To make the Pope
responsible for
the fall of socialism is to make too simple an
analysis of history
• Fidel reiterates
similarities between the humanist ideas of the Pope
and those defended by the Cuban Revolution
WE fervently want the Pope’s example to endure,
confirmed President Fidel Castro during his special
address in the International Conference Center to
leaders of the Party, state, government and the UJC,
representatives of the grassroots organizations and
officers and combatants of the Revolutionary Armed
Forces and the Ministry of the Interior.
"It honors us," he stated, "that he visited us; I
was right," he added, "when I said then that the
Pope did not entertain any notion of damaging our
people. His sentiments towards the Cuban people were
noble, and were clearly and paradigmatically
summarized by him on leaving Cuba when he spoke out
against the blockade, which he described as unjust
and ethically unacceptable. This opinion of the Holy
Father, "commented Fidel, "should not be forgotten
by the president of the United States when he takes
part in the funeral ceremony in Rome.
In the president’s view the death of the
religious leader constitutes a tremendously
significant event that has touched international
public opinion and given rise to a week of mourning
throughout the planet.
John Paul II lived during one of the most complex
and crucial moments for humanity, in which the world
has reached a veritable crossroads, unlike any other
point in history. For the first time, the
disappearance of our species is a real danger and
not just because of war and the proliferation of
nuclear weapons; humans are also running
unprecedented risks because they are destroying
nature, and polluting everything around them,
remarked Fidel.
The leader of the Revolution characterized the
fundamental features of conflicts of the
contemporary era as a basis for understanding the
importance of the pontificate of John Paul II, whom
he described as an exceptional man, a determined
fighter, untiring, whose virtues should not be
ignored. "These are our opinions from a human and
social focus, in the light of fundamental questions
for humanity, although we respect different opinions,"
he commented.
THE POPE WAS VERY CRITICAL OF CAPITALISM
"It is true," he stated, "that the Supreme
Pontiff had a critical attitude to issues which,
from his religious standpoint, he believed were
poorly accomplished in socialist countries. We
should not forget that in Poland, his native
country, the nation and the Catholic religion were
born at the same time, indissolubly united, a fact
that was underestimated by that socialist state,
where many errors were committed including those
related to respect for different beliefs.
Fidel examined the historical ambit into which
the man who became the leader of the Catholic Church
for 26 years was born and raised. He also analyzed
the political evolution of Europe prior to the World
War II, and warned that communism has always
frightened the world, including the Cuban people at
that time. It was the level of culture achieved by
the Revolution that allowed our people to overcome
those prejudices.
The Pope was not born or educated to destroy
socialism. "Making him responsible for the fall of
this system in Europe is to make a simplistic
analysis of history," he confirmed.
"Political culture in our country was born with
the Revolution," Fidel continued, "because the
empire, the oligarchy, the exploiters have made it
their task to repeat throughout the world that
communism is the most horrible thing to have existed.
In the early years after the revolutionary triumph
of 1959," he indicated, "they began making
outrageous claims, such as that we were going to
Cuban families of their of custody rights and send
their children to Russia to be processed and turned
into canned food. "
He declared that if Cuban socialism were to
collapse one day, the blame would lie with no else
but ourselves. He also emphasized that once the Cold
War was over, the Pope was very critical of the
capitalist system.
RESPECT FOR ALL BELIEFS
Fidel narrated his personal experience of
religion, dating back to his childhood, and
expressed his conviction that the religious
sentiments and beliefs of each individual are
strictly personal and deserve the utmost respect. "This
attitude is the one that should accompany a
revolutionary, a politician," he said, and affirmed
that we have always fought for dignity, freedom and
the rights of all human beings.
He also expressed his gratitude for having had
the opportunity in life to study and the usefulness
of acquiring the teachings of Marx, Engels, and
Lenin in order to undertake the revolutionary
leadership and understand the complex events of the
world in which we live.
He assured that the Cuban Revolution will never
be sectarian; it offers equality of rights,
opportunities and support to all religions, with the
maximum respect, but should always be on guard
against expressions of extremism. As an example of
the former, he highlighted the Cuban government’s
gesture at the time of the Pope’s visit of declaring
that December 25 – Christmas Day for Christians –
would become a public holiday from that date.
AN EAGERLY AWAITED AND FRUITFUL VISIT
The Pope was received in Cuba in 1998, said
Fidel, and in his sermon that was transmitted across
the world, our people recognized the battle that the
Supreme Pontiff was waging against underdevelopment,
poverty, the external debt and the pillaging of
countries, and for the globalization of solidarity,
ideas with which the Revolution fully agrees.
He recalled that he had publicly stated those
views of the Pope in December 1997 during the
session of the National Assembly of People’s Power
and later, during a television interview broadcast
on January 16, 1998, shortly before the Pope’s visit;
thus demonstrating that the Revolution has not
changed its opinions. Thus these are points of view
that have been sustained for many years and not
opportunistic modifications of opinions following
the recent death of John Paul II.
In the aforementioned conversation with Cuban
television journalists in January 1998, referring to
the impression the pope left on him during their
meeting in Rome, Fidel stated that it was very good;
John Paul II was very amiable and respectful and
once could almost say affectionate. "He was a man
with a noble face, who genuinely inspired respect,
and that impression was shared by all the comrades
present at that dialogue.
He reaffirmed that the Pope’s visit to our
country took place at a difficult juncture for the
Revolution due to the economic situation created by
the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern
European socialist bloc. The empire was maintaining
intense pressure that consisted on the one hand of
blockading the nation in an attempt to bring it to
its knees by hunger and, on the other, of opening
its doors to any Cuban – including those committing
crimes – by any means. "And we have had to endure
those conditions up until now, when things have
begun to radically change," he stressed.
He recounted that after the collapse of the
socialist camp and above all the Soviet Union, the
empire intensified its policy of aggression against
the Cuban Revolution. All the calculations indicated
that the country could not survive, he noted. "But
our people resisted, in spite of suddenly losing all
their supplies of fuel, fertilizer and foodstuffs...
Our oil production barely reached 700,000 tons per
year. We had lost the 14 million tons of crude from
the Soviet Union.
"In that context, within the empire and in other
places, the Pope’s visit came as something that
would lead to the final collapse of socialism in
Cuba. They believed that the Revolution would tumble
down like the walls of Jericho before the sound of
trumpets. But the Pope did not bring trumpets, nor
did he come with the intention of destroying the
Revolution."
He reiterated that at that point anti-communist
propaganda had created the myth that much merit was
due the Pope for the collapse of the socialist camp
and the USSR. "We tried to give him the reception
that he merited, for which it was necessary to
explain to many of our compatriots (as he did on
television) the significance of that visit and to
clarify John Paul II’s position to many people, and
the historical and personal conditions that shaped
his vision against socialism and communism.
The president went on to comment: "Now our
enemies are once again disconcerted at the displays
of consideration and affection expressed in Cuba
after the death of John Paul II. They are once again
disorientated on observing that Cardinal Jaime
Ortega has another opportunity to speak to the
people on television in relation to the demise of
the leader of the Catholic Church in the world.
The only difficult moment during the pastoral
visit, he added, was prompted by the words of the
Archbishop of Santiago de Cuba during the papal mass
in that city. The content of that address created a
difficult situation for the people and Santiago
Party members invited to the mass. "We weren’t
concerned at what he said, but at the reaction and
malaise of the people. It was confirmed to me that
neither the Pope or Cardinal Jaime Ortega knew of
the content of the archbishop’s speech."
Fidel also denounced the machinations of the
empire and its lackeys, headed by Roger Noriega, at
that time Senator Jesse Helms’ advisor, to spoil the
Pope’s visit in 1998, made evident in Noriega’s
meeting with the archbishop, the content of which
the religious leader reported to the Party
authorities.
"It was not us who politicized the visit; at no
time did the Revolution attempt to seek material
advantages or benefits for Cuba and its socialist
process," Fidel observed, moving on to make a rapid
reading of what he said in January 1998.
The president of the Councils of State and
Ministers listed some of the factors that did not
favor the Pope’s presence in Cuba over a number of
years, including tensions and differences with the
leadership of the Catholic Church in our country
during the early years of the Revolution, although
the island did have the cooperation of the then
representative in Cuba of the Holy See: a man who
worked intensively to alleviate and eliminate
difficulties.
Fidel also reflected on the recently deceased
Pope’s historical courage in publicly criticizing
past errors of the Catholic Church such as the
Inquisition or its refusal to accept Charles
Darwin’s theory of evolution.
He detailed the facilities offered at all times
by the Cuban government to different Catholic orders
like that of St. Bridget, while clarifying that
there neither is nor will be differences in
respectful treatment in relation to the religions
present in Cuba; on that point he gave as one
example the inauguration of a Greek Orthodox Church
and another Russian one in the future.
BUSH’S VISIT TO ROME IS AN OUTRAGE TO THE POPE’S
MEMORY
Fidel ratified that, from the beginning, the
Cuban state and government had acknowledged and
praised John Paul II for his stand against the
proliferation of nuclear weapons, for being a great
standard-bearer in the fight against wars of
aggression, territorial conquests, ethnic cleansing
and the external debt. At the same time he was a
fervent critic of neoliberal globalization and the
consumerist nature of the capitalist societies and
policies that accelerate environmental degradation.
He recalled that the Pope made those and other
important condemnations in the United Nations.
For Fidel, the tribute that should be paid to the
deceased religious leader is to put his humanist
ideas into practice. He castigated the hypocrites
who are ignorant of this legacy and are among those
principally responsible for the evils humanity is
suffering, including the president of the country
that produces the largest volume of nuclear weapons
and the mobile means to launch them any day, at any
moment, on whatever corner of the planet.
He highlighted the hypocrisy of "mister chief of
imperialism," who is attending the funeral to weep
over the body of a man who fervently opposed war,
and the invasion of Iraq. Bush’s visit to Rome, he
stated, is an outrage to the memory of John Paul II.
Referring to the constant US government pressure
on the Revolution, he noted that on repeated
occasions the empire demanded as condition for the
lifting of the blockade "to withdraw our
internationalist aid to Angola, Ethiopia, to break
off our relations with the Soviet Union and end our
support for revolutionary movements in Latin America."
He recalled: "We never accepted that and that
support only ceased to exist when those forces were
extinguished by themselves.
He affirmed that the course of history, of so
many struggles of the people against the oppressors,
has been renewed with a tremendous and unstoppable
force, particularly in the Our America dreamed of by
Martí. One example of that rebirth is Venezuela,
with its revolutionary Bolivarian process and Hugo
Chávez.
In another part of his address, the president
spoke of Hugo Chávez as a revolutionary of the ideas
of Bolívar and Martí, with correct interpretations
of Christianity, as his thinking takes into account
the Christ who was always on the side of the poor.
Fidel observed that Chávez has known how to evaluate
the history and traditions of his people.
THE HUMANISM OF THE REVOLUTION
"Nothing can compare with the pages of humanism
that our glorious people are writing," Fidel
affirmed, giving the example of the attention
received by thousands of Ukrainian children and
adolescents affected by the accident at the
Chernobyl nuclear power station, and with the
uncontestable reality that, as opposed to what
occurred in other countries of our own region on the
part of dictatorships installed by imperialism, not
one person has been tortured, killed or disappeared
in Cuba.
"That same empire wants to condemn us at the
Human Rights Commission," he stated. "Let them do
what they like; I don’t give a toss and the people
of Cuba don’t give a toss about the Geneva
commission," he added before going on to ask what
the Europeans are going to do in the next few days
when the a vote is taken on the anti-Cuba resolution
to be presented by the government of the United
States.
"All of them, without exception," he warned, "will
come up against a blade that is constantly more
honed; in other words, with a stronger Revolution
whose humanistic work based on social justice is on
the ascent."
He noted that while the United States is trying
to condemn Cuba for alleged human rights violations
and demanding the release of mercenaries serving
prison terms in our country due to their
counterrevolutionary activities, it is maintaining
five young Cuban anti-terrorist fighters
incarcerated in its own jails.
(María Julia Mayoral, Anett Ríos, José A. de la
Osa, Alexis Schlachter and Alberto Núñez)