http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37550

CUBA:
Twenty Years with God and the Revolution
Dalia Acosta

HAVANA, Apr 30 (IPS) - Close to one of the busiest crossroads in the Cuban 
capital, but peaceful nonetheless, the non-governmental Dr. Martin Luther King 
Jr. Memorial Centre (CMLK) has been active in Cuban society for two decades, 
working for a more participative social system. 

According to its own definition, the Centre is "a Christian-inspired 
organisation engaged in inter-faith dialogue, which works prophetically and in 
solidarity with the Cuban people and its churches, on training and education to 
promote informed, organised and critical popular participation to bring about 
social justice." 

"Out of commitment to the Cuban Revolution's socialist project, and out of 
religious conviction, we take our stance looking towards the South, because the 
South is where the Good News is happening, the South is where the poor are," 
said Reverend Raúl Suárez, head of CMLK, at last week's celebrations of the 
20th anniversary of its foundation. 

Suárez, pastor of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in the Havana district of 
Marianao, was a prominent agent in the foundation of the Centre, which was 
created as a means of incorporating his Christian congregation into action for 
"building a fraternal society." 

He is also a parliamentary deputy, and says he is a "firm believer in the 
revolution." He has been criticised by Cuban spokesmen for the Roman Catholic 
Church for what they described as his "complete submission to the Castro 
regime." 

The CMLK, named in honour of the legendary U.S. civil rights leader, runs four 
main programmes: participative popular communication; pastoral and 
socio-theological reflection and training; popular education in support of 
local groups; and a solidarity action programme. 

The popular communication programme teaches the alternative forms of 
communication needed by the other programmes. It also tries to bring its 
influence to bear on cultural and academic circles in Cuba, and to strengthen 
communication skills among Latin American social movements. 

To further these ends, it publishes the magazine Caminos, a forum for Cuban 
socio-theological thought, and a bulletin in print and digital formats with 
updated information on the Centre's work. It houses Caminos, a publisher, and 
an audiovisual production unit of the same name, as well as the Paulo Freire 
information and documentation service. 

The goal of the socio-theological and pastoral training programme is preparing 
young leaders for the Cuban churches. It encourages social commitment and 
responsibility from the religious perspective. 

Founded Apr. 25, 1987, the CMLK originally adopted Brazilian pedagogue and 
philosopher Paulo Freire's (1921-1997) ideas about popular education, developed 
in the 1960s. Although at first the Cuban authorities were wary of these ideas, 
they were actually a means of furthering the cultural transformations 
engendered by the Cuban Revolution. 

Popular education is "profoundly anti-capitalist, anti-hegemonic, and critical 
of Western culture that takes it for granted that some social groups are 
naturally dominated by others," the programme coordinator, María Isabel Romero, 
told IPS. 

Romero said that these relations of domination are seen in such everyday 
contexts as the family, the school, or relationships between men and women, all 
of which to a greater or lesser extent are characterised by asymmetrical, and 
not infrequently authoritarian, uses of power. 

"Popular education brings about a change in individuals' visions and 
conceptions which is reflected in their social practices," said Romero, who 
gave as examples of these transformations "learning to listen, to work in 
groups, to construct proposals in a collective way, to communicate as equals -- 
in brief, to enter into dialogue." 

The CMLK regularly offers training workshops on the theory and practice of 
popular education, on its own premises or as distance learning courses. It also 
advises community work projects and similar schemes that are working to support 
field workers, social participation and grassroots empowerment. 

By working together with the CMLK in popular education, the department of 
agricultural extension at the Agrarian University of Havana understood that it 
should incorporate participative principles in the training of agronomists and 
other agricultural extension workers and experts, and as a result, the 
curriculum and the basic tenets of agricultural extension work have been 
reformed. 

So now the knowledge already possessed by small farmers is taken into account 
before technical innovations are introduced, Communications Professor Julia 
María Fernández told IPS. 

The governmental Local Development Centre is another example of an organisation 
that has established close contacts between academia and grassroots sectors. In 
this case, popular education methods and principles are being incorporated into 
the activities of municipal governments, especially in Jatibonico, about 360 
kilometres east of Havana. 

"This has been an uphill struggle, because we live in a society which, like 
nearly every other society in the world, has an ingrained culture of 
domination," said engineer Humberto Pomares, an expert with the Local 
Development Centre. 

"Although in Cuba there is plenty of revolutionary rhetoric, the methods and 
customs of domination are still maintained," he said. 

"There is an abundance of prejudices to deal with when people start thinking 
and discussing about power, because there is a belief that changing the styles 
of leadership, or distributing power, weakens the revolutionary process," he 
said. 

The CMLK's solidarity programme, which is linked to social organisations in the 
United States and other countries, has been hit hard by the restrictions on 
visiting Cuba imposed in 2004 by the George W. Bush administration. Exchange 
visits with groups from the U.S. have dropped sharply since then. 

However, the work with church groups in the U.S. has been very useful, as "the 
programme was able to transmit another view of Cuban and Latin American 
reality," said Ariel Dacal of the CMLK. 

The CMLK participates actively in the annual World Social Forums, the 
Hemispheric Meetings of Struggle Against Free Trade Agreements and for the 
Integration of Peoples, and in campaigns against militarisation and 
indebtedness in poor countries. 

In Dacal's view, it would have been impossible to express solidarity in these 
ways if the Centre that was started 20 years ago in a small church in Havana 
"had not transcended its own limits and gone beyond the borders of Cuba." 

The CMLK was awarded the Alejo Carpentier medal by Cuba's Council of State, in 
recognition of its work over two decades. (END/2007) 

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



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