THE HANDSTAND

NOVEMBER 2003


..EXCERPTS FROM SPEECH GIVEN BY:

DR. FIDEL CASTRO, PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CUBA,

THE CEREMONY COMMEMORATING THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE ATTACK ON THE MONCADA AND CARLOS
MANUEL DE CESPEDES GARRISONS HELD IN SANTIAGO
DE CUBA, JULY 26, 2003. All emphasis itallics by editor,JB;
this speech principally addresses the European Union.

It seems almost unreal to be here in this same place 50 years after the events we are commemorating today, which took place that morning of July 26, 1953. I was 26 years old back then; today, 50 more years of struggle have been added to my life.

Way back then, I could not have imagined for even a second that this evening, the few participants in that action who are still alive would be gathered here, together with those, gathered here or listening to us all around the country, who were influenced by or participated directly in the Revolution; together with those who were children or teenagers back then; with those who were not even born then, and today are parents or even grandparents; ....and with millions of children who fill our imagination of eternal dreamers. And once again, life has given me the unique privilege of addressing all of you.

I am not speaking here on my own behalf. I am doing it in the name of the heroic efforts of our people and the thousands of combatants who have given their lives throughout half a century. I am doing it too, with pride for the great work they have succeeded in carrying out, the obstacles they have overcome, and the impossible things they have made possible.

In the terribly sad days that followed the action, I explained to the court where I was tried the reasons that led us to undertake this struggle.

At that time, Cuba had a population of less than six million people. Based on the information available back then, I gave a harsh description, with approximate statistics, of the situation facing our people 55 years after the U.S. intervention. That intervention came when Spain had already been militarily defeated by the tenacity and heroism of the Cuban patriots, and it frustrated the goals of our long war of independence when in 1902 it established a complete political and economic control over Cuba.

The forceful imposition on our first Constitution of the right of the U.S. government to intervene in Cuba and the occupation of national territory by U.S. military bases, together with the total domination of our economy and natural resources, reduced our national sovereignty to practically nil.

I will quote just a few brief paragraphs from my statements at that trial on October 16, 1953:

Six hundred thousand Cubans without work.

Five hundred thousand farm laborers who work four months of the year and starve the rest.

Four hundred thousand industrial workers and laborers whose retirement funds have been embezzled, whose homes are wretched quarters, whose salaries pass from the hands of the boss to those of the moneylender, whose life is endless work and whose only rest is the tomb.

Ten thousand young professionals: medical doctors, engineers, lawyers, veterinarians, school teachers, dentists, pharmacists, journalists, painters, sculptors, etc., who finish school with their degrees anxious to work and full of hopes, only to find themselves at a dead end, with all doors closed to them.

Eighty-five percent of the small farmers in Cuba pay a rent and live under constant threat of being evicted from the land they till.

There are two hundred thousand peasant families who do not have a single acre of land to till to provide food for their starving children.

More than half of our most productive land is in foreign hands.

Nearly three hundred thousand caballerías (over three million hectares) of arable land owned by powerful interests remain idle.

The little rural schoolhouses are attended by a mere half of the school age children who go barefoot, half-naked and undernourished.

Ninety per cent of the children in the countryside are sick with parasites......

Perhaps the most important statement I made about the economic and social situation was the following:

“The nation's future, the solutions to its problems, cannot continue to depend on the selfish interests of a dozen big businessmen nor on the cold calculations of profits that ten or twelve magnates draw up in their air-conditioned offices. The country cannot continue begging on its knees for miracles from a golden fleece, like the one mentioned in The Old Testament destroyed by the prophet's fury. Golden fleece cannot perform miracles of any kind. […] Statesmen whose statesmanship consists of preserving the status quo and mouthing phrases like 'absolute freedom of enterprise,' 'guarantees to investment capital' and 'law of supply and demand,' will not solve these problems.

These statements and ideas described a whole underlying thinking regarding the capitalist economic and social system that simply had to be eliminated. They expressed, in essence, the idea of a new political and social system for Cuba, although it may have been dangerous to propose such a thing in the midst of the sea of prejudices and ideological venom spread by the ruling classes, allied to the empire and imposed on a population where 90% of the people were illiterate or semi-literate, without even a sixth-grade education; discontent, combative and rebellious, yet unable to discern such an acute and profound problem. Since then, I have held the most solid and firm conviction that ignorance has been the most powerful and fearsome weapon of the exploiters throughout all of history.

Educating the people about the truth, with words and irrefutable facts, has perhaps been the fundamental factor in the grandiose feat that our people have achieved.Those humiliating realities have been crushed, despite blockades, threats, aggressions, massive terrorism and the unrestrained use of the most powerful media in history against our Revolution.The statistics leave no room for doubt........

Unemployment, despite the fact that the 1953 census was taken in the middle of the sugar harvest, --that is, the time of the highest demand for labor-- was 8.4% of the economically active population. The 2002 census, taken in September, revealed that the unemployment rate in Cuba today is a mere 3.1%. And this was the case in spite of the fact that the active labor force in 1953 was only 2,059,659 people, whereas in 2002 it had reached 4,427,028. What is most striking is that next year, when unemployment is reduced to less than 3%, Cuba will enter the category of countries with full employment, something that is inconceivable in any other country of Latin America or even the so-called economically developed nations in the midst of the current worldwide economic situation.........

Eighty five percent of the people own the houses they dwell and they do not pay taxes; the remaining 15% pays a rather symbolic rent..........

These statistics, however, do not tell the full story. Cold figures cannot express quality, and it is in terms of quality that the most truly spectacular advances have been achieved by Cuba. Today, by a wide margin, our country occupies first place worldwide in the number of teachers, professors and educators per capita. The country’s active teaching staff accounts for the incredible figure of 290,574.

According to studies analyzing a group of the main educational indicators, Cuba also occupies first place, above the developed countries. The maximum of 20 students per teacher in primary schools already attained, and the ratio of one teacher per 15 students in junior high school –grades seven, eight and nine– that will be achieved this coming school year, ....The number of doctors is 67,079, of which 45,599 are specialists and 8,858 are in training. The number of nurses is 81,459, while that of healthcare technicians is 66,339, for a total of 214,877 doctors, nurses and technicians in the healthcare sector. Life expectancy is 76.15 years; infant mortality is 6.5 for 1000 live births during the first year of life, lower than any other Third World country and even some of the developed nations.There are 35,902 physical education, sports and recreation instructors, a great many more than the total number of teachers and professors in all areas of education before the Revolution.

Cuba is now fully engaged in the transformation of its own systems of education, culture and healthcare, through which it has attained so many achievements, in order to reach new levels of excellence never even imagined, based on the accumulated experience and new technological possibilities.......The most developed and wealthy countries will never attain a ratio of 20 students in a classroom in primary school, or one teacher to 15 students in high school, or succeed in taking university education to every municipality throughout the country to place it within reach of the whole population, or in offering the highest quality educational and healthcare services to all of their citizens free of charge. Their economic and political systems are not designed for this.

In Cuba, the social and human nightmare denounced in 1953, which gave rise to our struggle, had been left behind just a few years after the triumph of the Revolution in 1959....A new stage began in the creation and construction of educational, healthcare, residential, sports and other public facilities, as well as thousands of kilometers of highways, dams, irrigation channels, agricultural facilities, electrical power plants and power lines, agricultural, mechanical and construction material industries, and everything essential for the sustained development of the country.The labor demand was so great that for many years, large contingents of men and women from the cities were mobilized to work in agriculture, construction and industrial production, which laid the foundations for the extraordinary social development achieved by our country, which I mentioned earlier.

I am talking as if the country were an idyllic haven of peace, as if there had not been over four decades of a rigorous blockade and economic war, aggressions of all kinds, countless acts of sabotage and terrorism, assassination plots and an endless list of hostile actions against our country, which I do not wish to emphasize in this speech, so as to focus on essential ideas of the present. Suffice it to say that defense-related tasks alone required the permanent mobilization of hundreds of thousands of men and women and large material resources. This hard-fought battle served to toughen our people, and taught them to fight simultaneously on many different fronts, to do a lot with very little, and to never be discouraged by obstacles.

Decisive proof of this was their heroic conduct, their tenacity and unshakably firm stance when the socialist bloc disappeared and the USSR splintered. The feat they accomplished then, when no one in the world would have bet a penny on the survival of the Revolution, will go down in history as one of the greatest ever achieved. They did it without violating a single one of the ethical and humanitarian principles of the Revolution, despite the shrieking and slander of our enemies.

THE EUROPEAN UNION

Today, great battles are being waged in the area of ideas, while confronting problems associated with the world situation, perhaps the most critical to ever face humanity. I am obliged to devote a part of my speech to this.Several weeks ago, in early June, the European Union adopted an infamous resolution, drafted by a small group of bureaucrats, without prior analysis by the Ministers of Foreign Affairs themselves, and promoted by an individual of markedly fascist lineage and ideology: José María Aznar. The adoption of this resolution constituted a cowardly and repugnant action that added to the hostility, threats and dangers posed for Cuba ...They decided to eliminate or reduce to a minimum what they define as “humanitarian aid” to Cuba.

How much of this aid has been provided in the past few years, which have been so very difficult for the economy of our country? In 2000 the so-called humanitarian aid received from the European Union was 3.6 million dollars; in 2001 it was 8.5 million; in 2002, 0.6 million. And this was before the application of the just measures that Cuba adopted, on fully legal grounds, to defend the security of our people against the serious threats of imperialist aggression, something that no one ignores.As can be seen, the average was 4.2 million dollars annually, which was reduced to less than a million in 2002.

What does this amount really mean for a country that suffered the impact of three hurricanes between November of 2001 and October of 2002, resulting in 2.5 billion dollars in damages for our country, combined with the devastating effect on our revenues:..... the drop in sugar and nickel prices due to the international economic crisis, and the considerable rise in oil prices owing to various factors? What does it mean in comparison with the 72 billion dollars in losses and damages resulting from the economic blockade imposed by the U.S. government for more than four decades, and with regards to which, as a result of the extraterritorial and brutal Helms-Burton Act, which threatened the economic interests of the European Union itself, the latter reached a shameful “understanding” where it pledged not to support its businesspeople in their dealings with Cuba......Through its sugar subsidies, the countries of the European Union have caused billions of dollars in losses for the Cuban economy throughout the entire duration of the U.S. blockade.

Cuba’s payments to the countries of the European Union for goods imported over the last five years totaled some 7.5 billion dollars, or an approximate average of 1.5 billion dollars annually. On the other hand, over the last five years, these countries only purchased an average of 571 million dollars worth of imports from Cuba annually. Who is actually helping whom? Moreover, this much touted humanitarian aid usually comes with bureaucratic delays and unacceptable conditions, such as creating funds of an equal value in national currency, at the exchange rate of our currency exchange bureaus, to provide funding in national currency for other projects where decisions were to be adopted with the participation of third parties. This means that if the European Commission were to hand over a million dollars, they want the Cuban side to put up 27 million Cuban pesos in exchange, to fund other projects in national currency for the same amount, and the execution of the projects would involve the participation of European non-governmental organizations in all decision-making processes. This absurd condition, which was never accepted, practically paralyzed the flow of aid for a number of projects for three years, and subsequently limited it considerably.

Between October 2000 and December 2002, the European Commission officially approved four projects for an approximate total amount of 10.6 million US dollars (almost all of it for technical assistance in administrative, legal and economic matters) and only 1.9 million dollars for food security. None of this has been executed, due to the delays caused by the bureaucratic mechanisms of this institution. Nevertheless, in all European Union reports, these amounts appear as “approved for Cuba”, although the truth remains that until now not a penny of this funding has reached our country. It should be remembered that additionally, in all of their reports on aid to Cuba, the European Commission and member countries include so-called indirect costs, such as airfares on their own airlines, accommodation, travel expenses, salaries and First World-standard luxuries. The portion of the supposed aid money that actually directly benefits the projects is whittled away through these expenditures, which do not help the country in any way, but are nonetheless calculated as part of their “generosity” for public relations purposes.

AID TO "THIRD WORLD" COUNTRIES

Cuba, a small country, besieged and blockaded, has not only been able to survive, but also to help many countries of the Third World, exploited throughout centuries by the European colonial powers.In the course of 40 years, over 40,000 youths from more than 100 Third World countries, including 30,000 from Africa, have graduated in Cuba as university-educated professionals and qualified technical workers, at no cost to them whatsoever, and our country has not attempted to steal a single one of them, as the countries of the European Union do with many of the brightest minds. Throughout this time, on the other hand, over 52,000 Cuban doctors and health care workers, who have saved millions of lives, have provided their services voluntarily and free of charge in 93 countries.

Even though the country has still not completely left behind the special period, last year, 2002, there were already more than 16,000 youths from throughout the Third World undertaking higher studies in our country, free of charge, including over 8,000 being trained as doctors. If we were to calculate what they would have to pay for this education in the United States and Europe, the result would be the equivalent of a donation of more than 450 million dollars every year. If you include the 3,700 doctors providing their services abroad in the most far-flung and inhospitable locales, you would have to add almost 200 million US dollars more, based on the annual salary paid to doctors by the WHO. All in all approximately 700 million dollars.

These things that our country can do, not on the basis of its financial resources, but rather the extraordinary human capital created by the Revolution, should serve as an example to the European Union,

While Cuban soldiers were shedding their blood fighting the forces of apartheid, the countries of the European Union exchanged billions of dollars worth of trade every year with the South African racists, and through their investments, reaped the benefits of the cheap, semi-slave labor of the South African natives. This past July 21, less than a week ago, the European Union, in a much-trumpeted meeting to review its shameful common position on Cuba, ratified the infamous measures adopted against Cuba on June 5 and declared that political dialogue should continue ‘in order to more efficiently pursue the goals of the common position’.

The European Union is fooling itself when it states that political dialogue should continue. The sovereignty and dignity of this people are not open to discussion with anyone, much less with a group of former colonial powers historically responsible for the slave trade, the plunder and even extermination of entire peoples, and the underdevelopment and poverty suffered today by billions of human beings whom they continue to plunder through unequal trade, the exploitation and exhaustion of their natural resources, an unpayable foreign debt, the brain drain, and other means.The European Union lacks the necessary freedom to take part in a fully independent dialogue. Its commitments to NATO and the United States, and its conduct in Geneva, where it acts in league with those who want to destroy Cuba, render it incapable of engaging in a constructive exchange. Countries from the former socialist community will soon join the European Union, albeit the opportunistic leaders who govern them, more loyal to the interests of the United States than to those of Europe, will serve as Trojan horses of the superpower within the EU. These are full of hatred towards Cuba, which they left on its own and cannot forgive for having endured and proven that socialism is capable of achieving a society a thousand times more just and humane that the rotten system they have adopted.

When the European Union was created, we applauded it, because it was the only intelligent and useful thing they could do to counterbalance the hegemony of their powerful military ally and economic competitor. We also applauded the euro as something beneficial for the worldwide economy in the face of the suffocating and almost absolute power of the U.S. dollar.... Any dialogue should take place in public, in international forums, and should address the grave problems threatening the world. We shall not attempt to discuss the principles of the European Union or Disunion. In Cuba they will find a country that neither obeys masters, nor accepts threats, nor begs for charity, nor lacks the courage to speak out the truth........................

The European Union would do well to speak less and do more for the genuine human rights of the immense majority of the peoples of the world; to act with intelligence and dignity in the face of those who do not want to leave it with even the crumbs of the resources of the planet they aspire to conquer; to defend its cultural identity against the invasion and penetration of the powerful transnationals of the U.S. entertainment industry; to take care of its unemployed, who number in the tens of millions; to educate its functionally illiterate; to give humane treatment to immigrants; to guarantee true social security and medical care for all of its citizens, as Cuba does; to moderate its consumerist and wasteful habits; to guarantee that all of its members contribute 1% of their GDP, as some already do, to support development in the Third World or at least alleviate, without bureaucracy or demagoguery, the terrible situation of poverty, poor health and illiteracy; to compensate Africa and other regions for the damage wreaked throughout centuries by slavery and colonialism; to grant independence to the colonial enclaves still maintained in this hemisphere, from the Caribbean to the Falkland Islands, without denying them the economic aid they deserve for the historical damage and colonial exploitation they have suffered.

For decades, our people have confronted powers much greater than those possessed by the European Union; new forces are emerging everywhere, with tremendous vigor. The peoples are tired of guardians, interference and plunder, imposed through mechanisms that benefit the most developed and wealthy at the cost of the growing poverty and ruin of others. Some of these peoples are already advancing with unrestrainable force, and others will join them. Among them there are giants awakening. The future belongs to these peoples. In the name of 50 years of resistance and relentless struggle in the face of a force many times greater than theirs, and of the social and human achievements attained by Cuba without any help whatsoever from the countries of the European Union, I invite them to reflect calmly on their errors, and to avoid being carried away by outbursts of anger or Euronarcissistic inebriation. Neither Europe nor the United States will have the last word on the future of Humanity!

I could repeat here something similar to what I said in the spurious court where I was tried and sentenced for the struggle we initiated five decades ago today, but this time it will not be me who says it; it will be declared and foretold by a people that has carried out a profound, transcendental and historic Revolution, and has succeeded in defending it: Condemn me. It does not matter. The peoples will have the last word!

Eternal glory to those who have fallen
during 50 years of struggle!

Eternal glory to the people that turned its dreams into a reality!

Venceremos!





HISTORICAL DATA:Born Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz on a large plantation near Biran in Orient Province, Cuba, in 1926.  He was the third child born to father Angel Castro y Argiz (a Spanish immigrant) and Lina Ruz Gonzalez (a household servant before she married Angel).  Angel became wealthy from laying track for the sugar railway and transporting the cane.
    Castro attended public school near the town of Mayari, a school with mostly laborers' children.  Because of his intelligence he then received tutoring.  He then enrolled in Santiago de Cuba's La Salle School, run by French Priests.  Castro was often undisciplined and his father sent him to Dolores Colegio, a private Catholic school renowned for its discipline and high academic standards.  There he observed how American soldiers treated Cubans as inferiors and came to resent American influence in Cuba's political affairs.  In 1940 he attended the renowned Belen Secondary School.  There he studied Cuban history and Jose Marti, the father of the Cuban independence movement.  He also became a good speaker and athlete while at Belen.
    While enrolled in the University of Havana Law School he became involved in the school's politics.  Politics was usually violent there, with aggressive confrontations between rival gangs.  He became disenchanted with university politics and became a member of the Party of the Cuban People (the Ortodoxo Party).  The Ortodoxos exposed the government's corruption under Rao Grau San Martin, of the Autentico Party.  They demanded reform, advocating social justice, economic equality, a strong Cuban identity, and Cuban influence in international affairs.  In 1947 he undertook an unsuccessful effort to overthrow Dominican Republic Dictator Rafael Trujillo with the group the Caribbean Legion.
    He returned to Cuba with the sole purpose of defeating the Autentico Party.  He gave inspired speeches that brought him national recognition amidst the domestic violence of electoral disputes.  In 1948 he attended the Ninth Pan American Union Conference in Bogota Colombia to protest American domination of Latin America.  His fervent political activity has been blamed for violence that ensued in the streets of Bogota.
    In 1948 he became involved in the Cuban Presidential election.  Although he felt the elections were often rigged to satisfy American demands, he supported Ortodoxo candidate Chibas in a losing effort against Autentico member, Soccaras.  After Chibas' suicide in 1951 Castro was prepared to run for a seat in the House of Representatives.  Before he could do this, however, Fulgencio Batista had established a dictatorship in a bloodless coup.  This experience led to Castro to reject change through electoral method, and he began to advocate violent protest.
    Castro joined one of many underground organizations working to dispatch Batista from power.  Batista used his secret police to torture and kill rebels.  On July 26, 1953 Castro led an attack on the Moncada Barracks in Santiago de Chile.  He and 150 revolutionaries planned to defeat 1000 soldiers, take weapons, and announce the start of a guerilla campaign via radio.  The group was soundly defeated , and the group, including Castro, were brought to trial.  At the trial Castro accused Batista of violating the 1940 Constitution, using force to subject the populace, and of supporting human rights offenses.  Castro was found guilty of conspiracy to overthrow the government and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.  There he read and strengthened his revolutionary fervor.
    By 1955 Batista felt secure enough to grant pardons to all political prisoners, including Castro.  Castro traveled to Mexico where he trained and educated recruits for his planned revolution.  The following year the troops boarded a ship, the Granma, with the intention of assembling a revolutionary movement in Sierra Maestra.  Batista's men met the group at the Bay of Pigs, and Castro was one of the few who escaped capture.  In Sierra Maestra developed his guerilla tactics of attacking small units, seizing weapons, and gaining territory.  He promised the peasants redistribution of the land, free education, and health care should Batista be defeated.  The group, named the 26th of July Movement after the incident in 1953, was forced to flee the area when attacked by U.S. planes. 
    By 1958 Batista no longer had the support of the people.  When Cuban guerillas attacked Santa Clara in December of 1958 Batista was forced to flee the country.  Castro stepped into the power vacuum.    At first only head of the armed forced, he participated in the passage of 1500 edicts and laws in the first nine months.  In 1959 the Agrarian Reform Law and the Urban Reform Law were passed, which broke up large land holdings and redistributed it to the poor.  In 1959 he became prime minister.  Some moderates, displeased with Castro's growing power, left their posts and sometimes the country.  In  May 1961 he canceled planned elections and then suspended the 1940 Constitution.  In December of that year he announced his plans to make Cuba a socialist nation.




Country :
Republic of Cuba
Capital : Havana
Total Area : 42,803.29 sq mi
110,860.00 sq km
(slightly smaller than Pennsylvania)
Population : 11,184,023 (July 2001 est.)
Languages : Spanish
Life Expectancy : 74.02 male, 78.94 female (2001 est.)
Government Type : Socialist
Currency : 1 Cuban peso (Cu$) = 100 centavos
Industry : sugar, petroleum, tobacco, chemicals, construction, services, nickel,
steel, cement, agricultural machinery
Agriculture : sugar, tobacco, citrus, coffee, rice, potatoes, beans; livestock
Arable Land : 24%
Natural Resources : cobalt, nickel, iron ore, copper, manganese, salt, timber,
silica, petroleum, arable land



Former Black Panther Assata Shakur speaks to America
from Cuba

by Nisa Islam Muhammad
(from www.sfbayview.com)

Four and a half years after her daring escape from prison, Assata Shakur was reunited with her daughter in Cuba.
Regarding those times, she says: When I came to Cuba I expected everyone to look like Fidel but you > see everything and everyone is different. I saw Black, White, Asian all living and working together. The Cuban women were so elegantly dressed and groomed. People would just talk to me in the street. I would wonder why until I realized that people are not afraid of each other. People in America are afraid to walk the streets. It's not like that here. I realized that I had some healing to do. I didn't know the extent of my wounds until I came to Cuba. I began to heal with my work, raising my daughter and being a part of a culture that appreciates you.
Living in Cuba means being appreciated by society, not depreciated by society. No matter what we do in America, no matter what we earn, we are still not appreciated by American society.

Who are the people on the tiny island nation of Cuba only 90 miles from Florida, I asked Assata? Who are these people who dare to say no to America? Who are these 11 million revolutionaries who resist in the face of the most powerful country in the world?

Cubans feel like they have power no matter who they are, she responded. They see themselves as part of a world. We> (Blacks) just see ourselves as part of a hood. They identify with oppressed people all over the world. When the Angolans were fighting against South Africa, they asked Cuba for help. Soldiers were sent - they went gladly.Cubans have a different perspective of outrage and justice. A White Cuban soldier came back from fighting and expressed his disdain for the Whites that were supporting apartheid. I just looked at him because in my mind he was White like they were, but that's not how he saw himself. He couldn't understand how the South Africans could
support apartheid.Anytime you have a country that makes people feel indignant about atrocities, wherever they are, that country has a> special place in my heart. Cuba is trying to end exploitation and atrocities.

> For nearly 20 years, Assata has carved out a life for herself in Cuba. She lives in exile and while many rejoice in her new life, America has not forgotten her alleged crimes. In 1997, the New Jersey State Troopers wrote to the Pope asking for the Pontiff's help in having her extradited. Former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd-Whitman issued a $100,000 enticement for anyone to assist in the return of Assata Shakur. Congress issued H.R. 254 calling on Cuba to send her back, which was supported by most Black congresspersons. In the absence of normalized relations with Cuba, there is no binding extradition treaty between Cuba and the United States.

What is it like to live in exile? What is it like to be away from> family and friends?

Assata says: Living in exile is hard. I miss my family and friends. I miss the culture, the music, how people talk and their creativity. I miss the look of recognition Black women give each other, the understanding we express without saying a word. I adjusted by learning to understand what was going on in the world. The Cubans helped me to adjust. I learned joys in life by learning other cultures. It was a privilege to come here to a rich culture. I had a big fear that the Cubans would hate me when I arrived. They are very sophisticated. They were able to separate the people from America like me from the government.

What message does she have for the youth of our people? What does she want people to know about her life?

I don't see myself as that different from (other) sisters who struggle for social justice. In the 1960s it was easier to identify racism. There were signs that told you where you belonged. We had to struggle to eliminate apartheid in the South; now we have to know the other forms that exist today. We had to learn that we're beautiful. We had to relearn something forcefully taken from us. We had to learn about Black power - people have power if we unite - we learned the importance of coming together and being active. That fueled me.We knew what a token was then. Today young people don't see Condoleezza Rice or Colin Powell as tokens. That's a problem. I realized that I was connected to Africa. I wasn't just a Colored girl. I was part of a whole world that wanted a better life. I'm part of a majority and not a minority. My life has been a life of growth. If you're not growing you're not going to understand real love. If you're not reaching out to help others, then you're shrinking. My life has been active; I'm not a spectator. We can't afford to be spectators......
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