We are following
in the path of Comandante Guevara
• Proclaims President Evo Morales
in La Higuera
BY MARIA JULIA
MAYORAL AND JORGE LUIS GONZALEZ (photos)
—Granma daily special correspondents
LA HIGUERA, Bolivia, June 14.—For those who are
fighting today in Our America for equality, justice,
solidarity and for a life in harmony with nature,
the only path we have to follow is that taken by Che
Guevara, affirmed the president of this South
American nation, addressing hundreds of Bolivians,
Venezuelans and Cubans gathered here to celebrate
the 78th anniversary of the birth of the heroic
guerrilla.
Right
in the small settlement where Che was murdered 39
years ago, the sons and daughters of the three
countries met to reaffirm that nothing will halt
their ties of cooperation in fields like those of
health and education, because, Morales recalled: "Our
continent is experiencing times of profound change,
of the restoration of its national dignity and
sovereignty."
Today La Higuera is a virtually unpopulated
place; it never had many inhabitants, but its
inhospitable conditions, the lack of work and hope
have forced numerous people to emigrate over the
decades. Nonetheless, the locality is still much
loved on account of its wealth of symbolism, the
exhortation not to forget anything that has happened
there, because the enemies of today are the same as
before, and their methods are no different.
Evo Morales highlighted in his speech that, as
opposed to U.S. imperialism and that of other
powerful nations, aid from Cuba and Venezuela is
happening without conditions of any kind, in a
spirit of solidarity, total respect for equality and
Bolivia’s decisions. Those are realities that
Bolivian health professionals who have rejected the
development of medical cooperation should understand,
he commented.
A medical post was officially inaugurated in La
Higuera and the first 15 people in the area to
become literate via the "Yes, I Can Do It" method
devised by Cuban specialists were acknowledged in
the act of tribute.
For families living in the area these are great
events; and that is what everyone says in their own
way when they are asked. Pedro Calzadilla, a rural
school teacher for 31 years, affirms that to give
people health and education is to offer them
invaluable well-being; without healthy people with
educated minds it is difficult to think about
development and national independence, he says.
Speakers at the event included Alvaro García
Linera, vice president of Bolivia; Osvaldo Peredo (the
brother of Inti and Coco, two valiant fighters in
Che’s guerrilla force); and Julio Montes and Rafael
Dausá, the Venezuelan and Cuban ambassadors in
Bolivia, respectively.
Dausá noted how in less than four months the
Cuban medical brigade has attended more than 600,000
patients, has helped to save more than 1,000 lives
and performed more than 15,000 eye operations. At
the same time, he added, the donation of modern
medical equipment destined for 20 hospitals is
underway, including that belonging to Valle Grande,
a facility reopened with the participation of
President Evo Morales and the Cuban authorities.
A further example of that solidarity are the
120,000-plus men and women who are already
incorporated into classes to learn to write and
write.
The event closed with a cake topped with white
meringue and 78 red candles, which would have been
Che’s age today. People spoke of sadness, of the
intrepid revolutionary and daring thinker who
commanded his men with valor and gallantry until the
last minute.
Not one detail of the crime has been forgotten
but, in the end, those present preferred to sing
Happy Birthday to an Ernesto Guevara whom they feel
is still alive, converted into millions in every
compatriot disposed to fight for the second and
definitive independence of this great homeland that
is Our America.
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