A Song for Hugo Chavez
Winona LaDuke
March 10, 2013

“Yesterday, the devil came here,”. “Right here. Right here. And it smells of 
sulfur still today…” Mr. Chavez said , in 2009 comments at the United Nations. 
Then Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez made the sign of the cross, 
brought his hands together as if in prayer and glanced toward the 
ceiling.
That is perhaps the most famous quote of a politician opposed to the 
US government, and one reason that Hugo Chavez was disliked by the US 
government. To Chavez , the Devil was George Bush. That’s what you get 
to say, when you are a third world leader who supplies maybe a million 
gallons of crude oil to an oil addicted country every day. You get to 
say anything you want.
I was a great admirer of Hugo Chavez, thankful for his generosity, 
his courage, his leadership, and his commitment to Indigenous peoples.
My first memory of Venezuela, being an American educated child, was 
dim. But, I do remember pictures of Native people in the Venezuelan 
jungle being gunned down, and hanging like deer from trees- the result 
of gold prospecting in their territories. The year was 1977. That is a 
stark image- one where humans are treated like game animals, and I have 
never forgotten it.
So, when the first Indigenous president (Hugo Chavez’ mother was a 
Wayuu Indian woman) came to lead Venezuela, I, like many other Native 
people celebrated our ascension to power and recognition. For the first 
time, we had some basic dignity, and subsequently a vote and inclusion 
in the constitution and a host of cabinet positions.
At age 44, Chavez became the country’s youngest president with 56 
percent of the vote. Chavez’s politic was populist, and that was counter to the 
history of a hundred years of entrenched power, which has so 
dominated Central and South America. I cannot speak to all of that, but I can 
say that when Chavez became president our people began to feel his 
generosity.
Heart to Hearth:
At a 2005 Congressional hearing , oil executives 
were being chastised because corporate earnings were matched with dire 
conditions in many communities. Exxon Mobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, BP
 and Royal Dutch/Shell reported total earnings last quarter of nearly 
$33 billion. In the meantime, many Americans were facing fuel poverty, 
absolute hardship about keeping their houses warm. Twelve U.S. Senators 
asked oil companies to donate some of their record-setting profits to 
people in need.
Citgo was the only company to respond. Citgo Petroleum, joined with 
Citizens Energy under the leadership of Joseph Kennedy and began 
distribution of fuel oil from the Bronx and Brooklyn to the Alaskan Sub 
Arctic. Our reservation was included. Our first year, we received 
roughly $l.7 million in fuel assistance, and this continued for six 
years since. Each year, tribes in northern Minnesota, North Dakota and 
elsewhere have benefitted from the largesse of the Venezuelan government owned 
Citgo Petroleum Corp. As the price of fuel went up, 240 tribal 
communities received hundreds of millions of dollars of fuel assistance 
as fuel prices skyrocketed.
Some politicians encouraged our tribes to turn down the money, but 
Wayne Bonne of the Fond du Lac tribe, commented, "to us, it would be a 
foolish move. We're not a wealthy tribe," Bohn said. "We could make a 
political statement, but making a political statement while your people 
freeze is not very wise."
"The program is not a political program, it is an assistance 
program," the Venezuelan Minister of Petroleum explained. "You don't 
have to be politically loyal to us to be part of this program. "In his 
own country, Chavez’s social programs won him enduring support: Poverty 
rates declined from 50 percent at the beginning of his term in 1999 to 
32 percent in the second half of 2011. But he also charmed his audience 
with charisma and a flair for drama .
He was a king of the stage, and he was a part of changing the terrain of the 
Latin and South American politic- where in the past several 
years, another Indigenous president, Evo Morales of Bolivia has come to 
office. The first woman came to rule Chile Michelle Bachalet ( 
2006-2010, a former political prisoner of the US backed Pinochet 
government).
Venezuela’s oil is still flowing into America, although in part it’s 
rumored that the push for the Canadian tar sands is based on political 
disinterest in getting oil from Latin American leftwing political 
leaders. In his life and in his passing, I remember Hugo Chavez as a 
brave and generous man to Native and poor people.
I never had a chance to meet President Chavez, but I certainly benefited from 
his life and his example.
Follow Winona LaDuke at News From Winona LaDuke. 

Read more at 
http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/opinion/song-hugo-chavez-148092

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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