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The course of events must change or else our species
will not survive
•
Speech
given by
Dr. Fidel
Castro Ruz,
President of
the Republic
of Cuba,
at the
Karl Marx
Theater on
January 3, 2004,
for the
45 Anniversary of
the Triumph
of the
Cuban Revolution
Dear
fellow Cubans;
Distinguished guests:
Many
of us who had the privilege of witnessing that
exciting day are still alive; many others are
deceased. On January 1, 1959 the overwhelming
majority of those here tonight were less than 10
years old or had not been born or there were still
many years to go before they would be born.

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(PHOTOS:
AHMED VELAZQUEZ) |
It
was never our purpose to attain individual or
collective glory, honors or recognition. However,
those of us who today have a legitimate right to
call ourselves Cuban revolutionaries found ourselves
obliged to write what has turned out to be an
unprecedented page in the annals of history. Unhappy
with the social and political situation in our
country, we simply resolved to change it. This was
not something new in Cuba; it had happened many
times for almost a century.
We
believed in the rights of the peoples, including the
right to independence and to rise up against
tyranny. It was from the exercise of such rights in
this hemisphere, conquered by European powers by
fire and the sword, mass slaughter of indigenous
peoples and the enslavement of millions of Africans,
that a group of independent nations emerged, one of
which was the United States of America.
When, on July 26 1953, the Cuban Revolution fought
its first battle against an illegal, corrupt and
bloody regime, 8 years had not yet gone by since the
end of World War II unleashed by fascism in 1939,
which took the lives of more than 50 million people
and brought about the destruction of the economies
of all the then industrialized countries, with the
exception of the United States, which was out of
reach of enemy bombs and guns.
The
fascist ideas that were the cause of that colossal
conflict were in total contradiction with the
principles proclaimed by the 13 former British
colonies in America on July 4, 1776 in their
Declaration of Independence, which literally read:
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
men are created equal, that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain inalienable Rights, that
among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of
Happiness. [¼]That whenever any Form of Government
becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right
of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to
institute new Government, laying its foundation on
such principles and organizing its powers in such
form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect
their Safety and Happiness".
The
French Declaration of the Rights of Man, which
resulted from the 1789 French Revolution, carried
this point even further when it proclaimed: "When
the government violates the rights of the people,
insurrection is for the people and for each portion
of the people the most sacred of rights and the most
indispensable of duties".
The
fascist ideas also clashed head on with the
principles enshrined in the United Nations Charter
after the gigantic battle that was World War II.
Among the principles the Charter proclaimed to be
essential prerequisites of a world political order
are respect for the rights of the people to
sovereignty and independence.
Actually, the rights of the peoples have never been
respected throughout humanity's brief known history,
so full of wars of conquest, empires and an infinite
variety of forms of plunder and of ways for human
beings to exploit other human beings. Nevertheless,
at that historic point in time and despite the
reality that the victorious powers imposed a world
political order with privileges for a minuscule
group of the most powerful states that became ever
more irritating, many nations, institutions and
people were hopeful that a new and promising stage
for humanity was beginning. More than 100 nations or
groups of nations, including human groups that still
lacked a national identity, were formally recognized
as independent States. It was a time that greatly
favored illusions and deception.
The
overwhelming majority of countries that formally
received the status of independent states was made
up of former colonies, dominions, protectorates and
other forms of oppressing and controlling countries
that the most powerful nations have used for
centuries.
Their dependence on the former colonial powers was
almost total; their struggle to attain greater
sovereignty and act on it has been difficult and
often heroic. The dreadful harassment to which they
are submitted in Geneva to get them to support the
US resolutions or, as a last resort, to abstain from
voting against them is proof of this. The way these
states behave in the United Nations General Assembly
is admirable. An expression of this is the growing
and almost unanimous support for Cuba against the
blockade.
The
worst of all is that a considerable number of those
countries that were supposedly independent before
that conflict was unaware of just how little
independence they really had, and Cuba was one of
them. Almost all of the Latin American countries
were on that sorry list, as would become blatantly
clear. As soon as our heroic people achieved real
and full independence, almost all of their governing
elites joined with the United States to destroy the
Revolution and prevent the social and political
accomplishments we were rapidly achieving.
The
aggression began as early as 1959 with the use of
all possible economic and political measures,
including violence, terrorism and the threat of the
massive use of US military might.
What
happened to Cuba would help showing all of the
illusion and deception contained in those elegant
texts about principles and rights proclaimed by the
United Nations Organization.
Might and not rights would continue to be the basic
fact of human life, as it has been the case through
the millennia.
All
that has happened up until the present, since the
first known historical facts were registered, is the
result of the natural and spontaneous, torpid and
disorderly evolution of human society. Nobody can
be blamed for the various economic and social
systems that have followed one another over the
course of five thousand years.
The
different civilizations which arose in the most
distant regions of the world: China, India, the
Middle East, the Mediterranean, Central and South
America obviously were, to a greater or lesser
extent, ignorant of the others' existence, were
independent, although many things attest to the
extraordinary range of their knowledge. Some are
amazing like, for example, the Greek civilization
with its art, philosophy, literature, its knowledge
of history, physics, mathematics, astronomy and
other subjects.
Our
knowledge of Mayan and other pre-Incan civilizations
is growing, and this knowledge shows that human
beings, even when separated by tens of thousands of
years in time and tens of thousands of kilometers in
space were already creators and capable of
extraordinary works. Yet, in all the civilizations
that preceded us and even today, empires, wars of
conquest, different kinds of slavery and feudalism,
rich and poor, privileged, ruling social classes and
exploited, marginalized and excluded classes have
existed in one form or another. To ignore this fact
would require enormous ignorance.
I
must admit that Marx was right when he sketched out
the idea that only when a truly rational, just and
equitable social regime exists on this earth, will
humankind have left prehistory behind.
If
the whole development of human society has
inevitably been chaotic, disorderly, unpredictable,
extremely cruel and unjust, the struggle to create a
different and truly rational world, worthy of our
species' intelligence is, at this moment in its
history, which bears no resemblance to any of
humanity's previous stages, something that was not
possible or even imaginable in other circumstances:
an attempt by human beings to plan their own destiny
for the first time.
Dreaming of impossible things is called utopia;
struggling for goals that cannot only be reached but
which are essential if the species is to survive, is
called realism.
It
would be wrong to assume that such an aim would be
motivated by ideology alone. We are talking about
something that goes beyond the noble and completely
justifiable whishes for justice, beyond the deep
desire that all human beings can live a free and
decent life: we are talking about the survival of
the species.
The
big difference between the age of the Greeks and our
age lies not in the intellectual capacity of our
species but in the exponential and seemingly
infinite development of science and technology that
has taken place in the last 150 years, and which
completely eclipses the negligible and ridiculous
political capacity we have shown for facing up to
the risk of perishing as a species, a risk which
really is threatening humanity.
Less than 60
years ago, when the first nuclear device equivalent
to 20,000 tons of TNT exploded over Hiroshima, it
became clear that technology had created a tool
which, if developed, could bring about the
obliteration of human life on this planet. From that
day on, the development of such new weapons and
weapons systems, hundreds of times more powerful,
varied and accurate has not ceased, not for one day.
Today, there are tens of thousands of them.
Actually, very few have been destroyed under
deceptive and limited covenants.
A
small group of countries that have a monopoly over
such weapons have taken upon themselves the
exclusive right to produce and improve them.
Meanwhile the contradictions and interests of its
members change and humanity develops under a web of
nuclear weapons that threaten its very existence.
Someone could say something similar to what that
Persian emperor said as he and his huge army closed
in on the 300 Spartans defending the pass at
Thermopiles: "Our nuclear weapons shall hide the
sun".
The
lives of the billions of human beings who inhabit
this planet depend on what a few think, believe and
decide. The worst of it all is that those who wield
such great power do not have psychiatrists to look
after them. We cannot just accept this. We have the
right to denounce it, to exercise pressure and
demand changes and an end to such an absurd, unheard
of situation, which makes hostages of us all. No one
should ever have such powers or else no one on this
earth will be able to talk of civilization again.
There is another lethal problem as well: nearly 40
years ago some people began to voice their concerns
over what has come to be called the environment,
because a barbarous civilization was destroying the
natural conditions for life. This extremely
sensitive issue was then put on the table for the
first time. Quite a few people thought it was just
some alarmists exaggerating, a kind of
neo-Malthusianism, like in previous centuries.
They
were, in fact, well-informed and intelligent people
who took to building a public awareness on this
issue, at times worried sick that it was too late to
take useful measures. Regrettably, those who due to
their great political responsibilities should have
shown greater concern, showed only ignorance and
disregard.
More
than ten years have passed since the UN-convened Rio
de Janeiro Summit and despite the usual
proliferation of speeches, pledges and promises,
very little has been done. Nevertheless, there is a
growing awareness of the mortal danger. And the
struggle must grow and will grow. There is no
option.
Recently, a conference was held in Havana on
desertification and climate change, which was also
convened by the UN. It was an important effort to
inform, raise awareness and call people to join the
struggle.
In
Rio de Janeiro, I was a witness to the deep concerns
and fear of representatives from small islands in
the Pacific and from other countries threatened by
the risk of being either partially or totally
submerged by the seas because of climate change.
This is sad. The first to suffer the consequences of
environmental damage are the poor. They do not have
cars, or air conditioners; it is possible they do
not even have furniture, if they have houses, that
is. The effects of huge emissions of carbon dioxide
causing atmospheric warming and the destructive
effect of the ultra violet rays that pass through
the damaged ozone layer filter have a greater impact
on them. When they fall ill, it is common knowledge
that there are no hospitals, doctors or medicines
for them or their relatives.
A
third problem: according to the most conservative
estimates possible, world population took no less
than 50,000 years to reach one billion. This
happened around 1800, just as the 19th century was
beginning. It reached two billion 130 years later,
in 1930. It reached 3 billion in 1960, thirty years
later; 4 billion in 1974, fourteen years later; 5
billion in 1987, thirteen years later; 6 billion in
1999 only 12 years later. Today, it stands at 6.3
billion.
It
is really amazing that in just 204 years world
population increased by 6.4 times from the figure of
one billion reached in 1800, after no less than 50
thousand years, calculated in a relatively arbitrary
and conservative way so as to have a point of
reference, but that should be further analyzed. It
could have taken many more years, if we limit
ourselves only to the time it took to reach its
current capacity.
At
what rate is it growing now?
1999: population 6.002 billion; growth 77 million.
2000: population, 6.1,079 billion; growth 75
million.
2001: population, 6.154 billion; growth 74 million.
2002: population, 6.228 billions; growth 72 million.
2003: population, 6.300 billion; growth 74 million.
2004: estimated population, 6.374 billion; growth 74
million.
What
will the world population be in the year 2050?
The
lowest estimates say it will be 7.409 billion; the
highest say 10.633 billion. According to many
experts, there will be around 9.00 billion
inhabitants. The enormous alarm generated by this
colossal demographic explosion, plus the accelerated
degradation of the natural conditions needed for our
species' survival have caused people to react with
true dismay in many countries, since almost one
hundred per cent of the growth I mentioned will take
place in Third World countries.
Aware of the growing deterioration and reduction of
land and water resources, of the famines in many
countries, of the indifference and wastage in
consumer societies and the educational and health
problems facing the world population, one could
imagine that if all of these problems are not solved
our human society might become one where its members
devour each other.
It
would be a good idea to ask the Olympic champions of
human rights in the West if they have ever used a
single minute to reflect on these realities, which
to a very large degree are the result of the current
economic and social system. It would be worth asking
them how they feel about a system that, instead of
educating the masses as a fundamental element for
making progress in the search for urgently needed,
viable solutions, with the support of science,
technology and culture, spends one trillion dollars
every year on alienating consumerist advertising.
With the money spent in just one of those years to
spread this peculiar poison, all the illiterate and
semi-illiterate people in the world could be taught
to read and write and even reach ninth grade in less
than ten years and no poor child would have to go
without schooling. Without education and other
social services, crime and drug abuse can never be
reduced or eradicated. This we proclaim from Cuba, a
country blockaded for 45 years, accused and
condemned more than a few times in Geneva by the
United States and their closest allies but which is
about to provide health, education and cultural
development services the like of which the developed
and rich West has never even dreamed of and, what is
more, these are absolutely free for all citizens,
with no exceptions whatsoever.
The
neoliberal globalization imposed on the world,
designed to facilitate greater looting of the
planet's natural resources, has, in the wake of the
fateful "Washington Consensus" led most of the
countries in the Third World, and especially those
in Latin America, into a desperate and unsustainable
situation.
The
first fruit of this disastrous policy was the "lost
decade" of the 80s during which economic growth in
the region only reached 1%; it rose to 2.7 % between
1990 and 1998, much lower than false hopes and
pressing needs, to drop again to 1% between 1998 and
2004.
The
foreign debt, which in 1985, the year of that
treacherous "consensus", was $300 trillion, today
stands at more than $750 trillion.
Privatizations wiped out hundreds of billions of
dollars worth of national assets that took many
years to create but which evaporated with the speed
at which capitals flee from those countries to
Europe and the United States.
Unemployment reached record heights. Of every 100
new jobs created, 82 are in the so-called "informal
sector" which includes a long list of those who earn
their living any way they can without any kind of
social or legal protection.
Poverty has grown alarmingly, especially extreme
poverty; it has grown by 12.8 % involving 44 % of
the population. Development is stagnant and social
services are deteriorating by the day. Neoliberal
globalization, as was to be expected, caused a
veritable disaster in these services, first and
foremost health and education.
If
old and new forms of looting, such as unequal terms
of trade, the unceasing, forced flight of capital,
the brain drain, protectionism, subsidies and the
WTO's edicts are added to this, then no one should
be surprised by the crises and other developments in
South America.
Latin America is the world region where neoliberal
globalization was applied most rigorously and
exactingly. Now it is facing the challenge of the
FTAA, which will sweep away national industries and
turn the MERCOSUR and the Andean Pact into
appendages of the US economy: it is a last assault
on the economic development, the unity and the
independence of the Latin American peoples.
But,
even if this attempt at annexation is successful,
this economic order will still be unsustainable,
both for the Latin American peoples and for the
people in the United States whose jobs are
threatened by plentiful cheap labor recruited by the
maquilas from among those who were prevented by the
existing poverty, educational disaster and
unemployment from getting properly trained. Cheap,
unskilled labor is something that the Latin American
oligarchies can offer on a grand scale.
A
summary of all that I have said shows my profound
conviction that our species, and with it each one of
our peoples, are at a turning point in their
history: the course of events must change or else
our species will not survive. There is no other
planet we can move to. There is no atmosphere, no
air and no water on Mars, neither is there any
transportation for us to emigrate there en masse.
Either we save this what we have, or many millions
of years will have to go by before another
intelligent species arises that can start all over
again the adventure we have gone through. Pope John
Paul II has already explained that the theory of
evolution is not irreconcilable with the doctrine of
the creation.
I
must draw my address to a close. There is much work
awaiting us in 2004.
I
want to congratulate our people for everything it
has done over all these years, for its heroism, its
patriotism, its fighting spirit, its loyalty and its
revolutionary fervor.
I
want to offer special congratulations on this 45th
anniversary to those who took part in glorious
internationalist missions, today epitomized by the
exemplary behavior of the five heroes imprisoned by
the Empire who, with impressive dignity, have
withstood the unjust, vengeful, cruel actions of the
enemies of their homeland and their people;
epitomized too by the 15,000 doctors who, making
great sacrifices, taking risks and dangers carry out
their internationalist duties anywhere in more than
64 countries, a human feat that the United States
and Europe could never accomplish as they lack the
human capital to demonstrate which human rights they
are really defending.
With
threats or aggressions nobody can prevent our
doctors, teachers, sports instructors or any other
collaborator from showing their solidarity; nobody
can hold back the bravery of our sons and daughters
because many are ready for the honor of taking the
place of those who might fall victims of terrorist
actions encouraged and promoted by extremist
officials in the US government.
I
congratulate all those who struggle, those who never
give up in the face of adversity; those who believe
in humanity's capacity to create, sow and cultivate
values and ideas; those who bet on humanity; all of
those who share the beautiful tenet that a better
world is possible!
We
shall fight hand in hand with them and we shall
overcome!
(Applause) |