Reflections by comrade Fidel
The Secret
Neither represented nor excommunicated,
only today could I learn what was discussed at the Summit of Port of Spain.
They led us all to entertain hopes that the meeting would not be secret, but
those running the show deprived us of such an interesting intellectual
exercise. We shall get to know the substance but not the tone of voice, the
look in the eyes or the facial look that can be a reflection of a person’s
ideas, ethic and character. A Secret Summit is worse than a silent movie. For a
few minutes the television showed some images. There was a gentleman on Obama’s left whom I could not identify clearly as he laid
his hand on Obama’s shoulder, like an eight-year-old
boy on a classmate in the front row. Then, another member of his entourage
standing beside him interrupted the president of the United States for a
dialogue; those coming up to address him had the appearance of an oligarchy
that never knew what hunger is and who expect to find in Obama’s
powerful nation the shield that will protect the system from the fearsome
social changes.
Up
to that moment, a bizarre atmosphere prevailed at the
The
artistic function arranged by the host was really spectacular. I have seldom
seen something like it; perhaps never. A good announcer, apparently a
Trinitarian, had proudly said that it was unique.
It
was a feast of culture and luxury. I meditated about it. I calculated the cost
of all that and suddenly I realized that no other country in the
Did
anyone in that meeting remember that Obama promised
to invest as much money as necessary to make the
Something
really impressed me as the summit unfolded until today, Saturday, April 18, at
It
was not the economist, the scientist, the intellectual or the poet speaking;
Daniel did not choose an elaborate language to impress his audience. He spoke
as the president of one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere, as a
revolutionary combatant, on behalf of a group of Central American nations and
the
It
would suffice to be one of the hundreds of thousands of Nicaraguans who learned
how to read and write in the first stage of the Sandinista Revolution, when the
illiteracy rate was reduced from 60 to 12 percent, or again when Daniel
received power in 2008 as the illiteracy rate had increased to 35 percent.
His
remarks extended for nearly 50 minutes. He spoke slowly and calm, but the
reproduction of the full text would make this Reflection too extensive.
I
shall summarize his statement using his own words for each of the basic ideas
he expressed. I will avoid the use of suspension points and use inverted commas
only when Daniel quotes other people or institutions.
Our
crime: we had freed ourselves from Anastasio Somoza’s tyranny imposed through the intervention of the
Yankee troops in
From
the past century,
These
were followed by interventions extending from the year 1912 to 1932, which
resulted in the imposition of the Somozas’ tyranny
equipped, funded and defended by American leaders.
I
had the opportunity of meeting President Reagan during the war; we shook hands
and I asked him to stop the war against
I
had the opportunity of meeting President Carter and when he told me that “now
that the Nicaraguan people had got rid of the Somoza tyranny it was time for
As
the war was still going on, I had the chance to meet the then recently
inaugurated President of the United States George Bush, senior. In the year
1989, at a gathering in
We
are waging a struggle in Nicaragua, Central America and Latin America to
eradicate illiteracy with the generous and unconditional solidarity of the
fraternal Cuban people, of Fidel who promoted such literacy campaigns in
solidarity with our peoples, and of President Raul Castro who has continued
these programs for the benefit of all of the Latin American and Caribbean
peoples.
Later,
the Bolivarian people of
Most
of the presidents and heads of government of
Another
country is not present here because unlike
We
are working to build a great alliance, a great unity of Latin American and
In
the 1950s racial discrimination was institutionalized, it was part of the
American way of life, part of the American democracy: black people could not
walk into white people’s restaurants or white people’s bars. The children of
black families could not attend the white children schools. In order to turn
down the wall of racial discrimination it was necessary --and this President Obama knows better than we do—Martin Luther King, jr, said: “I have a dream.” The dream became a reality and
the wall of racial discrimination collapsed in the
This
meeting, this gathering is opening exactly the same day that the invasion of
That
is history. In the year 2002, also in the month of April, on the 11th,
a coup d’etat was dealt to murder an elected
president in the
I
think that the time I’m taking is shorter than the three hours I had to wait at
the airport inside the plane.
The
freedom of expression must apply to the big ones and the little ones:
We are
asking that all immigrants in the
The
only way to stop that flow of emigrants to the
The
We
have the ungrateful task of protecting the
Just
in
How much does the
It’s
not fair, it’s not equitable, it’s not ethical. It is
not moral that the G-20 continues to make the great decisions; the time has
come for the G-192, that is, for all countries in the United Nations to make
them.
Those
who have had dealings with the IMF are perfectly aware of what the Fund has
meant, of the social, agricultural and productive programs that have been cut
off to obtain resources to pay back the debt, a debt imposed by the rules
established by global capitalism. It has only been an instrument setting forth
and developing colonialist, neocolonialist and imperialist policies from the
metropolises.
Mahatma
Gandhi, who waged a heroic struggle against
The
only way to save the planet, and the sustainable development of mankind with
it, will be to lay the foundations of a new international economic order, a new
socio-economic and political model which is truly fair, supportive and
democratic.
There is the project known as PETROCARIBE
and there is ALBA –most of the
“The
heads of Sate and Government of Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Honduras, Nicaragua
and Venezuela, members of ALBA, consider that the draft Declaration of the
Fifth Summit of the Americas is insufficient and unacceptable for the following
reasons:
(He goes on to read the ALBA Declaration
on the document proposed for the
“It
does not respond to the issue of the Global Economic Crisis, even though that
is the greatest challenge faced by mankind in decades.
“It
unjustifiably excludes
“What
we are experiencing is a structural and systemic global economic crisis and not
just another cyclic crisis.
“The
environmental crisis has been caused by capitalism which had subordinated the
necessary conditions for life on the planet to the predominance of markets and
profits.
To
avoid this outcome it is necessary to develop an alternative model to the
capitalist system. A system in harmony
with our Mother Earth and not one that plunders its natural resources; a
system of cultural diversity and not of crushing cultures and imposing cultural
values and life styles that have nothing to do with the realities of our
countries; a system of peace based on social justice and not on imperialist
wars and policies; a system that does not reduce them to simple consumers or
merchandise.
Regarding
the U.S. blockade on Cuba and the exclusion of this country from the Summit of
the Americas, the member countries of the Bolivarian Alternative for the
Peoples of Our America (ALBA) reiterate the Declaration adopted last December
16, 2008, by all of the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean on the
necessity to put an end to the economic, commercial and financial blockade
imposed on Cuba by the United States of America, including the implementation
of the so-called Helms-Burton Act, widely known to all.
In
my country,
As
the Nicaraguan Revolution triumphed in 1979, it found that the tyrannies and
governments that had been imposed and sustained in Nicaragua by the U.S.
administrations, the self-defined democratic governments, had left Nicaragua
with 60 percent illiteracy.
Our
first big battle was to eradicate illiteracy. We undertook that battle and
reduced illiteracy to 11.5 or 12 percent. We couldn’t go further because we
were imposed a war policy by the Reagan administration.
We
left the government in 1990 with 12.5 percent illiteracy in the country and on
January 2007 we received back the country with 35 percent illiteracy.
This
data have not been made up by the government; they have been released by
agencies specialized in education and culture.
That
is the result of the neoliberalism applied in
It
is an ethical problem, a moral problem, and the future lies on it; not only the
future of the most impoverished countries --as the five countries of Latin
America and the Caribbean I have mentioned—that have little else to lose other
than our shackles, if there is not a change of ethics, a change of moral, a
change of values that will enable us to be really sustainable.
It
is no longer a matter of ideology, it’s not a political issue; it’s a matter of
survival. And this applies to all, from the G-20 to the G-5 who are the most
impoverished in
I
think that this crisis that is affecting the world today and that is leading to
discussions, debates, and to a search for solutions we should approach it
bearing in mind that the current development model is no longer possible, no
longer sustainable.
The
only way to save us all is to change the model.
Thank
you, very much.
Daniel’s phrases at the opening session of
the
It is
This time Chavez stood up from his chair,
walked to Obama’s seat at the head of a rectangular
hall near Michelle Bachelet, and presented him with
the well known book by Galeano, Las venas abiertas
de America Latina, systematically updated by the author. I simply mentioned
the time it was when I listened to him.
It
is announced that the
The
His
predecessor went to bed early and slept for many hours. Seemingly, Obama works hard and sleeps little.
Today,
the 19th , at
Manning
had said before that the document had been elaborated two years back when there
was not a deep economic crisis; therefore, the current issues had not been
properly examined. Of course, I thought, McCain was not there; surely the OAS, Leonel and the
The
leaders in the press conference were the Prime Minister of Canada, certainly a
rightist and the only one who had been rude to Cuba; Mexican President Felipe
Calderon; Martin Torrijos from Panama and, naturally,
Patrick Manning. The
Obama spoke of the
We,
the Cubans do not do it to gain influence; it’s a tradition that was born in
He
was gruff and elusive with regards to the blockade in his interview with the
press; but he is already born and he will be 48 years next August 4.
Nine days later, that same month, I will be
83, almost twice his age, but now I have much more time to think. I wish to
remind him of a basic ethical principle with respect to Cuba: there is no
excuse for any injustice, any crime to last, regardless of time; the cruel
blockade on the Cuban people takes lives and causes suffering; it also affects
the economy of the nation and limits its possibilities to cooperate with
healthcare, education and sports services, with energy saving and with the
protection of the environment in many poor countries of the world.
Fidel Castro Ruz