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Reflections of Fidel
What Obama knows
(Taken from Cubadebate)
The most demolishing article I have seen recently
about Latin America was written by Renán Vega
Cantor, professor at the National Pedagogical
University of Bogotá, which was published three days
ago by the website ‘Rebelión’ under the title "Ecos
de la Cumbre de las Américas" (Echoes of the Summit
of the Americas).
It is a brief article and I won’t offer a summary.
Those who specialize in the subject can look it up
at the aforementioned website.
I have referred more than once to the infamous
agreement that the United States imposed on Latin
American and Caribbean countries when the OAS was
founded at the foreign ministers meeting held in the
city of Bogotá in April, 1948. Just by sheer
coincidence, I happened to be there on that date,
helping to organize the celebration of a Latin
American students’ congress which had as its main
goal to struggle against the European colonizers and
the bloody dictatorships imposed by the United
States in this hemisphere.
One of the most brilliant political leaders in
Colombia, Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, who had managed to
unite, with ever growing strength, the most
progressive sectors in Colombia that opposed the
Yankees’ creation, had offered his support to the
celebration of the students’ congress. No one
doubted he would win during the upcoming elections,
but he was treacherously murdered. His death led to
a rebellion that has persisted for more than half a
century.
Social struggles have been taking place
throughout millennia, since human beings, by
resorting to wars, were able to harness surplus
production to satisfy the essential needs of life.
As is known, the years of physical slavery, the
most brutal form of exploitation, lasted in some
countries until a little more than a century ago, as
it happened in our own homeland during the final
stages of the Spanish colonial domination.
Even in the United States, the enslavement of
African descendants continued until the presidency
of Abraham Lincoln. That brutal form of slavery was
abolished there barely thirty years before it was
abolished in Cuba.
Martin Luther King dreamed of the equality of
Black Americans until almost 44 years ago, when he
was vilely murdered on April, 1968.
The accelerated development of science and
technology have characterized our times. Whether we
are aware of it or not, this is what will shape the
future of humanity. This is an entirely new era.
What prevails in every corner of this globalized
world is the real struggle of our species for its
own survival.
As for now, all Latin American nations,
particularly our own, will be affected by the
process that is taking place in Venezuela, the home
country of the Liberator of the Americas.
I barely need to reiterate what you already know:
the close links that exist between our people and
the people of Venezuela and Hugo Chávez, the
promoter of the Bolivarian Revolution and the United
Socialist Party he founded.
One of the first actions promoted by the
Bolivarian Revolution was the medical cooperation
with Cuba. This is an area where our country has
achieved a special prestige, which has been
recognized nowadays by the international public
opinion. Thousands of health centers, equipped with
state-of-the-art technology manufactured by the
world’s specialized industry, have been founded by
the Bolivarian government to provide medical
assistance to its people. Chávez, for his part, did
not choose to go to expensive private clinics to
care for his own health. He trusted it to the same
medical services he was offering his people.
Moreover, our doctors have devoted part of their
time to the training of Venezuelan doctors in
classrooms that have been properly equipped by the
Venezuelan government. The people of Venezuela,
regardless of their personal incomes, began to
receive the specialized services offered by our
doctors. It is now among the best in the world and
health standards have obviously begun to improve.
President Obama knows this only too well and has
talked about it with some of his visitors. He
candidly told one of them: "The problem is that the
United States sends soldiers while Cuba sends
doctors".
Chávez, a leader who has not had a minute of rest
in the last twelve years and enjoyed an iron
constitution, was, however, affected by an
unexpected illness that was discovered and treated
by the same specialized staff that usually assisted
him. It was not easy to persuade him of the need to
pay maximum attention to his own health. Since that
moment, with an exemplary behavior, he has
rigorously followed the treatment prescribed without
neglecting his duties as Head of State and leader of
his country.
I would dare to describe his attitude as heroic
and disciplined. Not even for a single minute does
he forget about his obligations; at times he does
that to the point of exhaustion. I can attest to
that because I have not ceased to be in touch and
converse with him. He has not stopped devoting his
fertile intelligence to the study and analysis of
the problems of his country. He finds the vile
remarks and slanders of the spokespersons of the
oligarchy and the empire amusing. I never heard him
utter an insult or vile remark when referring to his
enemies. That is not his kind of language.
The enemy knows his character and is multiplying
its efforts with the purpose of slandering and
attacking President Chávez. I, for one, do not
hesitate in stating my modest opinion –which
emanates from more than half a century of struggle -
that the oligarchy will never again be able to
govern that country. That is the reason why the U.S.
government’s decision to promote the overthrow of
the Bolivarian government under such circumstances
becomes a source of concern.
Moreover, to insist on a slanderous campaign
stating that among the top leadership of the
Bolivarian government there is a desperate quarrel
to assume command of the revolutionary government if
the President is not able to overcome his illness,
is tantamount to constructing a crude lie.
On the contrary, I have been able to see the
closest unity among the leaders of the Bolivarian
Revolution.
Under such circumstances, any mistake made by
Obama could provoke rivers of blood in Venezuela.
The Venezuelan blood is also Ecuadorian, Brazilian,
Argentinean, Bolivian, Chilean, Uruguayan, Central
American, Dominican and Cuban blood.
It is necessary to bear in mind this reality when
analyzing the political situation in Venezuela.
Is it now understood why the workers’ anthem is a
call to change the world by doing away with the
bourgeois empire?

Fidel Castro Ruz
April 27, 2012
7:59 p.m.
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Reflections
of Fidel
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