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July 26: Cuba’s Revolution, Morality
and Solidarity
[July 26, 2011]
Fifty-eight years ago, on July 26, 1953, 160 Cuban rebels attacked Moncada
Barracks near Santiago de Cuba. Had the rebels been able to take the
fort with 1,000 troops—a good possibility—it would have
started a revolution that might well have defeated the dictatorial regime
of Fulgencio Batista within a short time.
The main cause for failure was a missing vehicle with their heavy weaponry.
Nevertheless they were able to cause three times the numbers of casualties
that they suffered. Nearly one-half of the rebels were killed but most
of them died under or following torture.
After being held for 76 days in isolation without access to reading
material, Fidel Castro, the 26-year old leader, came into a courtroom
filled with 100 soldiers. He gave a rousing defense of the need for
revolution to topple the dictator and change the corrupt and brutal
socio-economic system so that all could be fed, obtain education and
health care, so that farmers could own land and all have a voice.
In his five-hour speech, Fidel said, “The right of rebellion against
tyranny, Honorable Judges, has been recognized from the most ancient
times to the present day by men of all creeds, ideas and doctrines.”
Instead of asking for acquittal, he demanded to be with his brother
and sister rebels in prison.
“Condemn me, it does not matter, history will absolve me!”
Fidel Castro considers ethics and morality to be essential for revolutions.
In My Life: Fidel Castro, the 2006 interview book with Ignacio Ramonet,
Fidel speaks of these highest principles on numerous occasions. He asserts
that “especially ethics” is what he learned most from the
national liberation hero, José Martí.
After following liberated Cuba for half-a-century, having lived and
worked there for eight years, I find that during its guerrilla struggle,
from December 2, 1956 to January 1, 1959 the revolutionaries acted in
a moral manner. Cuba’s revolutionary armed struggle was exceptional
in this way. As Fidel told Ramonet, “We did not kill any prisoners”,
“not even one blow” was dealt. That is “our principle”;
“All revolutionary thought begins with a bit of ethics.”
I think that is also the key reason why so many millions of people the
world over love and respect Che Guevara: his moral stance, his example
as a just revolutionary leader. This from “Socialism and Man:”
“At the risk of seeming ridiculous, let me say that the true
revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love…Our vanguard
revolutionaries must idealize this love of the people, the most sacred
cause, and make it one and indivisible…one must have a great deal
of humanity and a strong sense of justice and truth in order not to
fall into extreme dogmatism and cold scholasticism, into an isolation
from the masses. We must strive every day so that this love of living
humanity will be transformed into actual deeds, into acts that serve
as examples, as a moving force.”
I agree with Fidel and Che. Revolutionaries must be ethical in vision
and use morality in practice, both at home and in solidarity with the
oppressed everywhere. As Fidel told Lee Lockwood in Castro’s Cuba,
Cuba’s Fidel:
“Those who are exploited are our compatriots all over the
world; and the exploiters all over the world are our enemies…Our
country is really the whole world, and all the revolutionaries of the
world are our brothers.”
I define ethics in this way: Life shall not be abused or destroyed by
our conscious hand—without being attacked or oppressed beyond
limits of toleration. A moral person, organization, political party
or government acts in daily life and in the struggle for justice with
that ethic in mind. These are my thoughts on morality:
1. We act so that no one person, race or ethnic group is either
over or under another.
2. In combat against oppressors and invaders, we do not kill non-combatant
civilians nor forcefully recruit them, or use them as hostages.
3. We struggle to create equality for all.
4. We abolish all profit-making based upon the exploitation of labor
or the oppression of any person, group of people, class or caste. Instead,
we build an economy based upon principles of justice and equality, one
in which no one goes hungry, sharing equitably our resources and production.
5. We struggle to create a political system based upon participation
where all have a voice in decision-making about vital matters with relation
to local, national and international policies.
6. We struggle to eliminate alienation in each of us.
Ethics and Sri Lanka Tamils
True solidarity activists have no choice. We must support a people under
attack by aggressors wherever in the world. That is what I see as our
task as anti-war activists concerning Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine…just
as we did in the wars against Vietnam-Laos-Cambodia and the South Africans…
For us solidarity activists, and governments viewing themselves as progressive-socialist-communist-revolutionary,
I believe our task must be to press for the very lives and rights of
the Tamil people in Sri Lanka where governments have systematically
oppressed and repressed them for half-a-century.
As a solidarity activist—who advocates the right to resist and
the necessity to conduct armed struggle once peaceful means fail to
change oppressive governments from terrorizing us—I denounce all
perpetrators of terrorism, no matter the party or cause, and demand
they change tactics to ones that are morally in accordance with our
ideology embracing fellowship with justice and equality.
I find that most armed movements commit acts of atrocities, even acts
of terror in the long course of warfare. This has sometimes been the
case with the Colombian FARC and Palestinian PFLP, for instance. But
I support them in their righteous struggle.They are up against much
greater military and economic forces that practice state terror endemically.
They also did not systematically use terrorist tactics but rather sporadically
and corrected that in latter years. The ANC in South Africa’s
war for liberation also committed horrendous acts of terrorism.
Most of the dozens of Tamil groups that took up arms, at one time or
another, considered themselves Marxists, and many looked up to Che Guevara
and Cuba’s revolution as an ideal. But they nearly all used terrorism
in some of their actions. Hear what Che Guevara meant about the use
of violence. (Speech “From somewhere in the world”)
“There are always laggards who remain behind but our function
is not to liquidate them, to crush them and force them to bow to an
armed vanguard, but to educate them by leading them forward and getting
them to follow us because of our example, or as Fidel called it ‘moral
compulsion.’”
This Sri Lanka Tamil ‘story’ is a tragedy especially for
the Tamils but also for Sinhalese and the world of humanity. Most people
not directly involved, however, do not react because they don’t
know what they can do. There are so many tragedies going on at the same
time. Cynical brutality is constantly unleashed by major capitalist
enterprises and their governments in the ‘first’ world,
much of the former ‘second’ world as well as by national
capitalists in the ‘third’ world. We live in what I call
the Permanent War Age. Brutality—surveillance—suffering
is the norm.
In those countries where there is little brutality, in comparison,
and no aggressive war-making (I speak here of the governments of Cuba
and other ALBA—Bolivarian Alliance of the Peoples of Our America—countries)
the leaders see the necessity of having political ties with some war
criminal governments, such as Sri Lanka. I gather that this leads them
to ignore their moral solidarity principles and abandon the oppressed
Tamils.
On this July 26 day of celebration, I call upon the Cuban government,
as well as all members of the ALBA alliance, to return to the moral
principles expressed by Fidel and Che and do the right thing by the
Tamil people. Call for an independent international investigation into
the war crimes committed by the Sri Lankan government, and use your
moral clout, your revolutionary record to demand an end to the genocide
against this people.
If morality does not become integral to our struggles, I’m
afraid we are headed for a worldwide moral collapse, which is already
underway due to the intrinsic immorality of capitalism and its imperialism;
the foundering of contemporary socialism; and the rise of fascism throughout
much of the world.
Copyright © 2006-2012 Ronridenour.com