Dear students, teachers, families
and distinguished guests at this emotional ceremony:
To be able to talk, your throat has
to be in good shape, right? And I have had to spend
many hours talking over these last few days. Now you,
primary school children, want me to talk. Do you
know what you are doing? Have you thought it over
carefully? What if I talk for two hours? (Laughter)
Tell me something: what do you want
me to talk about? (Shouts of "Everything!")
Everything? But I am not a universal geography
teacher. (The children ask him to talk about how he
has felt in the school.) Oh! Well now, it has
brought back many memories. I was thinking about
this just a few minutes ago: the first time I came
to this school was four years ago, less a day, or
rather, tomorrow it will be exactly four years.
I was also reflecting on the fact
that when I came on that day, on December 6, 1999,
four years ago, the children who were in first grade
then are now in fifth grade. Let us see, could the
children who are in fifth grade please raise their
hands? (They raise their hands.) You remember, right?
(Shouts of "Yes!") Now raise your hand those who are
in sixth grade. (They raise their hands.) Well then,
the children who are in fifth and sixth grade were
here then. There are many children here who will
remember those days.
Almost all of the teachers who
worked at the school back then are still here now.
There are also about 16 young teachers here now who
were not here then. They were grade 12 students in
senior high school back then.
Do you know why these young,
intensively trained teachers are here? They are the
result of the events that led to the visit I made to
this school four years ago.
You asked me how I feel; I am
comparing it to how I felt on that day, and how the
teachers, workers and everyone else who met here
that afternoon felt. Perhaps back then we could not
even have imagined the enormous historical
importance that those events would have, as well as
the events that took place later, which we could
talk about for days on end.
Tears, sorrow and sadness reigned
here back then. And why? Because a great injustice
had been committed: one of the children from this
school was sadly absent. His father, his
grandparents, his relatives were going through
terrible suffering because of the events that had
led to the absence of that child.
In those days, the school did not
look the way it looks today, freshly painted, with a
series of improvements that had not taken place then.
It was a well-built school, but like many others, it
needed to be painted, and to have a few repairs
done.
I am not going to explain to you now
why this school did not look as nice as it does
today, or why many schools were not the way they are
now. I am not going to explain this to you, because
one day you will know why, you will gradually
discover the reasons why our children, the children
of Cuba, have been receiving the kind of attention
over the last few years that is unlike anything ever
seen in this hemisphere, or in any other part of the
world.
You have heard about the Revolution.
I am not going to explain to you what a revolution
is, I am simply going to tell you that when what
this thing we call a Revolution triumphed, that is,
when it defeated its enemy after a long, hard
struggle, there were hundreds of thousands of
children in this country who did not go to school.
There were a million adults who could not read or
write. There were millions of others who did not
even make it as far as sixth grade, because the
majority of those who had been able to attend school
at all only went as far as second, third or fourth
grade. No more than one out of every ten could
manage to reach or perhaps barely succeed in
surpassing a sixth grade education.
The vast majority of children could
not make it as far as fifth grade, or sixth grade,
because they were the children of workers, of
peasants, of humble people who needed them to help
the family make a living, to buy food, clothing and
shoes, although many of them went around barefoot or
dressed in rags, because, like I said, they were
very poor.
I never saw schools like this one,
or even schools quite as nice as this one, when I
was your age. I never saw an afternoon like this. I
never saw joy like this. I never saw hundreds and
hundreds of children doing what you have done here
this afternoon. I never saw such a beautiful
ceremony. I never saw so many children performing
with such incredible grace. I never saw teachers
like the three art teachers who came through here,
well-known and famous graduates from our art schools.
Back when the Revolution I was
telling you about began, there was nothing even
remotely similar to what we call the Higher
Institute of Arts. We could hardly have even dreamed
that years later, there could be young people like
this, so cultured, so well-trained, so skilled, here
with you for perhaps an hour, an hour and a half,
bringing joy to everyone, to you, to the teachers,
to the workers, to the guests, to the journalists –I
am sure they also enjoyed what they saw here– and
also to the dear group of people here with us who
have suffered the tremendous injustices committed
against beloved members of their families: sons,
fathers, brothers, for whom they have struggled
restlessly over these last years.
When I said that a student from this
school was absent because of a great injustice, you
all know what I was talking about, because you are
very smart. But he is not the only example. There is
an innocent little girl who is now five years old,
here among you this afternoon, who has been the
victim of a monstrous crime that she can barely
understand. Thousands of children have been the
victims of great injustices; thousands of children,
mothers and other people have died in those seas as
a consequence of a law that we call a murderous law,
created to attack the Revolution, created to destroy
the Revolution, with no regard for the tears, the
mourning, the sadness caused to our beloved and
heroic people by that brutal law.
And this is not the only barbaric
act committed against our people. It is one of many
that have been committed throughout more than half a
century, and are still continuously committed.
Just today, a number of news reports
arrived from over there. About 10 citizens of our
country who recently drowned –including a woman and
a child, according to the reports– as a consequence
of that murderous law and the policies of the most
formidable power that has ever existed in the world
and that has been trying, unsuccessfully, to crush
this Revolution for the last 45 years.
I use the word heroic when I talk
about our people, because never before in history
has such an uneven battle been fought, and never
before has such a great victory been achieved by
such a small country in its fight against the
aggressions of such a mighty power.
I was talking about a little girl –I
will not say who it is– who also came here today
with other relatives of victims of equally monstrous
acts. They said to me, "Look, do you see that little
girl over there? That is so-and-so, she is five
years old now." The little girl is here, and so is
her mother. And you would be astonished if I told
you that this little girl has never been able to
meet her father, that her mother is prevented from
visiting her husband, who is over there, inside that
powerful empire, for having fulfilled the sacred
duty of warning about the plots organized against
our people by terrorist mobs. Terrorists organized,
directed and paid from the United States to plant
bombs in our hotels; terrorists who came here to
shoot at tourism facilities, where thousands of
citizens of Cardenas and Matanzas work, in order to
destroy the country’s economy; the same terrorist
groups who once blew up a Cuban plane in mid-flight,
with 73 people on board; the same murderers who were
recruited, trained and armed by that powerful nation
to murder men, women and children in our country,
just as mercenary forces backed by warships, planes
and modern weaponry supplied by the U.S. government
invaded our country through Playa Giron, or the Bay
of Pigs, here in this province of Matanzas.
Well then, for attempting to obtain
information that would help to expose and prevent
bloody terrorist plots, five genuine heroes, whose
conduct will eternally serve as an example for our
young people, are locked up over there, in high-security
prisons, each one in a different state of that
country, isolated from all the others, because they
will not even allow them to be together. One has
been sentenced to 15 years in prison, one has been
sentenced to 19 years, two have been given life
sentences, and another has been given two life
sentences. If any one of them were to live 100 years
more, he would spend those 100 years in prison. If
he lived 200 years, he would live them in prison. If
he lived 1000 years, he would still be in prison.
You can understand how much
suffering this terrible injustice brings to us. And
I have mentioned just a few unjustifiable and
monstrous injustices.
All of this makes us suffer, but it
does not discourage us, because we have spent the
last 45 years fighting back with unshakable dignity,
honor, courage and determination against the
government of that superpower, which has only
achieved one defeat after another in its actions
against Cuba.
Today, coincidentally, a wire story
brought news of a mob made up of unscrupulous and
shamefully dishonest high officials. They were
gathered in the White House –that is what they call
the place where those who rule the empire gather–
for a commission has been created for no other
purpose than to think up and implement actions to
destroy the Revolution, after 45 years of futile
attempts and failures.
Those with some knowledge of
political affairs could really get a laugh out of
imagining the spectacle of that cabal gathered there,
and seeing the press agencies reporting on the magic
formulas they are going to implement to terminate
the Revolution. I think that even the youngest
children here today can understand what this means.
I can assure you that repugnant
plans like these are being elaborated for a very
simple reason: it is because they do not want
justice. They hate justice, they hate the
independence of the peoples, they hate freedom, and
they hate the poor. They want to bring back what
there used to be here, and I started out by telling
you what there used to be here.
If you go to that country, you will
find tens of thousands of people living under
bridges, sleeping under newspapers. If you go to
that country, you will find that although it is the
richest and most powerful country in the world,
there are more than 40 million people who have no
access to health care services, millions who are
illiterate, who live in poor neighborhoods without
sufficient and adequate schools, where people are
discriminated against because of skin color, or
because they are immigrants who have escaped from
hunger. And these people are mercilessly exploited
because there is no spirit of brotherhood or
solidarity whatsoever. There, you will never see a
school like this one, where all of the children have
the same opportunities to study, even if their
parents are poor, or they suffer from some mental or
physical disability. They do not have, and never
could have, a school like this one, with one teacher
for every 20 students, or less than 20 students.
The children in efficiently run
schools are the children of the rich, because they
go to the best, most luxurious schools, where they
pay thousands and thousands of dollars every year.
They do not have schools where education is free for
all children, without exception, just as they do not
have medical care or hospitals and health care
services free for all children without exception.
The good hospitals are exclusively for those who are
very, very rich, who can pay any amount of money
necessary in order for their children and families
to receive medical care.
You know that there is nothing more
repugnant than these differences and discriminations.
How does this show? I will give you an example. In
that country, in any poor neighborhood where Mexican
immigrants live, or immigrants from Haiti or other
Latin American countries, out of every 1000 children
born, 20 or 25 or 30 or even more die before their
first birthday. The children of the rich have three,
four or five times less chance of dying than the
children of the poor.
In that very wealthy country, which
spends hundreds of billions of dollars every year on
weapons to destroy and to kill, more children die in
their first year of life than in Cuba.
In no other country in Latin America
is there free education for all children. In no
other country in Latin America is there free medical
care for all children equally. In Cuba, a revolution
has brought justice, equality and dignity for all
citizens without exception. This is a country where
you will never see school-aged children wandering
the streets or begging. This is a country where 100%
of the children, who are your age, primary-school
age, attend school and graduate from sixth grade.
This is a country, the only one in this hemisphere,
including the United States, where 100% of children
go on to seventh grade. It is a country where 99.5%
of teenagers graduate from ninth grade. This is a
country where practically 100% of children under
five years of age receive the benefits of an
educational plan through the "Educate Your Child"
program. This is a country, the only one in this
hemisphere, where all children, from the moment they
are born, have the possibility of growing up healthy
and sound, of having a liter of milk a day, and the
food they need, and in terms of education, to go
from kindergarten up to becoming a PhD without
spending a penny.
I see the little first grade
students there, and I want to ask them a question.
How much do you pay to study at this school? (They
answer, "Nothing.") Is there anyone who pays a penny,
who is charged anything at all? (They say no.) Is
there anyone here who pays a penny for the school
lunch? (The say no).
This is the country that that
monstrous empire wants to destroy, wants to wipe off
the map, because this country, these people, all of
you, have become an example for the rest of the
countries of Latin America that face ever greater
poverty, greater problems, and fewer resources for
education and health care. And they, who do not want
life to change in all of our sister countries of
Latin America and the Caribbean, and do not want the
governments of those countries to be able to say no
to any of the empire’s demands, do not want Cuba to
continue to exist as a beacon of hope, as a star.
It is absolutely certain that the
other countries will change. Some are already
beginning to carry out profound changes, and that is
why the current masters of the world do not want to
see the fulfillment of that dream of Jose Marti, who
said that he was willing to die without a homeland –which
he did not have, because it was occupied by the
powerful Spanish colonial army– but then without a
master, and to have on his grave just a bouquet of
flowers and a flag. Today, we Cubans have a homeland;
if we must die defending it, we will die with a
homeland and without a master. (Applause and shouts.)
That little group of idiots who met
yesterday in the White House will die of bitterness,
they will die of frustration, they will die of
astonishment when they see how this country has
endured 45 years of blockade. Now, they are
promising to adopt a series of magic measures to
defeat the Cuban Revolution; in other words, to
destroy the work that the Revolution has carried out
over these 45 years, to destroy this freedom, to
destroy this joy we saw here today, to destroy this
future, to destroy this marvelous and ever
increasing culture that all of the children of Cuba
enjoy today and will continue to enjoy to an
increasingly greater degree, with fully equal
opportunities to develop their minds, their talents
and their vocations to the greatest extent possible.
This struggle for the independence
and the future of our people has been going on for a
long time and different stages, throughout the
course of almost a century, from the beginning of
the first war of independence in 1868 up until the
final battle when full independence was achieved, on
January 1, 1959. And it achieved the greatest
freedom ever achieved by any people in the world,
because no other people in the world has been able
to say "No!" throughout 45 years; no other people in
the world has been able to defy that monstrous power
and say "No!" to it for 45 years, to say "No!" to it
today with even greater force and certainty than on
the first day, and to be in a position to say "No!"
for another hundred years if necessary. But it will
not be necessary for that much longer, because those
who manage that insatiable and unsustainable monster
are meeting with growing opposition from the peoples
of the world, and even more importantly, from the
people of the United States itself, whose ancestors
proclaimed that the "Creator" had endowed all human
beings with sacred rights.
When we talk about the imperialist
aggressor, the imperialist superpower, the monster,
we are not referring, and never will, to the people
of the United States. The United States is made up
of tens of millions, hundreds of millions, almost
300 million people, who are just like you: children,
teachers, mothers and fathers, people capable of
having noble sentiments. Nobody can blame them for
the system they live in. This system is a product of
history, a product of the historical evolution of
human society which, over the course of thousands of
years of injustice, has degenerated into the current
globalized imperialist system, ever more
unsustainable, which is imposed on the world today.
You will ask yourselves, why is it
that in other countries in this hemisphere, there
are so many millions of children without schools,
and so many tens of millions of poor children? Why
do so many dozens of children die for every 1000
children born every year? Why is there so much
hunger? Why is there so much poverty? Why is there
so much discrimination? Why are there so many social
problems? Why are there barefoot children? Why are
there armies of children who go out every day, in
any capital city, to clean windshields, polish shoes,
beg for money, when they are still at an age when
they should be in school, in fifth, sixth, seventh
or eighth grade? Quite simply, it is because of this
system of exploitation that plunders the peoples, so
that a tiny minority can enjoy enormous privileges.
You will ask yourselves, and will it
always be like this? The answer is no, because time
is increasingly running out for this system of
domination, because the peoples are becoming ever
more aware of these injustices, because the peoples
are rebelling against them more and more, and
overthrowing governments, with growing frequency,
oftentimes without firing a single shot.
In our sister country of Bolivia –you
have heard a lot about Bolivia, because it was
precisely there that Che was fighting for justice,
and fighting to change the atrocious lives of the
peoples of Latin America– a government fell without
a single shot being fired against it. The
governments are now so weak, and in such critical
condition, that it takes just a breath to topple
them.
As a result of these conditions of
injustice, two consecutive governments fell with
just a breath in Argentina. As a result of these
injustices, in another large country, a workers
movement leader, a laborer who had run for president
on three previous occasions, achieved a wide victory,
when a considerable majority of the people gave him
their votes. We have the example of our sister
nation of Venezuela, where a profound revolutionary
process is now underway.
There is instability in almost all
of the countries of Latin America. This is why they
are plotting crimes against Cuba over there in the
White House, resorting to the ways of gangsters.
They are nervous, they are fearful, they are
desperate in the face of the reality of over 500
million inhabitants of this hemisphere who are
rebelling to a greater extent every day against the
intolerable living conditions they endure.
I can assure you that this system of
plunder will not last much longer. And what has the
terrorist imperialist mob decided to do? To
desperately search for any means possible of wiping
out the example of Cuba, a beacon of dignity, of
unshakable determination, an inextinguishable light
of heroic resistance.
Today, our country already has the
best system of education among all the countries of
the world. It has the largest number of teachers per
capita, and the lowest number of students per
classroom. There is no longer a single primary
school with more than 30 students in a classroom.
The national average is less than 20, and in the
capital itself, where just two years ago the average
class size was 37, today it is 18. And all of this
was done in spite of the ‘special period’ and the
blockade.
Today, in our secondary schools,
where an extraordinary and novel educational process
is being implemented, we now have one teacher for
every 15 students. In the past, one teacher taught a
single subject to several groups of 40 or 50
students each; they ended up teaching a total of 200
or 300 students in all. They did not even know the
names of all their students, because it would have
been impossible. They did not have any relationship
with the students’ families that can contribute and
are, in fact, contributing so much to their children’s
education.
New methods are being implemented
with the use of the most modern technology, which
can vastly expand the knowledge acquired by students
every year.
Presently, our children begin
studying computers right from kindergarten. Today,
our primary school children, who are in school for
the full day everywhere in the country, and who are
already ranked at the top worldwide in both language
and mathematics, will acquire three times as much
knowledge every year. Our secondary school students,
who used to only attend school for half the day,
will acquire four times as much knowledge.
I am going to tell you something now,
and you are not going to believe me. Quite often, in
the early hours of the afternoon, when I have the
time, I watch the classes broadcast on television,
and I remember what they taught me when I was in
second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth grade, in
language, mathematics, geography, history, and so on,
and I am amazed at the things that can be learned in
half an hour.
Yesterday, in fact, at around 2:00
in the afternoon, I was watching a television class
on geography, and I can assure you that in barely
half an hour, I learned quite a few things about the
planet, about the Earth: what it was like 350
million years ago, what it was like 300 million
years ago, what it was like 250 million years ago,
and so on. The first thing that appears is a mass,
as if someone threw a handful of ink on a piece of
paper, and a compact spot was made. All of the Earth,
all of it, was like that spot 350 million years ago.
Then they went on to explain and to show images of
what happened in successive stages, how this mass
separated and the current configuration of the
planet emerged, the map of all the continents that
you see today.
Then they talked about the Earth’s
crust, which covers the entire planet under the seas
and on dry land, what it was like, how the shapes of
all of the continents were formed, how mountain
ranges were created, and how they can use technology
today to map out the ocean floor, its valleys, its
mountain ranges, how the movement of this crust is
produced as a result of something called magma,
which makes up the bulk of the volume of the planet,
or how the Himalayan mountains were formed through
these movements, how volcanoes are made, what
factors lead to earthquakes. And during this time, I
was able to see dozens of images in color, in full
detail, with clear explanations, and it made me
think just how much I would like to be in seventh,
eighth or ninth grade today.
Once again I was amazed, once again
I felt so happy to see for myself the prospects of
the methods we are implementing for the education of
almost half a million students in our junior high
schools. We will continue to actively work in order
to gradually extend the provision of a heavy midday
snack to all of the junior high schools in the
country. We hope that this goal will have been
reached by the beginning of the next school year in
September of 2004, that is, within eight or ten
months: a snack that contains 41% of the protein
required by children of that age, and free of charge,
as well.
What could an honorable, serious,
decent person think when reading a news report on
those bandits, discussing and dreaming up formulas
to further strangle Cuba, to tighten the blockade,
to prevent all of this, to prevent Cuban children
from having access to more books, more educational
resources, more and better food?
Perhaps they were totally unaware of
the fact that two days before the grotesque and
shameless meeting of that vaunted committee, I took
part in a constructive meeting with more than 600
students and professors from 239 American
universities. I can assure you that those young
people, participants in a program called Semester at
Sea, which takes place twice a year, truly impressed
me with their humane attitude and their decency.
These are undoubtedly young people who will leave
university with greater knowledge of the world and
greater political awareness. In the last few years,
I have met and spoken with more than 4000 of them.
Among the various presidents who
have governed the United States during the years of
the Revolution, there was one who bragged about the
fact that he had only read one book in his entire
life, and there might be another who has only read
two or three. What is perhaps most strange about
this situation is that individuals with the power to
destroy the world in a matter of hours –just
imagine– with the power to destroy all of the
nations of the world in a matter of hours, have less
political culture –and I am not talking about
sentiments now– than the students here at the
"Marcelo Salado" Primary School. (Applause) And this
is no exaggeration, nor am I including the teachers,
because our teachers, in this regard, are absolute
geniuses compared to those who wield such monstrous
power. On the other hand, they totally lack any
moral or ethical principles. The difference between
the truth and lies does not even exist for them.
That is the reality of this world: a
globalized and unsustainable system of exploitation
and plunder of all the peoples of the Third World,
governed by barbaric and totally unscrupulous norms.
That is why, when I recall my meetings with those
young students from the United States, I say that
the executioners plotting a genocide against Cuba
will not only have to confront the courage of our
people, their determination to triumph or to die,
their determination to keep up the struggle to
defend their homeland and their Revolution with
greater will, determination and experience than ever
before; they will also have to confront the people
of the United States itself, for whom we feel
growing affection.
It is worth remembering the great
battle that began on that December 5, because I came
to this school on December 6, and the day before,
the struggle had been launched outside the U.S.
Interests Section by a thousand young people from
the scientific brigades; after finishing a meeting,
they marched on the U.S. Interests Section and made
the first denunciations from the top of a jeep.
We cannot forget the many months
that battle lasted, and how in the end, 80% of the
American people had become aware of the great
injustice being committed, and supported the return
of that little boy, whose absence caused everyone,
and the whole people of Cuba, so much sorrow and
such determination to struggle.
We launched a difficult battle
amidst the lies and slander against our country; but
we were determined to win that battle, and we would
have won it, let no one doubt that. Our people would
have won that battle without violence, with the
truth, with arguments, with reason, using the
possibility of transmitting the truth to the world.
And not only the majority of U.S. public opinion was
on our side, but also the majority of world public
opinion.
Oh! But a battle had begun, and it
was obvious that we could not give it up when that
particular injustice had been repaired, because what
was important, what was essential, was all of the
causes that had brought so much hurt on our people,
the loss of so many lives of men, women, teenagers,
children and old people; the abuses, the crimes, the
threats, the blockades, the mercenary attacks, the
sabotages, the war waged by the richest and
mightiest power in the world against a small island
90 miles away.
They could neither halt the progress
of the Revolution, nor thwart a human undertaking,
which has no parallel in history. This is a country
bound by honor, by a sense of dignity, whose loyalty
to the lofty principles with which it undertook its
struggle has been unwavering since the first battle
against the tyranny. This is a nation that, in the
course of 25 months of fighting, never once
humiliated a prisoner that had laid down his arms,
never once mistreated him or showed him the
slightest disrespect; that never once denied the
wounded the care they needed, at times even
prioritizing the care of a wounded enemy in cases of
serious injury. We would give them medical supplies,
despite the fact that we were blockaded in the
Sierra Maestra.
Morals and principles cannot be
forgotten. Our principles have remained unshakable
to this day.
If you watch a TV news broadcast
from Europe, whenever there is a strike or a social
conflict you never fail to see men dressed in what
looks like diving suits releasing tear gas or
launching powerful jets of water, enormous horses
rushing against the crowd and the beating of all
sorts of citizens who are protesting against old and
new abuses. Our country can call things by their
rightful name, whether it is the bandits who have
committed countless crimes against Cuba or the
hypocritical European governments that are
accomplices of the United States in its aggressions
against Cuba and that threatened to withdraw a "humanitarian
assistance" that never existed, that was no more
than a shameful lie, and that was offered like a
petty handout.
They would buy around 500 million US
dollars worth of goods from us and we would buy over
1.5 billion from them. Making a conservative
estimate on the profits they reaped from unequal
trade with us, we can say they were getting no less
than 400 million US dollars from Cuba in the form of
profits. Approval for so-called "humanitarian aid"
took years and years of discussion, and the
officials who discussed such aid would stay in the
best hotels and travel with the best airlines, while
a great part of the money was being spent on this as
they decided what to do with the aid and how to go
about it.
I assure you that, for the most part,
we accepted the so-called "humanitarian aid", with
which they hope to polish off their dirty
consciences for centuries of pillaging the world,
out of politeness and courtesy, as we have no need
for such aid, miserable sums to be sure, to
accomplish everything we have accomplished.
The great feats achieved in this
four-year-long battle of ideas stem exclusively from
our own resources. They scarcely account for 1% of
our annual spending in foreign currency, and we have
truly revolutionized many aspects of life, which
shall prove significant indeed.
What is it that these criminals, or
the ruffians responsible for anti-Cuba policies,
many of which exhibit a shameful background of
immoral acts and complicity with Miami's terrorist
mob, do not want to see?
They simply would not like to see,
or are frightened --one cannot account for it in any
other way-- by Cuba's growing prestige. They have
not the minutest thing to reproach her for. They
must justify all of their actions through lies and
vicious slander.
They have gone as far as accusing us
of manufacturing biological weapons, Cuba, a country
whose research institutes are devoted exclusively to
studies for the production of medicines that save
lives, that have produced vaccines that protect God
knows how many people around the world from diseases
and death, that develop new means and techniques to
confront the serious health problems that weigh
heavily on humanity today; a country that reports
the lowest rates of the AIDS in the entire world,
that seeks medical solutions for the prevention or
cure of malignant tumors. A country that is
advancing in many different directions, a country
that, having healthcare services superior to those
of any other country, is modifying, transforming and
perfecting these services that, inevitably, shall
not only place us ahead of the United States and any
other industrialized nation but, in this context,
will also give us an extraordinary lead. They won’t
be able to catch up with us. This is unbearable for
them: their conceit, their pride, their arrogance
cannot tolerate it. Well, they shall have to put up
with it! I promise you this on behalf of the Cuban
people! (Applause).
Oh! They place high hopes --you hear
this in the media over there, among many other
hypocritical statements-- on an imminent solution
for all this. Yes, because the idiots are counting
the seconds of life I have left, forgetting that
this is a revolutionary leader who has had the
privilege of living the years he has lived, despite
the innumerable attempts on his life concocted by
the United States.
They have had an additional
misfortune, as I seem to have been blessed with
longevity genes (Applause). I am not worried, nor
have I ever been worried, about questions of life or
death. It has nothing to do with courage or anything
of the sort; I know exactly what it is. I have never
written an autobiography, but what I have stored as
memories would come close to filling up a building
like this one with compact disks (Laughs).
Why do I claim to be at ease and
ever more at ease? Some of you might be wondering.
Simply because this Revolution does not depend on a
single individual, nor two, nor three. In the White
House, they speak as though they knew the date on
which I am to die. Their talent for killing is well
known. Should I be a bit more careful to make it
harder for them? No one can say how many they have
killed already. Someday the number will be known,
when certain documents are declassified or someone
reveals the information. But it is best not to waste
time in such matters. It has always been like this.
One of the participants of the
momentous gathering declared: "We are seeing the
regime grow weaker every day. It depends almost
exclusively on the personality of one individual.
This individual is getting older every day and his
health is less than perfect."
It is really funny. To discover, at
this point in time, that a person gets older by the
minute deserves a Nobel Prize. And what an honor
this is, what a flattering distinction! It is far
greater than the Statue of Liberty, at the entrance
of New York, that gigantic monument. I worry that
this distinction will continue to grow until it
bumps against the moon, the honor of making one
individual responsible for their frustrations, their
failures, their defeats, of the unheard-of-fact that
the super-powerful empire should have clashed
against the supposed attributes of one individual,
ascribing to him what stems from the unyielding
spirit and extraordinary heroism of his people.
Their arrogance blinds them and
their rage prevents them from seeing or
understanding what has become of the former semi-colony
where 90% of people were illiterate or semi-illiterate
and whose levels of culture act today like a barrier
against the lack of common sense, the impotence and
the ignorance of those who govern the empire.
For over half a century, those
Cubans were taught that the independence they had
fought so hard to obtain was not the work of
Céspedes, Agramonte, Martí, Gómez, Maceo and many
dozens of thousands of extraordinary warriors, that
it was not the achievement of a people that,
scarcely over one million in number --a great part
of which was Spanish, and where, in a society based
on slavery where the owners of great plantations, of
Cuban descent, were pro-Spanish or pro-annexationists--
fought for 30 years against enemy forces whose ranks
swelled to 300 thousand troops. I do believe, in all
honesty, that no other people have accomplished a
similar feat.
Once that decadent Spanish power had
been defeated, the US government showed a truly
shameless opportunism in establishing, under the
pretext of a humanitarian act, a neocolony governed
by the clauses of an infamous Amendment imposed on
our Constitution, giving them the right to intervene
and even occupy a part of our territory and remain
in occupation, as they pleased, for an indeterminate
period of time, as they occupy our territory now
with the Guantánamo base, transformed into a world
prison in violation of all law and of what they
themselves refer to as human rights. It hurts us
when throughout the world people talk about that
horrible prison, one that bears no difference with
the Nazi concentration camps.
As a result of that intervention,
the base has remained there, by force. The United
States has millions and millions of square feet in
its territory that it could use for that purpose,
but they did not build this prison there, they
established it here to humiliate Cuba.
A great many countries are voicing
complaints that many of their citizens are detained
there without trial or guarantees, in violation of
the most elementary of international norms.
While all of this is taking place,
as I have already explained, five of our comrades,
who saw the terrorist activities against Cuba up
close and incurred great risks to inform and warn
our nation of those criminal designs hatched in and
directed from the United States, are now subject to
severe and inhumane treatment in high-security
prisons, in humiliating and abusive conditions of a
completely arbitrary nature, which serve only to
increase the admiration and pride felt by our people,
who see them uphold, unyieldingly, their
revolutionary principles and their dignity.
They should take a closer look at
those young men and understand that they shall find
millions like them right here. This island could be
showered with nuclear weapons, it shall never yield.
This country has a heroic background. It is a
country where hundreds of thousands of people have
worked in internationalist missions and that today
have the military training to become an invader's
worst nightmare.
We began the struggle against
Batista's army and armed forces, a total of 85,000
men, with but a few rifles, only seven. The story is
well known: dignity, patriotism, our people's
ability to think, meditate, analyze and adapt itself
to any kind of war. We even lived through the
experience of being in the sights of hundreds of
nuclear missiles in 1962. Not one citizen was known
to lose sleep over this, or worry in any way.
This country has millions of
fighters and millions of weapons, and it knows how
to put them to use in case of an aggression. The
brainy strategists behind the policy of intimidation,
blockade, economic strangulation and aggression
against Cuba would do well to sit down and meditate
for a few minutes on how things would unfold in this
country, which is not an easy target, for several
reasons: they know that the price would be
impossibly high; they know that the American people
would never support such an action because, despite
all of the lies and pretexts used for deception, it
is ever more opposed to illegalities, arbitrary
actions and wars of conquest; they know that the
American people are ever more aware of the sheer
nonsense and falsity of their government. And let me
say I am going easy on them. The condemning evidence
that is available to us would be enough to expose
them indelibly in the eyes of history. The dead one
can still do a few things before giving up the ghost!
But another shameless bit of
nonsense has been said. The small clique got
together and an imbecile made a public declaration
saying that they were doing more than everything
needed to bring the quickest possible end to the
Revolution, that it was not simply a question of
bringing this about, but rather of preventing
another revolutionary leader from governing the
country at all costs, that they would make sure of
this, in clear reference to a military intervention.
It would seem they want to install
the Miami mob here, or who knows what scoundrels,
what criminals, what degenerates, and hope to govern,
thus, this indomitable people. They just do not get
it; they either smoke marijuana --I cannot explain
it to myself any other way-- or they spend their
days knocking back God knows what strange cocktails.
They speak as though they truly
believed that, come tomorrow, this Revolution will
fall to pieces, that this country cannot put up a
fight. They do not realize what cause, what reality
and what force move the Cuban Revolution!
We make mistakes in our country, I
am not denying this. And I am constantly denouncing,
warning, urging people to think, demanding
corrections. We know our people very well. The enemy
does not know it will find millions of leaders, that
it will find an entire people, even children,
transformed into leaders; that it will find a
political and revolutionary culture with no parallel
in any other country. It will find that no political
process has ever had more popular support than that
enjoyed by this Revolution.
They, the enemies, will finally come
to the realization that Cuba does not preserve its
peace and tranquility through the use of force, fire
trucks, men dressed in diving-suits-like uniforms,
tear gas or seven-foot horses, or through violence.
Our government can boast the unparalleled record of
never once having used force against its people.
They know this to be the case, just
as they know that no one has ever been tortured or
been the victim of a death squad here, and that such
institutions do not exist in Cuba. They know that
there have never been illegal executions here, nor
any political assassination in the course of 45
years of Revolution; an Olympic record that will be
difficult to beat in the coming years. You should
know that during the disturbance we had in 1994,
that 5th of August, not a single police
officer, nor a fire truck or anything of the sort,
made a single move on the crowd. I was there
personally, in the front seat of a jeep and, having
strictly forbidden the nine men that accompanied me
from using their firearms, I got off near a group of
really disgruntled and marginal people, who had been
promised by the official counter-revolutionary radio
in the United States that they would all be fetched
by boats. They were thirsty for provocation, they
were irritated and they began to throw stones. No
one made a single move, because the first thing I
did was instructing the pertinent authorities not to
send in the army or the police. People began to come
out from everywhere and the very people who had been
throwing stones began to applaud. We walked to the
port entrance, it was teeming with people, God knows
where they came from, and we walked down the whole
length of the seafront area. It is the only
disturbance we have had in 45 years. No shots were
fired, no tear gas was released, no beatings were
given, there were no wounded. This is the strength
of morals, the strength of dignity, the strength of
principles. This is my first public declaration
about my personal involvement in that event.
Perhaps, this is the reason that
they believe the Revolution will crumble 15 minutes
after my death. They are unaware, or pretend to be
unaware, of the millions of knowledgeable people in
this country, people who are not illiterate, who
know more about politics --much more, infinitely
more-- than those gentlemen over there. They forget
the people who know of human psychology, who know
the tradition of patriotism of our people, who are
capable of doing what our heroic comrades --prisoners
of the empire-- do in the belly of the beast, who
know that this country has hundreds of thousands of
men who have participated, of their own will, in
dangerous internationalist missions that took them
to the most precarious of places, that has 300,000
professors and teachers and dozens of thousands of
people who would volunteer to teach in any corner of
the world.
When aid was being sent to
Nicaragua, we had 30,000 volunteers. When one or two
of these volunteers were killed, we had 100,000
volunteers. This is what our people are all about:
one Cuban is killed and you have more volunteers to
go and fight. One Cuban is killed, or a grave
injustice is committed against one Cuban, and you
will have millions willing to give their lives, if
necessary, to demand justice or rectify the wrong.
Cuba has seen its share of bandits,
terrorists of every sort, organized by the United
States, who cost us thousands of lives, and it was
the workers and the farmers in the Escambray
mountains, 10,000 workers and farmers, organized
into battalions who, in the end, managed to capture
every single criminal.
Literacy campaign workers such as
Manuel Ascunce, or teachers like Conrado Benítez,
were assassinated. The country was invaded, our
people were bombed by surprise by planes bearing
Cuban insignias while involved in the literacy
campaign, the first campaign of this nature seen by
the world, which managed to eradicate illiteracy
within a year and can boast today, of hundreds of
thousands, nearly 800,000 university professionals
and intellectuals, as well as millions of pre-university
specialists and an entire population engaged in
study. We are a nation that has made higher
education accessible to all, a nation that strives
to give its people the most comprehensive education,
a nation whose knowledge base shall procure for it
the resources needed for its full development and to
aid other nations.
It is a well-known fact that a great
number of Cuban doctors are now in Africa, the
Caribbean and Latin America working in the most
precarious places. They know very well that Cuba,
for instance, provides healthcare services for three
quarters of all Haitians. They have battalions,
bombers, tanks and missiles; they --and others--
have invaded that country on more than one occasion.
But not one of them has ever sent a doctor there,
nor could they send one. Pay what they may, the
United States and Europe together will never gather
the hundreds of doctors that today look after the
Haitian population.
This country has created great human
capital in all sectors. I have already mentioned
education, I can mention many others. I mentioned
the fighters, the hundreds of thousands of fellow
countrymen who have participated in dangerous
internationalist missions throughout the years of
the Revolution.
They know, or should know, what Cuba
is all about rather that to go around talking
nonsense. They had better go on drinking whisky or
mixing their drinks with whatever else they can get
hold of, instead of wasting their time in these cute
little White House gatherings that do not intimidate
us.
They should also know that we have
been cautious, that we have steered clear of
rhetoric, leaving it all on their side of the
playing field, but if it is a debate they want, they
would do well to get several special armors, because
they have not a single argument, a single idea, a
moral bone nor any solid footing for this; this is
the truth.
All the fuss now, all of the threats,
all of it has to do with keeping Americans from
coming here, with keeping them from traveling and
visiting Cuba. I am not sure what set them off like
this. Did it have to do with the meeting, which was
the sixth, with the American students from 239
different universities? And we are speaking of smart
youths; do not think for a moment that we are
talking about poor families’ kids. Those activities
[like the Semester at Sea program] cost money, they
pay for them. Creating that program was a great
initiative of the Pittsburgh University. And these
journeys, destined to get a sense of what is
happening around the world, gather together students
from hundreds of the best American universities.
That is why we need to see the difference, take a
closer look. Those people in the White House meeting
would not dare meet with these American students.
I suggest that they go and meet with
the six hundred and some students and teachers that
met with me for four hours in the Convention Center,
and discuss with them to learn something about the
world, if they want to know what Cuba is about and
what their impression is, that this is not a country
of fanatics, but rather an educated and civilized
nation. That it is quite possibly the only country
that has never burned an American flag, one of the
ways in which many people vent their passions or
frustrations; it has never done this, because this
is a Revolution that educates, a Revolution governed
by just principles, a Revolution based on ideas that
cannot blame the American people for the actions of
their government against our country.
They, on the other hand, apparently
blame Cuban children, the ill, the elderly and those
who suffer; for what are all of these measures that
intensify the blockade, and others, aiming at?
I was telling you this: they have
not the slightest idea as to the level of popular
support enjoyed by the Revolution, while we know it
like the back of our hands. We have spent four years
gathering opinions every day. We see how our
people's knowledge and conscience have evolved in
these past years, how all of our programs are
prospering, including dozens and dozens of social,
cultural, educational and artistic programs.
Four years ago, Cuba had no schools
for art instructors. This afternoon as I saw these
young art instructors graduated from our schools, --the
only place that can produce the sentiments and
values that make us human beings, or the knowledge
to make us producers or creators-- I thought of the
great value of the 16,000 students selected to study
in these schools that within the next eight months
will be graduating their first art instructors.
We know of the achievements of third
year students of that school at the University of
Information Sciences, a new university, of the
impact they had there. Students there will not have
any instructors other than the 20 that worked there
with them, and our country will already have around
3,500 of these by next September. Following them, at
the time of their graduation, 16,000 will continue
or begin their studies. So, we shall be graduating
no less than 3500 art instructors a year and
enrolling over four thousand, and if some could not
complete their degrees we are not going to enroll a
mere 4000. We know what resources are available; the
school will always be full.
From what we witness today, it is
possible to imagine a time when we have 10, 20
thousand graduated art instructors.
And something else, we are
supporting and fostering Cuba's Higher Institute of
Art. Investments are being made there, the school is
very prestigious and it is destined to be one of the
best in the world.
Today in Cuba, in the capital for
instance, we have the National School of Ballet, and,
at the request of their families, 4100 children of
humble families are receiving classic ballet lessons
there twice a week, with professors who are ranked
among the world's best, while nearly 300 students
pursue careers there. The school has a capacity of
300 students. Despite the blockade and petty
imperialist wiles, a series of buses pick up these
children in various parts of the city, following
school routes, taking them safely to school
throughout the week. Even with the high price of
gasoline today, the cost barely reaches the total of
30,000 US dollars a year. Which is to say that
giving this opportunity to children of any family,
live where they might in Havana, would cost, in
terms of transportation, around seven dollars per
child a year, and this same school designed to train
professionals simultaneously teaches and promotes
cultural and artistic knowledge of great
significance.
You do not see this anywhere else in
the world. This is what those characters should
spend time on, and their money should rather finance
something of the sort, instead of genocides and
invasions in search of oil and other raw materials
over which they seek absolute control.
Check it yourselves if they do
anything like this. Take a look at what happens with
African Americans in the ghettos of New York City,
or in cities of Florida, or in California, where
dozens of millions of people have no access to
educational and healthcare resources.
There is not a single point of
reference, a single example I could offer the world
that could serve as the basis of comparison with
this Revolution. It would be tantamount to comparing
hell with heaven.
It is rewarding to feel that we have
been building a heaven for the poor. We can be happy
for having saved our fellow countrymen, once and for
all, from the torments of hell (Applause). We can be
happy for creating a model, we can be happy for
demonstrating what man can do, that justice is
possible, that the intelligence with which man first
enters the world, properly cultivated, could reach
heights hitherto considered utopian in the history
of humanity. We can be happy for having turned a
utopia into a reality.
It is with this spirit that we read
the nasty declarations of those repulsive creatures
that gather to hatch their criminal designs. When
they receive the pleasant news, equally pleasant for
me, that the life to which I have devoted my modest
efforts has come to an end, millions of Cubans every
bit as revolutionary as we are, much better educated
and prepared than us, a united and battle-hardened
people shall carry on with the work of the
Revolution.
I see very clearly, and this shows
everywhere, that one cannot but envy children in the
first, second and third grades. Time passes, our
battle of ideas is merely 4 years old and we need
something not unlike a phone book to enumerate all
of the things that have been done, the thousands and
thousands of tasks and measures saw through to carry
out the programs undertaken.
I mentioned the schools where 16,000
well-selected art instructors study. I could mention
the schools offering intensive courses in nursing,
which responded to a deficit of nurses in the
capital; I could mention four new schools designed
to graduate 7,200 social workers a year, and the
14,000 of these already at work today. When this
battle was undertaken, none of this existed.
I could speak of truly remarkable
facts such as having reduced to a maximum of 20 the
number of primary school students per teacher; I
could have mentioned the 2500 schools that have
electricity thanks to solar panels, and that not one
of them is short of electricity to operate
audiovisual materials, TV sets and computers. I
could mention the hundreds and hundreds of works we
are completing and, counting the smaller projects,
the thousands being developed through health
programs we are carrying out at the moment. I could
mention the 100,000 students enrolled in
comprehensive schools for young people. None of this
existed four years ago.
We could speak of having transformed
study into a form of employment and having reduced
unemployment rates to less than 4%, which is
technically equivalent to full employment, at a time
when the world reports very high and growing rates
of unemployment.
We could mention the number of books
that have been printed, the number of painting and
other art schools that have been built and continue
to be built. We could mention the Educational
Channel, which enjoys the highest viewers’ rating in
the nation, and that a second Educational Channel
shall be in operation for all the country within
three or four months.
We could mention University for All
programs. We could mention the enrollment of over
100,000 students in higher learning institutions.
None of this existed four years ago.
We could mention the fact that today
29,000 doctors are working toward other post-graduate
degrees and that thousands of them are involved in
internationalist missions and living in precarious
and tough conditions, and even under such conditions
continue to study through new methods that we have
developed, making good use of videos, television,
computers and interactive educational programs which
serve to enhance their knowledge.
In a not too distant future, we
shall no longer speak of a mere 51,000 specialists,
30,000 medical specialists among them, among the
70,000 doctors we have. We will speak of hundreds of
thousands of doctors with post-graduate degrees. Our
country already has many more doctors, per capita,
than the United States although their economic
contribution is hardly visible in the country's
Gross Domestic Product because theirs is not a
commercial product, their services are entirely free
of charge.
Recreational, cultural, artistic and
sporting activities will also continue to be
developed. This country will be filled up with
schools and museums.
Today --I am running a little late--
we shall be inaugurating a beautiful museum in the
city of Cardenas. Cardenas has a special place in
the hearts of Cubans, in all of our hearts, because
here began the battle that is bringing so many
things to fruition and will be called on to bring
numberless new things to fruition in record
historical time, as we work toward creating the
world's most fair society. The work of the
Revolution, forged with so many sacrifices and with
the blood of so many noble people, in the course of
so many years, tells us without the shadow of a
doubt that they may wipe this island and all of its
inhabitants clean from the face of the planet, but
they will never see us yield an inch before their
blackmail, their stupid demands, or their threats.
Let them try, if they dare to!
Obliterate us from the face of the planet! (Applause).
What is more likely to disappear, much sooner than
they think, is this unjust and brutal order with
which they oppress and exploit the world with
growing intensity, leaving a humanity that has grown
six-fold in 150 years, --from 1 billion, according
to calculations, to 6.3 billion, and that will grow
to 10 billion inhabitants in 50 years-- without any
hopes for the future, and this in a world that is
destroyed more and more every day, where non-renewable
resources are squandered, and the atmosphere, the
air and the seas are poisoned. It could be
mathematically demonstrated that the human species,
with or without the criminal weapons it has
developed, with the destruction of the natural
conditions needed for life, could conceivably
disappear. What shall not disappear as long as
conscience and people of conscience exist is the
idea of the duty to fight so that the species does
not die out and, with it, the marvels that human
intelligence can create (Applause).
I have had to express myself in
rather complex circumstances, as I am before adults,
the press and the children. But, in any event, I
take comfort in the fact that each and every one of
those children, already in the first grade, can
understand many of the things I have told you today.
I hope you can forgive me for having
kept you seated there for a long time, while you
were anxious to enjoy a little snack, some ice cream
and all of the things in store for the children of
Cardenas. But, as the lawyer I once was, I want to
say in my defense that it was you who asked me to
speak (Applause and shouts of: "Fidel, Fidel!"). And
I did warn you were taking a great risk.
Long live our nation! (Shouts of: "Long
live our nation!")
Long live life! (Shouts of: "Long
live life!")
Long live culture! (Shouts of: "Long
live culture!")
Long live education! (Shouts of: "Long
live education!")
Long live the work and example
of our people (Shouts of "Long live the work and
example of our people!")
Ever onward to victory!
(Ovation)