saddest moment in the history of that legendary nation which carried out The Republic was born from the ideas of equity, justice and freedom for all human beings. There will be hundreds of field hospitals, rehabilitation centers and hospitals, where more than one thousand doctors and students of the last years of the specialty of Medicine from Haiti, Venezuela, Dominican Republic, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Ecuador, Brazil, Chile and other sister nations will be offering their services. We already have the honor of being able to count on a group of American doctors who also studied at ELAM. We are ready to cooperate with those countries and institutions that may be willing to take part in these efforts to offer medical services in Haiti.
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I was fond of History, as much as almost any other kid. And I also liked wars, a sort of culture that society used to sow among boys. All the toys we were given were toy guns.