Reflections by the Commander
in Chief
BUSH,
MAMBÍ?
Viva Cuba libre! (Long live free
I would never have imagined I’d be hearing
those words 139 years later, coming from the mouth of a president of the
On the contrary, a Spanish warship drew
near the coast and with its guns destroyed the small sugar mill where Carlos
Manuel de Céspedes declared the independence of
Lincoln, son of a poor woodcutter, fought
all his life against slavery which was legal in his country almost a hundred
years after the Declaration of Independence.
Clinging to the just idea that all citizens are born free and equal,
making use of his legal and constitutional rights, he declared the abolition of
slavery. Countless numbers of combatants gave their lives defending this idea
against the rebel slave states in the south of the country.
He died by an assassin’s bullet when,
unbeatable at the polls, he was running for a second term as president.
I am not forgetting that tomorrow on
Sunday, it will be the 48th anniversary of Camilo Cienfuegos'
disappearance at sea, on October 28, 1959, as he was returning to Havana in a
light aircraft from Camaguey Province, where days earlier just his presence
unarmed a garrison of simple Rebel Army soldiers whose superiors, of a
bourgeois ideology, were attempting to do what almost half a century later Bush
is demanding: rise up in arms against the Revolution.
Che, in a wonderful introduction to his
book Guerrilla Warfare, states: “Camilo
was the comrade of a 100 battles…the selfless combatant who always made
sacrifice an instrument with which to temper his character and to forge that of
the troops...it was he who gave this written armature here presented the
essential vitality of his personality, of his intelligence and of his audacity,
something which can be achieved in such exact proportions only in a very few
personages in history.”
“Who killed him?”
“We might better wonder: who wiped out his
physical being? Because the lives of men
such as he, live on in the people...The enemy killed him, they killed him
because they wished for his death, they killed him because there are no safe
planes, because pilots cannot have all the experience they need, because,
overburdened with work, he wanted to reach Havana in a few short hours…in his
guerrilla mentality there could be no impediment to hold back or distort a line
which had been drafted…Camilo and the other Camilos (those who didn’t arrive
and those yet to come) are the indicators of the strength of the people, they
are the highest expression of what a nation may give, at the ready to defend
its purest ideals and with its faith anchored in the securing of its noblest
goals.”
For all the symbolism in their names, we
reply to the false Mambí:
Long live
Long live Che!
Long live Camilo!
Fidel Castro Ruz
October 27, 2007
7:36 p.m.