http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/03/nicolas-maduro-on-the-legacy-of-comandante-chavez.html

Nicolás Maduro on the legacy of Comandante
Chávez<http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/03/nicolas-maduro-on-the-legacy-of-comandante-chavez.html>March
26, 2013 — Sabina Becker

[image: maduro-panorama]

The current (and sure to be future) president of Venezuela recently gave an
interview <http://www.aporrea.org/actualidad/n225643.html> to the
Venezuelan newspaper, Panorama, and shared some remarkable insights into
Chavecito’s illness, his last days, and the extensive preparations that lay
behind it all:

*When Nicolás Maduro talks about President Chávez his face changes, his
eyes too, he swallows hard at times, like a son when talking about a father
who is no longer there.*
*

“Aren’t there risks of fractures within the PSUV to guarantee this triumph
you speak of?”

We are in the best moment for motivation, commitment to the ideas of
President Chávez, unity amongst ourselves on the politico-military team
directing the revolution, among the most distinguished and recognized
sectors of the revolution, we have a brotherly relationship.

The blow of losing President Chávez has been terrible, tragic. I,
personally, when I wake up in the mornings, I look at the ceiling and think
of him, because every morning I got up with the day’s agenda and that was
to call him. It’s incredible because he’s not there anymore physically, but
that has motivated us a lot in taking on our responsibilities. It’s not
easy, because in effect Chávez is a giant and we are ordinary, common,
run-of-the-mill people. The only thing that can fill the giant space of
Chávez is the people, the other giant. There are those two giants and us,
the articulators of the process which is complex but which will work out
well.

What our people did 200 years ago is hard to find in the universal history
of humanity. President Chávez reawakened it. I remember once, in Lisbon,
Portugal, when we were talking about this subject, because we were
travelling a lengthy road and he said to me: “Nicolás, what happened is
that our people have always had in their genes the glory of the liberators.
No one could take it from them, and that glory was only waiting for someone
to press a button.” It’s like pressing a button for the genes to activate
once more. He pressed the button of the liberatory genes of the Venezuelan
people and that button made it possible to build all the consciousness on
which this revolutionary process rests.

“There are radicalisms on both sides, especially in Chavismo now. There is
so much emotion. It’s a moment that demands responsibility from political
actors. What will be your quota of responsibility?”

Everything, and we’ve already demonstrated it. Remember, since the day the
president was operated, on December 11, we started. Review all the videos.
Between Ernesto [Villegas] and myself, who were the official spokespeople,
we started by sending a message of peace. We knew it was in the hearts of
the people and we knew that the irresponsibility of the opposition, of some
of its spokespeople, joking about the president’s illness, prognosticating
and making fun of the possible death of the president, could have provoked
in Venezuela a “Bogotazo”, a “Gaitanazo”. We faced that possibility every
day, and we came out to tell the people and the Bolivarian National armed
forces: peace, peace, peace.

That day, March 5, we held a meeting because the doctors had told us that
his symptoms were grave. That had already happened in December and January
as well, and the Comandante had always overcome those symptoms but this
time the doctors told us: “It’s a special situation now”. We ourselves had
always believed and prayed to God that he would recover again, because
weeks before we had seen him in good spirits. We took precautions, we met
with the Military High Command, the entire political-military directorate
of the revolution met and we said: “All right, we have to prepare.” If it
happened, we would have to deploy all the Armed Forces, all the directors
of the revolution in all the states of Venezuela, to talk to the people and
make sure that they, in their grief, would not fall into frustration and a
desire for revenge. We were very close to that happening.

On March 5, at 5:15 in the afternoon, I gave the news, that sad and painful
news. I almost lost my voice, and when I was done telling the first part, I
heard a cry, a scream, and I was afraid. I thought: The violence is
exploding, the people’s anger. Fortunately, it was only a cry of grief.

For that reason, when that gentleman candidate of the opposition, whom I’ve
called the Pharisee of the hour, the Pontius Pilate of the hour, started to
mess with the President, we were in full mourning, holding a wake over the
body of the Comandante, Hugo Chávez, and he started talking insanities
about the day of the Comandante’s death, meddling with his family, with the
honor of our Comandante, with the moral purity of Hugo Chávez, I left
immediately. If I had stayed one hour longer on Sunday night without
leaving, violence could have broken out on the spot.

“You were one of the people closest to Chávez from June 11, 2011 (when he
announced his first operation) to March 5, 2013. Looking back on his
illness, what was the hardest part? Did you prepare mentally for these
challenges? How was thhat year and a half with the president ill?”

The spirit and strength of the president at all times was impressive. He
underwent some very deep, hard operations, and he always recovered quickly
and with great strength. Fundamentally, through his will to live, an
energy, a call to life. When he went for chemotherapy, there were five
sessions, the first three in Havana, one here in the Military Hospital, and
the last once again in Havana. I recall that he called me at 6:00 in the
morning, and told me: “Come here”. I arrived at 7:00 and he was in the
middle of chemo, which was administered via saline solution, and we stayed
nearly till 10 o’clock that night without resting. Around 2:00 in the
afternoon he had lunch and rested half an hour, then immediately we started
talking, reading, studying. I telephoned Caracas, to give orders, then
passed on some messages to him. He got busy painting; he painted a portrait
of Néstor Kirchner, a picture of the Moncada Barracks, and one of the
Cuartel de la Montaña, where he is now.

Later came the other big blow, in February. We saw he was so strong that no
one could have imagined that there had been another recurrence. He had
talked for nearly 10 hours in the National Assembly, I believe on the 15th
of January. They operated on him and that week we were doing a program in
the room right next to his, live. And another, and another, and another.

Then came the radiotherapy, and that was very hard. It was the hardest
moment, very hard, but he was undaunted. He completed the radiotherapy,
they did tests and he was fine, perfect, and June 11, a year after the
first operation, he signed on as a candidate. The campaign was intense,
clearly, as he said, he went into the ring with his hands tied, that’s why
he campaigned like a machine.

The elections happened, a great triumph and, immediately, maybe because of
the sudden drop in adrenaline after the election fight, he started to feel
a lot of pain.

Every time we talked, he was in a lot of pain. That was a second hard time,
after the radiotherapy, after the elections. Because of the pains, he
decided to undergo hyperbaric oxygen chamber therapy. Sadly, in the middle
of that treatment, they examined him, and found, in the same place, a
recurrence.

I remember that on Sunday, December 2, I haven’t told this before, he
called me. I was in the National Pantheon conducting an inspection of the
repairs to the Pantheon, etcetera, for the ceremony on December 17, hoping
that he would be done his treatment and coming back. In the afternoon I got
the call and he told me, “There are complications.” Well, that was a
tremendous blow, and he asked me to assemble a commission. There were
Diosdado [Cabello], Rafael Ramírez, Cilia [Flores, Maduro's wife], and
Jorge Arreaza, and I told them what the experts had found. He always asked
for all the details from the doctors, he had the intuition that he would
not come out from the operation.

Whenn they told me upon his return that he’d had that intuition, I was
almost certain that he would not be wrong and, well, I cried for a long
time one morning because I knew it would be that way.

He called me and I went on December 5 to talk, from 10 at night to 6 in the
morning, we talked a lot. He would never have told me this, that if he were
to die, or something would happen to incapacitate him, I would take the
reins of the revolution, that I would assume the presidency and the
possibility of a candidacy. He called me in to tell me this personally,
during more than six hours of conversation, in the early morning of
December 6, in Cuba.

Then we left, in separate airplanes, I arrived first, and he arrived later.
He told me: “I’ve decided, and I told the doctors to guarantee it because
they wanted to operate on me right away, that I could come back to talk to
the people, to tell them all these things. He told only a small part,
barely what he wanted to say, because we recommended it, I said,
“President, don’t tell this to the people,” and he told me: “It’s my
historic responsibility, it’s the least I can do.”

On December 7, we met again, and on the 8th he said what he said. He went,
the operation was very hard, as you know, and later came the worst part of
all he had lived through. Nearly 90 days of ups and downs, sometimes more
downs than ups, of grave situations, managed scientifically and medically
the perfect way, correctly. In that moment, all the people who supported us
in the world knew that he was in the hands of the best doctors and
scientists in the fight against cancer that Cuba had taught, but with the
help of many scientist from all over the world.

On December 30, when I read the communiqué, he almost left us, he was very
close to it. Suddenly, in January, he miraculously recovered. Until the
very last day he wanted to live and believed he would go on living, and
gave orders up to the end. That spirit is an immortal spirit, really, and
the recognition, the homage the people of Venezuela paid, has been
extraordinary. The opinion polls say 70, 80% of Venezuelans recognize that
Hugo Chávez has made history i our country. And now it’s up to us, he
fought his battle up to the last second, he left a mission yet to be
finished. Now it’s up to me to complete this mission as President of the
Republic, it’s up to all of us who loved him, this country, to complete
that mission.

“And what did you feel about witnessing that?”

It’s a very hard responsibility.

“Were you afraid?”

No. I’m not afraid. The only fear I could have is of failing, but I sense
that I’m not going to fail. I’ve come to think that President Chávez
prepared me for this. I didn’t know it, but he was preparing me, and I
won’t speak individually, he was preparing us to be a cohesive team: Rafael
Ramírez, Diosdado, Cilia, all of the Armed Forces, the military chiefs of
the High Command, all the young militaries who rose to all the ranks, the
PSUV, the Great Patriotic Pole — Comandante Chávez did what was impossible
for Bolívar to do. The Liberator could not prepare the country for life
after his death. He couldn’t. First they killed Sucre, who was like his
son, and who was going to be his political and military heir; then everyone
betrayed him — Juan José Flores in Quito, Santander in Bogotá, Páez in
Valencia. Urdaneta was the most loyal of the loyal, and he would have been
president, had Bolívar lived after 1830 it’s for certain that Urdaneta
would have been his new Sucre.

Comandante Chávez believed he would live a while longer, and be at the head
of the nation. As well, he believed he would be at the head of the nation
without being president of the Republic. He came to think that at a given
time, he would do what Fidel has done, and direct with his authority and
gigantic morality the new phase of the revolution, and prepare for his
departure, but, well, he couldn’t get to that point. He called that the
third scenario.

He left us prepared with the Constitution as of 1999, he left us his
political testament, it’s an extraordinary document to study, he left us
precise orders for the work teams, he left the will in my hand, which is
not the hand of just one man, or just one human being. I don’t know why he
made that decision, I never asked him, my voice wouldn’t come out, it
wasn’t pertinent to do so, it never occurred to me to do so. But, well, I
took the will of President Chávez, which is a collective will, my hand is
that of millions, of a team. He left a prepared team, which is the one we
call the politico-military directorate of the revolution, the political
high command, the Government, the governors, the Great Patriotic Pole, the
Military High command, and our Armed Forces on the whole.

When has this country ever had so much strength? Never, ever. He also left
the country’s finances organized, the funds, the income, now everything’s
transparent, so now we have no more excuses for failure. We’re prepared for
a victory, it’s what I feel in the streets…
*

*In Venezuela I saw an effervescence, I lived it, what I’m seeing now in
the streets is the highest level of popular effervescence since 1994. I can
only compare it with 1994 and 2006, two peak moments in the mythical and
historical leadership of Comandante Chávez. The people are converting their
pain and their feelings of having lost their father, their orphanhood, into
fervor. I have no vanity of any kind, my ego doesn’t exist, I know these
displays of love are not for me, they’re for Chávez. The people look at me
and say “We’re voting for you for Chávez, for Chávez’s sake we’re voting
for you…” We can’t fail, I’m sure we are going to win by more than 10
million votes, the only thing left is what the people will give us on April
14.*

Translation mine.

So that was what Chavecito meant when he said “Viviremos y venceremos” (“We
will live, and we will conquer”). It was no empty slogan; neither was it
entirely literal (although Chavecito *did* expect to live and overcome the
cancer, at least until things got really bad!) Nor was it limited to
himself alone. He used the first person plural, meaning, as I understand
it, that he meant to live on with and among the people of Venezuela, like
Fidel in Cuba. Sadly, it didn’t work out that way. But he still lives on
WITHIN them — which, while sad in the here and now, as a nation grieves
(and so does the world!), is also going to be their greatest strength in
due course.

As I wrote on the day he died, he is now beyond reach of his enemies. They
can try to smear his memory, sure, but they can’t rub him off the page of
history. His mark is already indelible, and it refuses to be so much as
blurred. And the empire that tried to kill him, can’t do it anymore.

And even if they did, and succeeded, with bioweapons such as a souped-up
cancer virus or pneumonial bacterium — a theory which, at this point, is
only a speculative possibility — their efforts still backfired. Remember
Che? Yeah. It’s like that. If they did murder him, they failed to get rid
of him; they only succeeded in making him immortal. Either way, the empire
loses.

And on April 14, guess who’s going to win?

[image: maduro-latest-survey]


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



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