Raúl leads
National Day of Rebellion commemoration
We have arrived thus far thanks to
the unity of the people and their confidence in the
Revolution, said Comandante de la Revolución Ramiro
Valdés, July 26 in Artemisa
President
Raúl Castro led the event commemorating the 61st
anniversary of the assaults on the Moncada and
Carlos Manuel de Céspedes Garrisons, July 26,
National Day of Rebellion, held in the provincial
capital of Artemisa, west of Havana.
The Cuban people’s determination to
guarantee the continuity of the Revolution and
socialism was emphasized by Comandante de la
Revolución Ramiro Valdés Menéndez – a participant in
the historic 1953 assaults led by Fidel against the
Batista dictatorship – who presented the principal
remarks at the national celebration.
We have no alternative other than
continuing to struggle every day for the homeland,
the Revolution, and socialism, said Valdés, also a
vice president of the Councils of State and
Ministers.
Recalling the painful economic,
political and social situation facing Cubans before
1959, Valdés added that this reality led to the
decision made in 1953 by young followers of Fidel to
fight, and undertake the two assaults on garrisons
in the former eastern province of Oriente.
Emphasizing that the Cuban people
have overcome enormous obstacles and adversities,
the decorated Hero of the Republic insisted that the
revolutionary project has come thus far "thanks to
the unity of the entire people and their confidence
in this process."
He said that when the group of 28
young revolutionaries, of which he was a part, left
Artemisa to join the attack on the Moncada, no one
was thinking they would be around 61 years later,
but rather in José Marti’s words, "The true man does
not look to see on which side one lives better, but
on which side duty lies."
Commenting on progress in the new province where the
July 26th national commemoration took place, Valdés
highlighted experiments underway in government
organization and the distribution of agricultural
products, among other efforts.
Valdés emphasized that the location
within the province of the Mariel Special
Development Zone (ZEDM) presents both great
challenges and opportunities, adding that the
development of a prosperous and sustainable
socialist society depends on the efforts of all, as
has been indicated in the Economic and Social Policy
Guidelines adopted by the 6th Congress of the Party.
In addition to President Raúl Castro, also in
attendance at the event were José Ramón Machado
Ventura, second secretary of the Communist Party of
Cuba’s Central Committee and a vice president of the
Councils of State and Ministers; and Miguel Díaz-Canel,
member of the Party’s Political Bureau and First
Vice President of the Councils of State and
Ministers.
Also speaking during the
commemoration was José Antonio Valeriano, provincial
Party secretary, who emphasized that Artemisa is
being transformed, and is today the land of the
future and high hopes.
He recalled that the province has
been blessed with Mariel’s deep bay, where the
coming and going of ships of all kinds has begun,
reporting that, in this first phase, more than 1,500
workers are already employed at the site, making an
important contribution to the sustainability of
Cuban trade.
Valeriano emphasized progress being
made in the implementation of experimental
management models in Artemisa and Mayabeque, an
experience which will serve to guide change in other
parts of the country.
Wendy Ferrer, a 6th Grade student at
Carlos Rodríguez Elementary, thanked the Moncada
combatants in attendance for having turned garrisons
into schools, recalling that sixty years ago,
undernourished children with no schools were common
in Artemisa. Now, she said, students are educated
without discrimination based on class, race or
religious belief; necessary materials for art and
sports classes are made available; and values are
emphasized.
Some 8,000 Artemisians representing
the new province’s population attended the event at
the Martyrs’ Mausoleum, along with other leaders and
guests; veteran combatants of the Revolution and
Granma expeditionaries; members of international
solidarity brigades; and both René González and
Fernando González, released members of the Cuban
Five, anti-terrorists unjustly imprisoned in the
United States.