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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: NN,Letter from Nacho del Valle, Sentenced to 67 Years in Prison,May 07
Date: Tue, 8 May 2007 19:18:59 +0200

Who Can Imprison the Fury of a Volcano?
Letter from Nacho del Valle, Sentenced to 67 Years in Prison, from "the La
Palma Extermination Camp" in Mexico
http://www.narconews.com/Issue45/article2651.html



By Ignacio del Valle
Peoples Front for the Defense of the Land, Atenco, Mexico
May 7, 2007

Introduction: Brief Synopsis of the Struggles in Atenco


One year after the brutal police attack against the town of San Salvador
Atenco in Mexico, sentences of 67 years were handed down to three leaders of
the People's Front in Defense of the Land (FPDT), Ignacio Del Valle, Felipe
Alvarez, and Hector Galindo in retaliation for the town's effective
resistance to the expropriation of its lands for the purpose of building a
regional airport.

On May 3 and 4, 2006, two young boys were killed in Atenco and Texcoco and
207 people imprisoned, most of whom were subjected to cruel tortures
including the rape of 26 women on a 6-hour bus ride, yet not one police
murderer or torturer has been brought to justice. All year long, 28 people
have been in prison, never having been released on bail, and 172 still face
charges (most of them for blocking a highway and 26 for kidnapping).

The three FPDT leaders were tried and condemned for the offense of
kidnapping, a highly exaggerated charge having to do with the detention of
public officials for short periods of time in February and April of 2006.
The three men still face other charges related to the events of May 3 and 4.

During a week of demonstrations in support of the prisoners, two of which
were headed up by Subcomandante Marcos and members of the Sixth Commission
of the Other Campaign, several messages from prisoners were read, including
the following letter from Ignacio Del Valle.



Letter from Ignacio del Valle from the La Palma extermination camp
May 4, 2007

To all my brothers, sisters, and comrades: From the bottom of our hearts I
send you greetings and a warm hug, wishing you serenity of heart and harmony
of action, always following the same star, the route that leads us to our
long-cherished dream, a dream that we together will make real though we may
travel a path of pain and rage.

I know that everyone who should be present is present: those of you who have
taken into yourselves our pain, our rage, our impotence, our cry, those of
you who have always been there in silence, withstanding, resisting, walking,
constructing the paths that await our footsteps, setting out in unity
towards horizons that our grandparents have forged with suffering and death,
without selling out, without being broken, bearing up, brandishing in your
fists a thousand futures like flags waving in new dawns of hope.

A year ago today the beast attacked us, wounding our most sacred sentiments
in the vilest, most cowardly way, leaving a deep wound that makes us tremble
with rage, one we will never forget, one that makes us redouble our efforts
to stay on the march, never turning back. Though the road may be slow,
torturous and fraught with dangers that threaten us unceasingly, we won't
stop. We are a stream, and at the call of the rains we'll join forces with
others in a mighty flow to drown the beast, with a roar that will break the
bars imprisoning our most sublime dreams of justice and freedom.

To all of you we send our gratitude flowing from feelings that have survived
the brutal attack that filled our souls and our flesh with wounds, fear and
pain. In the face of the drama of repression and the rabid attack against
our people, how could we forget your unflinching comradeship and the blood
you shed when we dared to say "enough is enough"! From you no handouts or
lies of goodwill and mercy! What should we make of "goodwill" when they
exploit, humiliate, and murder us in the name of the law and take away the
creative force with which our hands shape matter, bringing life to it? What
should we make of "justice" when they denigrate our struggle by outrageously
casting us in the role of criminals? And then, faced with our town's demand
for justice, they pose as victims! They use the most perverse measures to
impose repressive conditions, instilling fear to teach people a lesson.

But in spite of all this, the beast has made another blunder. Who can
imprison the fury of a volcano, the silence of centuries that explodes in
rage and pain? Who has ever imprisoned all the wings of liberty that fly
like shining lights, breaking through the fog that traps our dreams? Who has
ever imprisoned the light that projects our yearnings, that flashes as a
wake-up call and guides us on our march towards horizons of justice and
freedom? Who can stop the march of your footsteps?

To all our brothers and sisters, I reiterate our recognition, our respect
for you as human beings, and our gratitude for your revolutionary
solidarity.

For collectives, for organizations large or small of all sectors,
neighborhoods, students, farmers, indigenous brothers and sisters, whether
from the cities, the country, or the mountains--the struggle continues.

Prison degrades but it doesn't kill; the person who dies is the one who gets
broken, the one who gives up.

>From La Palma extermination camp, IGNACIO DEL VALLE , Peoples Front in
Defense of the Land.


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