Dear comrade Alarcón:
Please read the following message,
addressed to the National Assembly, when you open the morning session.
A heartfelt
embrace,
(Signed)
Fidel Castro Ruz
Comrades of the
National Assembly:
You have
no easy task on your hands. On
Nearly
50 years since the triumph of the Revolution, we can justifiably feel proud of
ourselves, as we have held our ground, for almost half a century, in the
struggle against the most powerful empire ever to exist in history. In the
Proclamation I signed on
This
past December 24, during his visit to the various districts of the municipality
which honored me with the nomination of candidate to parliament, Raúl noted that all of the numerous candidates proposed by
the people of a district famous for its combativeness, but with a low
educational level, had completed their higher education. This, as he said on
Cuban television, made a profound impression in him.
Party,
State and Government cadres and grassroots organizations face new problems in
their work with an intelligent, watchful and educated people who detest
bureaucratic hurdles and inconsiderate justifications. Deep down, every citizen
wages an individual battle against humanity's innate tendency to stick to its
survival instincts, a natural law which governs all life.
We
are all born marked by that instinct, which science defines as primary. Coming
face to face with this instinct is rewarding because it leads us to a
dialectical process and to a constant and altruistic struggle, bringing us
closer to Martí and making us true communists.
What
the international press has emphasized most in its reports on
We also face great risks that threaten the
human species as a whole. This has become more and more evident to me since I
predicted, for the first time in Rio de Janeiro, --over 15 years ago, in June
1992-- that a species was threatened with extinction as a result of the
destruction of its natural habitat. Today, the number of people who understand
the real danger of this grows every day.
A recent book by Joseph Stiglitz,
former Vice-President of the World Bank and President Clinton's chief economic
advisor until 2002, Nobel Prize laureate and bestselling author in the
Few
people are aware of these facts. The same economic system which forced this
unsustainable wastefulness on us impedes the distribution of Stiglitz' book. Only a few thousand copies of an excellent
edition have been published, enough to guarantee a margin of profit. This
responds to a market demand, which the publishing house cannot ignore if it is
to survive.
Today,
we know that life on Earth has been protected by the ozone layer, located in
the atmosphere’s outer ring, at an altitude between 15 to 50 kilometers, in the
region known as the stratosphere, which acts as the planet’s shield against the
type of solar radiation which can prove harmful. There are greenhouse gases
whose warming potential is higher than that of carbon dioxide and which widen
the hole in the ozone layer above
To have a clear sense of this phenomenon, suffice it
to say that the world produces an average of 4.37 metric tons of carbon dioxide
per capita. In the case of the
The
ozone layer, in brief, protects us from ultraviolet and heat radiation which
affects the immune system, sight, skin and life of human beings. Under extreme
conditions, the destruction of that layer by human beings would affect all
forms of life on the planet.
Other
problems, foreign to our nation and many others under similar conditions, also
threaten us. A victorious counterrevolution would spell a disaster for us,
worse than
General
Suharto, who overthrew him, had been trained by
Japanese occupation forces. At the conclusion of World War II,
The
news on the events in
The
extraordinary circumstances faced by
There
hasn't been a day in my life in which I haven't learned something.
Martí taught us that "all of the world's glory fits in
a kernel of corn". Many times have I said and repeated this phrase, which
carries in eleven words a veritable school of ethics.
Fortunately,
exemplary conducts will continue to flourish with the consciousness of our
peoples as long as our species exists.
I am
certain that many young Cubans, in their struggle against the Giant in the Seven-League
Boots, would do as they did. Money can buy everything save the soul of a people
who has never gone down on its knees.
I
read the brief and concise report which Raúl wrote
and sent me. We must not waste a minute as we continue to move forward. I will
raise my hand, next to you, to show my support.
(Signed)
Fidel Castro Ruz