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We met in Managua, on July 1980, 30 years ago, --during the
commemoration of the first anniversary of the Sandinista
Revolution—thanks to my contacts with the followers of the
Liberation Theology, which had started in Chile when I
visited President Allende there in 1971.
I hard heard about Lula from Friar Betto. He was a leader of
workers, someone in whom the leftist Christians had early
placed their hopes.
He was a humble worker from the metal industry, a man of
remarkable talent and of prestige among the trade unions in
that great nation that was leaving behind the dark days of
the military dictatorship imposed by the Yankee imperialism
in the 1960s.
Brazil’s relations with Cuba had been excellent until the
dominating power in the hemisphere brought them to an end.
Several decades would pass before those relations could
slowly recover to what they are today.
Each of our countries lived its own history. Our homeland
endured exceptional pressures during the incredible stages
since 1959, confronting the aggressions of the mightiest
power known to history.
Hence the enormous significance we attach to the recent
meeting in Cancun and to its decision to establish a
Community Latin American and Caribbean States. No other
institutional event of the past century in our hemisphere is
so transcendental.
The agreement has been reached at a time when the most
serious economic crisis of the globalized world develops
concurring with the greatest danger of an ecological
catastrophe for our species and the earthquake that
destroyed Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, this being
the most painful human disaster in the history of our
hemisphere, in the poorest country of the continent and the
first one to eradicate slavery.
As I was writing this Reflection, only six weeks after the
death of over 200,000 people, --according to official
figures released in that country-- we received dramatic news
of the damages caused by another earthquake, this time in
Chile, causing the death of close to one thousand people and
huge material damages, according to official figures
released by the authorities there.
It was particularly moving to watch the suffering of
millions of Chileans materially and emotionally affected by
such a harsh blow of nature. Fortunately, Chile has more
experience in coping with this kind of phenomenon and it is
a country with more resources and a higher economic
development. If it were not for the sounder buildings and
infrastructure, a countless number of people, perhaps tens
or hundreds of thousands of Chileans would have perished.
There are reports of two million victims and the potential
loss of between 15 and 30 billion dollars. Faced with this
tragedy, Chile counts on the solidarity and the sympathy of
the peoples, ours included, although given the type of
cooperation required there is not much that Cuba can do.
Nevertheless, the Cuban government was one of the first to
communicate to Chile our feelings of solidarity at a time
when the communication system was not yet operational.
The country which is today putting to the test the world
capacity to tackle climate change and ensure the survival of
the human species is Haiti, as it is a symbol of the poverty
suffered today by billions of people worldwide, including a
significant portion of the peoples of our continent.
The recent earthquake in Chile, with the amazing intensity
of 8.8 in the Richter scale, although fortunately at greater
depth than the one which devastated Port-au-Prince, leads me
to emphasize the importance and the duty to encourage the
steps toward unity taken in Cancun, even though I do not
entertain illusions knowing how difficult and complex our
struggle of ideas will be vis-à-vis the efforts of the
empire and its allies inside and outside our countries to
thwart our peoples efforts toward unity and independence.
I want to place on record the significance and symbolism I
attach to Lula’s recent visit and my meeting with him, both
personally and as a revolutionary. He had said that as he
was nearing the end of his term as president, he wanted to
visit his friend Fidel; he honored me with that description.
I think I know him well. We often had fraternal
conversations both in Cuba and abroad.
I once had the honor of visiting him in his house located in
a modest neighborhood in Sao Paulo where he lived with his
family. It was very moving for me to meet with him, his wife
and children. I will never forget the fraternal and healthy
family atmosphere in that home and the sincere affection
showed by the neighbors who approached Lula when he was
already a prestigious worker and political leader. No one
knew then whether or not he would become the President of
Brazil since major interests and forces opposed him: but I
enjoyed talking with him. On the other hand, Lula did not
care much about that position; he took pleasure in fighting
and he did so with irreproachable modesty. This he showed
extensively when after being defeated twice by his
adversaries he only accepted to run for the Workers Party on
a third occasion due to the strong pressure of his most
sincere friends.
I will not try to relate the times we spoke before he was
elected president; on one of these occasions, actually one
of the firsts was in the midst of the 1980s as we were
struggling in Havana against Latin America’s foreign debt,
which then amounted to 300 billion dollars and had been paid
more than once. He is a natural born fighter.
As I said, on two occasions his adversaries beat him in the
elections with the support of their huge economic and media
resources. However, his closest assistants and friends knew
that the time had come for that humble worker to be the
candidate of the Workers Party and the leftist forces.
Certainly, his opponents underestimated him; they thought he
would not achieve a majority in the legislative body. The
USSR did not exist anymore. What could Lula do at the head
of Brazil, a nation of great wealth but little development
in the hands of a rich and influential bourgeoisie?
But, neoliberalism was in a crisis; the Bolivarian
Revolution had triumphed in Venezuela; Menen was in a
free-fall; Pinochet was off the political stage; and Cuba
was putting up a resistance. But Lula was elected when in
the United States Bush won the elections through fraud
robbing his rival Al Gore of his victory.
It was the beginning of a challenging stage. Fostering the
arms race and the role of the Military Industrial Complex,
and cutting down taxes to the wealthy sectors were the first
steps taken the new US President.
The fight on terrorism was his pretext to resume the wars of
conquest and to institutionalize assassination and torture
as an instrument of imperialist domination. It’s impossible
to publish the events related to the secret prisons which
exposed the complicity of the US allies with that policy.
Thus, the acceleration took place of the worst economic
crisis of those that cyclically and increasingly have
accompanied developed capitalism, just that this time the
privileges of Bretton Woods were there but none of its
commitments.
On the other hand, in the past eight years, with Lula at the
head of the nation Brazil kept overcoming obstacles,
increasing its technological development and expanding the
weight of the Brazilian economy. The most difficult part was
his first term, but he succeeded and gained experience. With
his restless struggle, his calmness and composure as well as
his growing devotion to his work, under such challenging
international conditions, Brazil attained a GDP close to two
trillion dollars. The data vary depending on the sources but
they all agree to place it among the 10 largest economies in
the world. In spite of this, with an area of 5,327,500
square miles, compared to the United States with barely a
larger territory, Brazil only has about 12% of the GDP of
that imperialist country that plunders the world and deploys
its armed forces in over one thousand military bases
worldwide.
I had the privilege of attending his inauguration as
president at the end of 2002. Hugo Chavez was there too. He
had just faced the treacherous coup d’etat of April 11, that
same year; later there would be an oil coup organized by
Washington. By then, Bush was president. The relations
between Brazil, the Bolivarian Republic and Cuba had always
been good and mutually respectful.
I had a serious accident on October 2004, which markedly
limited my activities for months; then I fell gravely ill at
the end of July 2006, the reason for which I did not
hesitate to delegate my responsibilities at the head of the
Party and the State through the proclamation of July 31 that
year, first provisionally, and soon with a final resolution
as I understood that I would not be able to resume them
again.
As soon as my health situation allowed me to study and
meditate I devoted myself to that and to review materials
about our Revolution, and once in a while to publish some
Reflections.
After I fell ill, I have had the privilege of receiving the
visit of Lula every time he has traveled to our homeland;
and we have talked at length. I will not say that I always
coincided with all of his policies. I oppose by principle
the production of biofuels using crops that can serve as
food since I am aware that hunger already is, and can
increasingly become, a major tragedy for humanity.
However, I must honestly say that this is not a problem
created by Brazil, least of all by Lula. It is an essential
part of the world economy imposed by imperialism and its
rich allies that subsidize their farm productions to protect
their domestic markets and compete in the world market with
the food exports of the Third World nations, which are
forced to import the industrial items produced with the raw
materials and energy resources of these same countries that
inherited poverty from centuries of colonialism. I perfectly
understand that given the unfair competition and subsidies
of Europe and the United States, Brazil had no choice but to
produce ethanol.
The infant mortality rate in Brazil is still 23.3 per one
thousand live births and maternal mortality is 110 per
100,000 deliveries while in the rich industrial nations is
lower than 5 and 15 respectively. We could offer many more
such data.
The beet sugar subsidized by Europe deprived our country of
its sugar market derived from sugarcane, a precarious and
seasonal farm and industrial labor that kept the sugarcane
workers unemployed a good part of the year. Meanwhile, the
United States seized our best lands and its companies became
the owners of the industry. Suddenly, one day they deprived
us of our sugar quota and blockaded our country in order to
crush the Revolution and the independence of Cuba.
Presently, Brazil has developed the cultivation of
sugarcane, soybean and corn with high-yield machinery that
can be used for these crops with a very high productivity.
One day, as I watched a documentary about 40 thousand
hectares of land in Ciego de Avila used to grow soybean
alternating it with corn where they will try to work the
entire year, I said that this is the ideal of a socialist
farm enterprise, highly mechanized and with a high
productivity per man and per hectare.
The problem with farming and its facilities in the Caribbean
are the hurricanes that are increasingly sweeping the
territory.
Our country has also elaborated and signed with Brazil a
project for the financing and construction of a very modern
port in Mariel that will be of great importance to our
economy.
Venezuela
is using Brazilian farming and industrial technology to
produce sugar and to use bagasse as a source of
thermo-electrical energy. This is sophisticated equipment
working in a socialist enterprise, too. At the Bolivarian
Republic they are using ethanol to reduce the harmful effect
of gasoline on the environment.
It was capitalism that developed the consumer societies and
also the waste of fuel that has begotten the risk of a
dramatic climate change. It took nature 400 million years to
create what our species is consuming in barely two
centuries. Science has yet to solve the problem of the type
of energy that will replace the one generated with oil
today. No one knows how much time that will require and how
much it will cost to resolve it in time. Shall we ever have
it? That was the issue under discussion in Copenhagen and
the Summit was a complete failure.
Lula told me that when the cost of ethanol is 70% that of
gasoline, it is not good business to produce it. He said
that Brazil, which has the largest forest on earth, will
progressively reduce the current pace of cutting by 80%.
Today, Brazil has the best technology in the world to drill
in the sea; it can extract fuel from as deep as seven
thousand meters of sea water and bottom. Thirty years back
this would have seem a science fiction story.
He explained the high-level education programs that Brazil
intends to carry forward and expressed great appreciation
for the role of China in the world scenario. He proudly said
that trade with that country amounts to 40 billion dollars.
One thing is clear: the metal worker has become an
outstanding and prestigious statesman whose voice is
respectfully heard in every international meeting.
He is proud to have been honored with the choice of Brazil
to hold the Olympic Games of 2016 thanks to the excellent
program presented in Denmark. His country will also host the
World Football Cup in 2014. All of this has been the result
of the projects submitted by Brazil, which left those of
their competitors behind.
A great proof of his selflessness was his refusal to go to
the reelection and his confidence that the Workers Party
will continue in government in Brazil.
Some of those who envy his prestige and his glory, and worse
still, those at the service of the empire, criticized him
for coming to Cuba. To that end, they have resorted to the
vile slanders used against Cuba for half a century.
Lula has known for many years that in our country no one has
ever been tortured; that we have never ordered the
assassination of an adversary, and that we have never lied
to the people. He does know that truth is the inseparable
companion of his Cuban friends.
From Cuba he left for our neighbor Haiti. We shared with him
our ideas on what we are proposing with regard to a
sustainable and efficient program, one especially important
and very economic for Haiti. He knows that more than one
hundred thousand Haitians have been treated by our doctors
and by graduates from the Latin American School of Medicine
after the earthquake. We discussed serious issues; I am
aware of his fervent wishes to help that noble and
long-suffering people.
I shall keep an unforgettable memory of my last meeting with
the President of Brazil and I do not hesitate to declare it.
Fidel Castro Ruz
March 1st, 2010
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