How to change the
world from a bicycle
• As
the leader of his people, Evo Morales celebrates his
50th birthday on Monday, having become one of the
most prestigious leaders in the world. Regarding the
date, he said, "That means that I’m a militia member,
too"
LUIS BÁEZ AND PEDRO
DE LA HOZ
THE
first time we talked with Evo Morales, on a cold
winter night in La Paz in 2008, after learning the
date of his birthday, one of us observed, "On that
same day, Fidel in Havana called upon the people to
create the National Revolutionary Militias." The
Bolivian president nodded his head and after a brief
silence commented, "That means that I’m a militia
member, too."
Fifty years after having been born on October 26,
1959, Evo will most likely arrive at his birthday
involved in one of his usual busy days. He will rise
at 4 a.m., see to the first matters one hour later,
and immerse himself in a whirlwind of work that will
continue until late at night.
He might travel to somewhere in the country to
inaugurate a construction project, supervise a
program, converse with residents, correct
perspectives, right some wrongs, and envision new
possibilities for his people.
Since January 2006, Evo has been president of all
the Bolivian people. He assumed office with more
than 53% of the vote, which was ratified in an
August 2008 referendum by an overwhelming majority.
In the upcoming December 6 elections, the first
to be held under the country’s new Constitution, no
other candidate has appeared that could displace him.
What speaks for Evo is unprecedented progress in the
country’s history in terms of social justice,
productive incentives, education and health. There
is the recovered dignity of a people that finally
has the benefits of the exploitation of hydrocarbon
and mineral resources. And the dignity of the
descendants of the indigenous peoples — Aymara,
Quechua, Guaraní and another 30 indigenous
communities — who, under his government, have gone
from being invisible and denied for so long to
playing a central role in a heroic collective effort.
Senator Antonio Peredo, who is also a political
analyst for the media, commented to us on that:
"At this point I do not see a figure other than
Evo who is consistent and serious. Because the only
program that the rightists have is to go backwards.
There is no other program except to get the United
States to accept us; to have the DEA attack the coca
farmers again; that nationalization is good in
theory but why nationalize if you don’t have
capital; to hand over our national resources to the
lowest bidder, and other old ideas. The opposition
has been left without arguments. They cannot tell
people that they are going to continue to bring
changes, and the people are convinced that the road
forward is change, and that the only one who can do
it is Evo Morales."
This does not mean that the road is clear. On the
contrary, maneuvers are being plotted and threats
are hovering. In an exclusive interview, Juan Ramón
Quintana, minister of the presidency, gave us his
assessment:
"When considering one’s main enemy, one should be
cautious in knowing that such an enemy does not have
the virtue of political transparency; rather, he has
the shrewdness to not present himself as the main
enemy and to use third parties. I would say that our
adversaries are digestible, politically speaking,
because they are incapable of producing an
alternative project to the one we have. They are
adversaries ashamed of their reality; they have no
identity; they lack their own doctrine. Their
proposals are more the result of external
lucubration; they have a script to follow. Therefore,
they don’t worry us much. What worry us are the main
enemies of this revolution: at some point they were
the transnational corporations, until we struck a
blow at them one day. Later, they dispersed out into
pro-secession political projects and dropped anchor
there. Today, they act in the shadows, but we know
they are putting together their conspiracy. Of
course, they are using every imaginable method to
undermine this process, and of course, they have
gone from the coup-plotting adventure to the
separatist terrorist adventure. I would warn that
they could end up in a suicidal adventure."
Evo received a magnificent birthday present
shortly before the ALBA Summit held last weekend in
Cochabamba. Compañero Fidel’s Reflection entitled "A
Nobel Prize for Evo" offered readers in Cuba and
around the world a very precise profile of the
merits of the Bolivian leader.
During another evening of confessions, Evo told
us that he sometimes dreamed of Fidel, and as he had
learned from his ancestors, these were premonitory
dreams. We asked him to recall the first time that
he saw the Commander in Chief:
"It was at an event in Havana in 1992," he told
us. "With the help of various friends, I managed to
get together the money for the one-way ticket to
Havana. I only went to Havana to learn about Cuba
and Fidel. I made a three minute speech, Fidel was
chairing the meeting. I didn’t get to meet him
personally but afterwards, I found out that he had
noticed me. The return journey was very complicated.
They managed to get me a ticket as far as Lima. I
got there with just a dollar in my pocket which I
changed into soles. Luckily, a Peruvian
friend Juan Rojas, lent me $100 so that I could make
it back to Bolivia."
And later on?
"I’ve had several meetings with Fidel. He is a
wise older brother, whose basic principal is
solidarity and the struggle for dignity and justice.
Fidel is the best doctor in the world. You should
see how concerned he is over the health of others,
but he is also a great teacher. I feel that Fidel is
the Commander of the libertarian forces of America."
The day that Evo was elected leader of his trade
union in the coca plantations in Chapare – prior to
that he was secretary of sports and then, and to
date, president of the six trade union federations
in the Trópico de Cochabamba – he didn’t even have
enough money to reach the meeting in Villa Tunari by
bus.
"I went by bicycle," he tells us. "It was several
kilometers away. I went pedaling away and thinking
at the same time. Ideas spring to mind when you’re
out in the open air. I would think about how the
world could not continue in this way, just a few
‘haves’ and the vast majority, ‘have-nots.’ It came
to me clearly that the fight must be an anti-imperialist
one."
In the international arena, Evo has consolidated
notable prestige for his unambiguous positions and
his ethical stance on defending the dispossessed and
Mother Earth. He has even merited the evaluations of
politicians who are diametrically opposed to his way
of thinking, such as the case of former U.S.
President William Clinton. According to a report by
EFE dated May 16, 2006, Clinton was asked during a
press conference in New York what he thought of the
nationalization of the hydrocarbons industry and the
situation in the South American country. Clinton
likewise responded with a question: "What would you
do if you were a Bolivian miner working 60 hours a
week, with four children to feed and no prospects
for improvement? Who would you have voted for?"
Evo also considers Hugo Chávez as a brother.
Chávez feels the same. At the recent bicentennial
event commemorating the first cry of liberation in
La Paz, Chávez said:
"I see Evo as stronger than ever, clearer than
ever, a greater leader than ever. Support him, don’t
listen to the voices of the oligarchy, who are
trying to demonize him and confuse the people every
single day. (…) Come together with love, and design
and build together the great Bolivia of the 21st
century."
Many things in this world amaze Evo. For him, the
most important values are openness, honesty, honor
and respect for the elderly. He cannot abide vanity
or dishonesty. He likes to hear different people’s
opinions before making a decision. He confided to us
that he would only make one personal request of
Cuba: "That Silvio comes here to sing."
Translated by Granma International