Reflections by comrade Fidel
THE 9TH CONGRESS
OF THE YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE OF
I had the privilege of following directly the voices,
images, ideas, arguments, faces, reactions and applauses of the delegates
taking part in the final session of the 9th Congress of the Young
Communist League of Cuba held at the Convention Center last Sunday, April 4.
The TV cameras show details from much better angles and distances than can be
perceived by the eyes of those attending any of these events.
It is no exaggeration to say that to me it was one of
the most touching moments of my long and hazardous life. I could not be there
but I felt inside like someone engaged in a journey along the ideas for which
he has fought three fourth of his life. However, ideas and values would be
worthless for a revolutionary who did not feel it is his duty to fight every
minute of his life to overcome the ignorance we all come with into the world.
Even if few admit it, chance and circumstances play a
decisive role in the results of any human work.
It is sad to think of so many revolutionaries, with
many more merits, who could not live to see the victory of the cause for which
they fought and died, be it the independence or a deep social Revolution in
From the mid 1950s, the year I completed my
university studies, I considered myself a radical as well as an advanced
revolutionary, thanks to the ideas I received from Marti, Marx, and countless thinkers
and heroes who wanted a world with more justice. Nearly a century had gone by since
October 10, 1868, when our fellow countrymen had started the independence war
in our country against what was left in the
The powerful neighbor to the North had decided the
annexation of our country as if it were a ripe fruit fallen from a rotten tree.
Europe had already seen the vigorous emergence of the socialist ideas and the
struggle of the proletariat against the bourgeois society, which had seized
power by a historical law during the French Revolution that broke out on July
1789 inspired in the ideas of Jean Jacob Rousseau and the 18th
century’s encyclopedists, which had also been at the roots of the Declaration
of Philadelphia on July 4, 1776, representing the revolutionary ideas of that
time. Ever more often in human history the events tend to combine and overlap.
In my view, a self-critical spirit, and the constant
necessity to study, observe and meditate are characteristics that no
revolutionary cadre can do without.
From an early stage, my ideas were already
irreconcilable with the hateful exploitation of man by man, a brutal notion on
which the Cuban society was based under the aegis of the mightiest imperialist
country that has ever existed. The basic issue while the Cold War was in full
swing was the search for a strategy adjusted to the concrete and peculiar
conditions of our small nation submitted to the contemptible economic system
imposed on a semi-illiterate people --albeit one with a heroic tradition—through
military force, deceit and the monopoly over the media, which turned the
political views of the overwhelming majority of the people into reflex actions.
However, despite this sad reality they could not prevent the great agitation among
the people caused by the abuse and exploitation of that system.
For some time after the Second World War for the
distribution of the planet, which was the cause of the second carnage, –hardly
20 years after the first, but this time unleashed by the fascist extreme right,
that took the lives of more than 50 million people, including 27 million
Soviets-- the democratic sentiment
prevailed in the world and also friendliness toward the USSR, China and other
allies in that war that ended with the unnecessary use of two nuclear bombs,
which brought death to hundreds of thousand of people in two helpless cities of
a power already defeated by the irrepressible advance of the allied forces,
including the Red Army troops that in a few days had annihilated the powerful Japanese
army of Manchuria.
The Cold War was initiated by the new American
President almost immediately after the victory. The former president, Franklin
D. Roosevelt, who enjoyed international prestige and popularity for his
anti-fascist stance, passed away after his third reelection and before the end
of that war. He was then replaced by his
Vicepresident Harry Truman, an uninspiring and mediocre man, who was
responsible for that disastrous policy.
The
Before the onset of the Cold War, there was in
The merits of the Cuban Revolution can be measured by
the fact that such a small nation has for so long been capable of putting up a
resistance against the hostile policy and criminal actions carried out against
our people by the most powerful empire ever in the history of mankind, the same
that was in the habit of handling the countries of the hemisphere in its own
way thus it underestimated a small, dependent and poor nation located a few
miles off its coasts. This resistance would never have been possible without
the dignity and ethics that have always characterized the policies of
The great difference between the past –when the word
socialism could barely be uttered—and the present could be observed the day of
the last session of the 9th Congress of the Young Communist League of Cuba
in the delegates’ remarks and in the speech made by the President of the State Council
and the Council of Ministers.
It is most convenient that what was said there is
reproduced and known inside and outside the country through the media, not so
much for our compatriots who have accumulated experience in this long struggle
but because it is fitting that the peoples of the world know the truth and the
extremely serious consequences of the direction in which the empire and its
allies are taking humanity.
In his closing remarks --short, profound, and accurate--
Raul went straight to the point concerning some major issues. His speech cut
deep into the entrails of the empire and its cynical allies, as he was critical
and self-critical something that makes more vigorous and robust the morals and
the strength of the Cuban Revolution, if we are consistent with the daily
teachings of such a dialectic and deep process in the concrete conditions of
Cuba.
The empire was so used to impose its will that it
underestimated the resistance that a small Latin American country of the
Caribbean was capable of, a country that is only 90 miles off its coasts and
where it owned the fundamental wealth, monopolized trade and political
relations, and forcibly imposed a military base against the will of the nation,
under the umbrella of a legal agreement that they also turned into something of
a constitutional nature. They despised the worth of ideas vis-à-vis their
immense power.
Raul reminded them of how the mercenary forces were
defeated in Giron [Bay of Pigs] less than 72 hours after their landing, before
the eyes of the Yankee Naval fleet and of the firmness of our people that
remained unperturbed during the October [Missile] Crisis of 1962 refusing to
accept the US inspection of our territory –after the agreement that ignored our
national sovereignty reached by the USSR and that country without consulting us-- despite the countless number of nuclear
weapons aimed against the island.
He also referred to the consequences of the demise of
the
Nearly 20 years have passed since that sad and
terrible event, however,
Presently, to overcome old and new challenges we are
counting on the people that went from illiteracy to one of the highest levels
of education in the world, that are the owners of the mass media and capable of
building the necessary awareness. On the other hand, regardless of the need to
promote knowledge, it would be absurd to ignore that in an increasingly complex
and changing world the fundamental duty of any citizen is to work and to create
the material goods the society requires. The Revolution proclaimed the universal
expansion of knowledge in the understanding that the better trained people are
the more useful they will be throughout their lives, but the Revolution has
never ceased to extol the sacred duty of doing the work required by the
society.
By the same token, physical work is a necessity for
both education and human health, that’s why following one of Marti’s principles
we advocated from a very early stage the notion of combining study and work.
Our education made considerable progress when becoming a professor was
proclaimed as a duty and tens of thousand of youths chose to teach or whatever
was most necessary for our society. Forgetting any of these principles would come
into conflict with the construction of socialism.
The task to which each person devotes his or her life
cannot only be the result of a personal wish but also of education. Retraining
and sharpening everyone’s skills is an unavoidable necessity of any human
society.
The Party and State cadres will have to tackle
increasingly complex problems. Those responsible for political education will
need to learn more than ever about history and economics, due precisely to the
complexity of their work. Suffice it to read the news coming in every day from
all parts of the world to understand that ignorance and shallowness are
absolutely incompatible with political responsibility.
The reactionaries and the mercenaries, who yearn for
consumerism and refuse working and studying, will find it ever more difficult
to fit in public life. There will always
be in human society demagogues and opportunists who advocate easy solutions with
the aim of becoming popular but those who betray ethics will have less and less
possibilities of deceiving. The struggle has taught us the damage that
opportunism and treason can cause.
The education of the cadres will be the most
important task to be mastered by the revolutionary parties. There will never be
easy solutions; strictness and exigency must prevail. Let’s guard ourselves
especially from those that throw down the drain the people’s principles and
dreams together with the dirty water.
For a few days I’ve wanted to speak of the Youth
Congress but I chose to wait until it was publicized in order not to rob it of
any space in the press.
Yesterday, April 7, was Vilma’s birthday. I was
touched as I heard her voice on television accompanied by a piano. My
appreciation is greater every day for her work and for everything she did for
the Revolution and for Cuban women. There are more reasons every day to fight
and to win.
Fidel Castro Ruz
April 8, 2010
3:40 PM