IF Obama was awarded the Prize for winning the
elections in a racist society despite being African-American,
then Evo deserves it for winning in his country
despite being an indigenous man, and moreover for
keeping his promises.
It was the first time in the two countries that
someone from each of their respective ethnic groups
became president.
More than once, I noted that Obama was an
intelligent, educated man in a social and political
system in which he believes. He aspires to extend
health services to almost 50 million U.S. people, to
pull the economy out of the profound crisis it is
experiencing, and to improve the image of the United
States, deteriorated due to its genocidal wars and
torture. He does not conceive of or desire, nor can
he change, his country’s political and economic
system.
The Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to three
U.S. presidents, a former president and a
presidential candidate.
The first was Theodore Roosevelt, elected in
1901, the man of the Rough Riders that landed their
riders – without their horses -- in Cuba for the U.S.
intervention in 1898 to prevent our country’s
independence.
The second was Thomas Woodrow Wilson, who took
the United States into the first war to divvy up the
world. In the Treaty of Versailles, he imposed such
harsh conditions on defeated Germany, that it laid
the foundations for the emergence of fascism and the
breakout of World War II.
The third is Barack Obama.
Carter was the former president who, several
years after ending his mandate, was awarded the
Nobel Prize. Without a doubt, one of the few
presidents of that country incapable of ordering the
assassination of an adversary, as others did; he
returned the Canal to Panama, created the U.S.
Interests Section in Havana, and avoided falling
into large budget deficits or squandering money for
the benefit of the military-industrial complex like
Reagan did.
The candidate was Al Gore when he was already
vice president, the U.S. politician who knew the
most about the terrible consequences of climate
change. He was the victim of electoral fraud when he
was a presidential candidate and had victory
snatched away from him by W. Bush.
Opinions about the awarding of this prize have
been very much divided. Many are based on ethical
concepts or reflect evident contradictions in the
surprising decision.
They would have preferred that prize to be the
fruit of a task fulfilled. The Nobel Peace Prize is
not always awarded to people who deserve that
distinction. Sometimes individuals have received it
who are resentful, arrogant or even worse. Lech
Walesa, upon hearing the news, said disdainfully, "Who,
Obama? It’s too fast. He hasn’t had time to do
anything."
In our press and on CubaDebate, honest and
revolutionary comrades have been critical. One of
them said, "In the same week that Obama was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize, the U.S. Senate passed the
largest military budget in history: $626 billion".
During the television newscast, another journalist
commented, "What has Obama done to achieve such a
distinction?" Others asked, "And what about the war
in Afghanistan and the increase in bombings?" Those
are viewpoints based on reality.
In Rome, the filmmaker Michael Moore made a
lapidary statement: "Congratulations, President
Obama, on the Nobel Peace Prize; now, please, earn
it."
I am sure that Obama would agree with Moore’s
statement. He possesses sufficient intelligence to
understand the circumstances surrounding the case.
He knows that he has not yet earned that prize. That
morning, he stated, "I do not feel that I deserve to
be in the company of so many of the transformative
figures who have been honored by this prize."
It is said that there are five members on the
famous committee that awards the Nobel Peace Prize,
all of them members of the Swedish Parliament. A
spokesperson said that it was unanimous. One
question fits here: did they or did they not consult
the winner? Can a decision of this type be made
without first notifying the winning individual? This
cannot be judged morally in the same way if the
person knew or did not know beforehand about the
awarding of the prize. It is also fitting to affirm
that about those who decided to award it to him.
Perhaps it is necessary to create a Nobel Prize
for Transparency.
Bolivia has major gas and oil deposits and holds
the largest known reserves of lithium, a mineral
greatly needed in our era for storing and using
energy.
Evo Morales, a very poor indigenous farmer,
traveled throughout the Andes, together with his
father, before he was six years old, shepherding the
llamas of an indigenous group. They led them for 15
days to reach the market where they sold them to buy
food for the community. Responding to a question of
mine about that unique experience, Evo told me that
at the time, "they stayed in the 1,000-star hotel,"
a beautiful way of referring to the clear skies of
the mountains where telescopes are sometimes placed.
During those hard years of his childhood, the
alternative for the farmers in the community where
he was born was to cut sugar cane in the Argentine
province of Jujuy, where part of the Aymara
community sometimes took refuge during the sugar
cane harvest.
Not very far from La Higuera, where Che, wounded
and disarmed, was murdered on October 9, 1967, was
Evo, who was born on the 26th of that same month in
1959, not yet 8 years old. He learned to read and
write in Spanish, walking to a little public school
five kilometers from the hut where, in a rustic room,
he lived with his brothers and sisters and parents.
During his eventful childhood, wherever there was
a teacher, Evo was there. From his race, he acquired
three ethical principles: not to lie, not to steal,
and not to be weak.
When he was 13, his father permitted him to move
to San Pedro de Oruro to go to high school. One of
his biographers tells how he was better in geography,
history and philosophy than in physics and
mathematics. The most important thing is that Evo,
to pay for his studies, would wake up at 2 a.m. to
work as a baker, construction worker, or in other
physical labor. He attended classes in the afternoon.
His classmates admired him and helped him. From the
very start, he learned to play wind instruments and
was a trumpet player in a prestigious band in Oruro.
When he was still an adolescent, he organized his
community’s soccer team, and was its captain.
Access to the university was not within his reach,
being an Aymara Indian and poor.
After his last year of high school, he served his
mandatory military term and returned to his
community, located high up in the mountains. Poverty
and natural disasters forced his family to migrate
to the subtropical region of El Chapare, where they
were able to obtain a small land parcel. His father
died in 1983 when he was 23 years old. He worked
hard on the land, but he was a born fighter; he
organized all of the workers, created labor unions
and with them filled the vacuums to which that the
state was not paying attention.
The conditions for a social revolution in Bolivia
had been created over the last 50 years. On April 9,
1952, before the start of our armed struggle, the
revolution broke out in that country with the
Nationalist Revolutionary Movement of Víctor Paz
Estenssoro. The revolutionary miners defeated the
forces of repression and the MNR took power.
Revolutionary objectives in Bolivia were far from
being met. In 1956, according to well-informed
people, the process began to fall apart. On January
1, 1959, the Revolution was victorious in Cuba.
Three years later, in January 1962, our country was
expelled from the OAS. Bolivia abstained. Later, all
of the governments except for Mexico broke off
relations with Cuba.
Divisions in the international revolutionary
movement made themselves felt in Bolivia. Still to
come were 40 years more of blockading Cuba,
neoliberalism and its disastrous consequences, The
Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela and the ALBA;
still to come, above all, were Evo and the MAS in
Bolivia.
It would take to long to sum up that rich history
on a few pages.
All I will say is that Evo was able to overcome
the terrible and slanderous campaigns of imperialism,
its coups d’état and interference in internal
affairs, and to defend Bolivia’s sovereignty and the
right of its millenary people to have respect for
their customs. "Coca is not cocaine," he exclaimed
to the largest marijuana producer and largest
consumer of drugs in the world, whose market has
maintained the organized crime that costs thousands
of lives every year in Mexico. Two of the countries
where the yanki troops and their military
bases are located are the largest producers of drugs
on the planet.
Bolivia, Venezuela and Ecuador are not falling
into the deadly trap of drug trafficking; they are
revolutionary countries that, like Cuba, are members
of the ALBA. They know what they can and should do
to bring health, education and well-being to their
peoples. They do not need foreign troops to combat
drug trafficking.
Bolivia is going forward with a program of its
dreams under the leadership of an Aymara president
who has his people’s support.
In less than three years, he eradicated
illiteracy: 824,101 Bolivians learned to read and
write; 24,699 did so in the Aymara language and
13,599 in Quechua; it is the third country to be
free of illiteracy after Cuba and Venezuela.
Free medical attention is provided to millions of
people who had never received it. It is one of seven
countries in the world that in the last five years
has most reduced its infant mortality rate, with the
possibility of reaching the Millennium Goals before
2015, and it is the same case with maternal deaths,
in a similar proportion. Restorative eye surgery has
been performed on 454,161 people, 75,974 of them
Brazilians, Argentines, Peruvians and Paraguayans.
An ambitious social program has been established
in Bolivia: all of the children in public schools
from first to eighth grade receive an annual
donation to help pay for their school materials,
benefiting almost two million students.
More than 700,000 people over the age of 60
receive a voucher for the equivalent of some $342
annually.
All pregnant women and children under the age of
2 receive assistance of approximately $257.
Bolivia, one of the poorest countries in the
hemisphere, has placed under state control the
country’s principal energy and mineral resources,
respecting and compensating each one of the
interests affected. It marches along carefully,
because it does not wish to retreat a single step.
Its hard currency reserves have been growing. Evo
has no less than three times what the country had at
the beginning of his administration. It is one of
the countries that makes the best use of foreign
cooperation and firmly defends the environment.
In a very short time, he has been able to
establish the Biometric Electoral Register, and
approximately 4.7 million voters have been
registered, almost one million more than on the last
electoral register, which in January 2009 had 3.8
million.
On December 6, there will be elections. It is a
sure thing that the people’s support for their
president will grow. Nothing has been able to stop
his growing prestige and popularity.
Why isn’t he awarded the Nobel Peace Prize?
I understand his big disadvantage: he is not a
U.S. president.

Fidel Castro Ruz
October 15, 2009
4:25 p.m.
Translated by Granma International
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