GRANMA INTERNATIONAL
Havana.  January 9, 2009

http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2009/enero/vier9/Speech-Rafael-Correa.html


SPANISH ORIGINAL:
http://www.granma.cubaweb.cu/2009/01/09/nacional/artic10.html 

This marvelous people, the Cuban people, a heroic people, has taught
the
world that Revolution has a destiny

Speech by His Excellency Mr. Rafael Correa Delgado, president of the
Republic of Ecuador, at the commemoration event for the 50th
anniversary of
the entry of Commander in Chief Fidel Castro into Havana, at Ciudad
Libertad, January 8, 2009

Dear Comandante,

President Raúl Castro Ruz, I expect that compañero Fidel is watching us
and
so an immense Latin American and solidarity-filled embrace for him
(Applause)

Dear commanders, combatants of this heroic gesture: the Cuban
Revolution,
the liberation of Cuba, the most significant milestone in the history
of
Latin America in the 20th century and an example for the entire world;

Dear officials of the Cuban government;

Ministers and officials from the Ecuadorian government who are
accompanying
me on this visit;

Representatives of the media;

Dear sisters and brothers from Cuba, Ecuador, Latin America and the
rest of
the world, for each and every one of you, a warm embrace (Applause):

Today, January 8, 2009, when - at the invitation of the Cuban
Revolution -
we are here representing the Ecuadorian people and their Citizen’s
Revolution, it is worth asking the question: When did the Cuban
Revolution
begin?

Perhaps on July 26, 1953, when Fidel, leading the Centenary
Generation,
etched the name of the Moncada Garrison into history?

Maybe it was on November 25, 1956 when the Granma set sail from
Veracruz
carrying 82 guerrillas?

Or perhaps it was long before that, in the early hours of April 11,
1895,
when José Martí and his group of compatriots disembarked at Playitas
de
Cajobabo in order to begin the Necessary War and bring the yoke of
Spanish
colonialism to an end?

Perhaps it would be better to think that this Revolution, the hope and
fate
of Our America, began in the struggles against colonialism, alongside
the
major reference of our emancipatory vocation, symbolized by the
Liberator
Simón Bolívar.

Because Manuela Sáenz and Antonio José de Sucre; José Martí and
Emiliano
Zapata; Eloy Alfaro and Augusto César Sandino; Manuel Rodríguez and
José
Carlos Mariátegui; Antonio Maceo and Máximo Gómez, and all the
compatriots
of the continent devoted their lives to the liberation of our Great
Homeland
harbored by the image and flag of Bolívar.

We should acknowledge then, that the Revolution began when Fidel
Raúl, Che,
Haydée, Camilo, and the Cuban revolutionaries followed the path and
the
profound footprints of a historic struggle.

Following in these footprints meant and continues to mean, at whatever
moment in time, being honest, being transparent and always telling the
truth, just as the Liberator did when he said:

"Blessed is he who, running between the obstacles of war, politics and
public misfortunes, preserves his honor intact."

Fifty years ago, in this very same place, Fidel said:

"I believe that this is a decisive moment in our history: the
dictatorship
has been defeated. The joy is immense. But there is still much to be
done.
Let us not deceive ourselves by believing that everything will be much
easier from now on; the future will perhaps be much more difficult."

"Telling the truth is the first duty of every revolutionary," stated
Fidel.
"Deceiving the people, stirring up deceptive illusions will always
bring the
worst consequences, and I believe that we have to warn people against
excessive optimism.

"How did the Rebel Army win the war? By speaking the truth. How did
the
dictatorship lose it? By lying to the soldiers.

(
) "And for this reason, I want to begin - or rather, continue - with
the
same system: always telling the truth to the people," stated Fidel, in
this
very same place, exactly fifty years ago.

This ethical torch, and the greatest devotion to the legitimate
aspirations
of the peoples of Cuba and Latin America has permitted this Revolution
to
remain in force, with pride and dignity, in the defense of the most
prized
assets pursued by the people: freedom and sovereignty.

This marvelous people, the Cuban people, a heroic people, has taught
the
world that Revolution has a destiny. That it is a process of the
spirit,
that it is forged by human spirit and that, once underway, there is no
power
that is capable of stopping it, however powerful it believes itself to
be.

Today, fifty years later, that distant January 1, 1959, or that January
8
half a century ago, are already glorious dates for every revolutionary
movement around the world. But they would not be if the movement that
culminated in it had been conceived simply as the climax of the
insurrection
against injustice, despotism and corruption.

The fight against that injustice, that despotism and against corruption
is
an eternal one, and will never end.

It is for this reason that the January 1st and 8th of 50 years ago are
glorious
And they are majestic, because from that moment onward, the Cuban
people have taught the world that a revolution is constructed from the
dawn
of every day, and also, based on the teaching left to us by every
error
made.

This process is exemplary because it was capable of achieving real
national
independence, freedom, sovereignty and the self-determination of the
Cuban
people.

This process is extraordinary because it secured the reestablishment
of
human rights for all Cuban men and women. It is the recognition that
the
first constitutional right of all human beings is their full dignity.
The
Cuban Revolution made real the declaration of its leaders: the Cuban
people
know that no compatriot will be left to his or her own fate under any
circumstance whatsoever.

The Cuban Revolution has no skeletons hidden in the closet of its
history,
and has never practiced torture or "disappearances."

The Cuban Revolution has eliminated racial and gender discrimination,
and at
the same time has defended the rights of children and the widespread
protection of the rights of the Cuban family.

Cuba’s declaration in 1961 as the First Illiteracy-Free Territory in
America
continues to be an example for our peoples, and that same conviction
transformed garrisons into schools, and told the Cuban people: "Read,
don’t
just believe", thus democratizing access to the world of the written
word
and its phantoms.

Cuba increased by more than eleven times the number of doctors it
possessed.





This message has been scanned for malware by SurfControl plc. 
www.surfcontrol.com

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to