Monday, December 19, 2011

HOLIDAY UPDATE :



 Breaking News :


The United Working Elves Union of the North Pole, (local#42) have called a strike against Santa Claus & Claus Inc., citing sweat shop labor ethics of Claus & Claus Inc., unpaid wages, cuts on Health benefits, and an abusive drunken supervisor bedecked in jolly red suit and white beard, who is often absent or sleeping off a hangover in the janitors closet.....Additionally,word on the street is that Santa Claus has absconded with the Tooth Fairy.....Rudolph and his Rednose reindeer were not available for comment.


I'll keep you posted on all developments.....


Thursday, December 15, 2011

Season's Greetings !

 
 
 THE POWER OF POSITIVE THINKING
 
(Part One) 



 
by W. Zorn

1.) If you find yourself in the middle of a war, you should :

...
a.) duck & run for cover.
b.) Take that lump out of your pocket & throw it.
c.) Think positively !

2.) If you're homeless & living in the northeast in winter, you should:

a.) Try to find an all night Dunkin' Donuts & nurse that first cup o' coffee all night long.
b.)Try to find a homeless shelter that will let you in. In case you are in NYC, make sure you have all your documentation together, to prove you have nowhere else to go.
c.) Think positively ! Imagine yourself on some island (preferrably carribean) resort & reach up & pick that orange off that tree. *

[ *See & Read Anton Chekov's short-story, "Ward Six"]

3.) If the doctor informs you that your second leg needs to be amptutated due to bone cancer, you should :

a.) watch a comedy on DVD.
b.) Smile & say , "Why Thank you, God, for giving me this gift for you must surely love me."
c.) Think positively

4.) Your best friend dies in a car accident. You should :

a.) Cry until the cows come home.
b.) Think about how now you won't have to listen to her Cassandra-like complaints & be thankful.
c.) Think positively ! She's in a better place than you are.

5.) You've been laid off your job, you're unemployment has run out, and now, you're in foreclosure. You :

a.) Start a local Occupy movement to stop the eviction.
b.) Have a couple of doubles and smoke some pot.
c.) Think positively ! (as your belongings are carted out to the curb & there is one more empty house that no one can afford to buy.)
d.) Send a thank you note to the bank.

6.) You get a second water bill for the quarter totalling $400. Even though you know you haven't used that much water, you:

a.) Call city hall & make a stink.
b.) Smile, pull out your cheque book & write a check, even tho' you won't be able to pay your next mortgage.
c.) Think positively ! God must really love you to have given you this burden.
d.) Tear your clothing off, run out into the street, screaming, in hopes they'll give you a nice little vacation, and not for free, w/ drugs included, in the local bug house.




THINK POSITIVE !

Wednesday, October 5, 2011


Friday Oct. 7th, 2011 at 7pm-10pm
Casa de Las Americas 182 E. 111th St. (Btwn. Lexington and Third Ave.)
Take the 6 train to E. 110th St.
Suggested donation: $5 (No one will be turned away)




638 Ways to Kill Castro:




 638 Ways To Kill Castro is a political documentary exploring the history of the relationship between the U.S. government and Cuba, told via the countless attempts to kill Fidel Castro. From exploding cigars to femme fatales; a radio station rigged with noxious gas to a poison syringe posing as an innocuous ballpoint pen, those who tried to kill Castro reveal every conceivable method of assassination.


On the trail of Castro's would-be killers, the filmmakers meet a series of extraordinary characters, including two men accused of being terrorists, but living free in America. Orlando Bosch, who many consider to be the greatest terrorist in the northern hemisphere, is found living peacefully in his Miami home, with his adoring family. Antonio Veciana, the Cuban American who got the closest to killing Castro on three occasions, now runs a marine store in Miami. Both men were supported and funded by the United States, and the CIA even sought the help of the Mafia, hoping they would be able to succeed where Bosch and Veciana had failed.

An exciting detective thriller, 638 Ways To Kill Castro is a Silver River production for BBC Channel 4!

FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH/FILM FESTIVAL!






 http://www.freethecuban5.com/

In 2006, President Ricardo Alarcon of the Cuban parliament, called for the period of time between September 12th through October 6th, to be a time to call attention to the case of the Cuban 5; 5 U.S. held political prisoners incarcerated for 13 years for fighting against terrorism in the United States and Cuba. In New York City we extend the time frame by 6 days to make it a full month, Sept. 12th-Oct. 12th.



This year, The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 is organizing a film festival and a series of forums to educate, organize and mobilize for the freedom of these innocent men!




Please Support our efforts! Contact us if you want to host a film showing or a forum! Email us at: freethecuban5@gmail.com or call 718-601-4751



Thursday, September 29, 2011

THE STORY OF THE IRISH CITIZEN ARMY

 by Sean O’Casey
First Published, 1919 – Reprinted by the Journeyman Press, 1980, West Nyack, NY

I was happy to get my copy of this O’Casey classic, written by the legendary playwright, Irish Rebel,  Republican Socialist, and former member of The Irish Citizen Army, a less known memoir by the author, which I have enjoyed reading so much that I felt obliged to offer an inspirational excerpt from the first chapter of this brilliant read, which I feel can be a source of inspiration and encouragement from all Socialists, Fenians and freedom loving people, the world over :


THE FOUNDING OF THE CITIZEN ARMY


“The people were waitin’ in thousands there,


An’ you couldn’t hear stir nor breath.”


-The Man from God Knows Where.


Discontent had lighted a blazing camp-fire in Dublin. The ruddy light of the flame was reflected by an earnest and ominous glow in the face of every Dublin worker. Men, full of the fire of battle, thronged in dense masses the wide, expansive area facing Liberty Hall. The city was surging with a passion full, daring, and fiercely expectant; a passion strange, enjoyable, which it had never felt before with such intensity and emotion. It was felt, unconsciously, that this struggle would be the Irish Armageddon between Capital and Labour. The workers were exuberantly confident that the unparalleled spread of the sympathetic strike would overthrow the moneyed hosts of Midiam. Did you not hear it ? It was true, many great scholars had declared in their favour, and even now Captain White, the aristocrat and gentleman, was with their beloved Leader, and had signified his intention to throw in his lot with his socially humbler brothers, abandoning the privileges of position, ignoring the remonstrances of friends, choosing freely and bravely to stand by the people now in their hour of need.




And the eager, toil-worn, care-lined faces of the workers now turned with concentrated uneasy patience towards the window on the left-hand side of Liberty Hall, waiting for it to be raised, that they might listen to this nightly message of hope, progress and encouragement from those Leaders, whom they were convinced would guide them safely through the heavy ordeal that each man must share that there might be preserved to all the elemental right of the workers to choose their Union, and to follow the Leaders in whom alone they placed their whole confidence and trust.


The disappearing Artist Sun had boldly brushed the skies with bold hues of orange and crimson, and delicate shades of yellow and green, bordered with dusky shadows of darkening blue, which seemed to symbolize the glow of determination, the delicate hues of hope, and the bordering shades of restless anxiety that coloured the hearts and thoughts of the waiting, watching masses of men that stood silently beneath the oriental-coloured panoply of the sky.


Suddenly the window is raised, and the tense, anxious feelings of the men crowded together burst out into an enthusiastic and full-throated cheer that shatters the surrounding air, and sends up into the skies a screaming flock of gulls that had been peacefully drifting along the somber surface of the River Liffey. Louder still swells the resonant shout as Jim Larkin appears at the window, with an animated flush of human pride on his strong and rugged face, as he brushes back from his broad forehead the waving tufts of dark hair that are here and there silvered by the mellowing influence of Time and the inexorable force of issuing energy from the human structure. Again the cheers ring out, and Larkin quietly waits till the effort to demonstrate their confidence and affection will give place to the lustful desire to hear what he has to say to them, while hidden under the heavy shadows of the towering Custom House a darker column of massive constables instinctively finger their belts, and silently caress the ever-ready club that swings jauntily over each man’s broad, expansive hip.


Rumours had been circulated that Jim Larkin had forged a new weapon for the workers, some plan which, when developed, would make their resisting power irresistible, a power that would quickly change their disorganized, clumsy, incohesive units into a huge, immovable, unbreakable Roman phalanx.


Hope’s ruddy flame was leaping in their hearts: this day would be an historic one in the unhappy annals of the Irish Labour Movement.


Perhaps this lovely autumn sunset would be followed by the dawn of their social emancipation.


And the lusty cheers died away to a droning echo, which was followed for a few moments by a silence that was so strangely sincere that the mass of people resembled the upright figures of an assembly in the shady and silent regions of the dead.


And then with a sweeping gesture of his arm, that seemed to pass around that tremendous gathering and make them one with himself in thought and hope and action, Jim Larkin began to speak.


In rugged, passionate, vitalizing phrases he told them “that they were engaged in the fight of their lives; that every conceivable combination had united its forces against the workers; that it would be a long and bitter fight between the Titans of Capital and the Titans of Labour.

“Therefore the workers must become disciplined, organized, made of the one stuff in thought and action, so that in all they would essay to do for themselves there would be spontaneous unity of pressure and a hardened and impenetrable unity of resistance. The men must get to know each other. They must no longer be content to assemble in hopeless, haphazard crowds, in which a man does not know and cannot trust the man that stands next to him, but in all their future assemblies they must be so organized that there will be a special place for every man to do.


“They know to their cost that a few determined men, determined because they were imbued with the force of discipline, led by men whom they looked upon as their leaders, could scatter, like spray before the wind, the largest gatherings of men, who, untaught and loosely strung together, would always be dominated by the possibility of fear and panic.


“If they would not agree to bring themselves under the influence of an ordered and systematic discipline, then they could never hope to resist the efforts that were being made to prevent them assembling peaceably to discuss affairs of their Union. By order and discipline only could they hope to secure for themselves the recognition of the sacred heritage bestowed by Nature upon every man born into the world ---- the right to live. All this must be changed, and he, with the help of Captain White, who would soon address them, was determined to begin the work now that would bring about this much desired improvement in the strength and mutual combination of the various sections of the workers.


“Labour in its own defence must begin to train itself to act with disciplined courage and with organized and concentrated force. How could they accomplish this? By taking a leaf out of the book of Carson. If Carson had permission to train his braves of the North to fight against the aspirations of the Irish people, then it was legitimate and fair for Labour to organize in the same militant way to preserve their rights and to ensure that if they were attacked they would be able to give a very satisfactory account of themselves.


 “They were going to give the members of their Union a military training. Captain White would speak to them now and tell them the plans he had to create from among the members of the Labour Unions, a great Citizen Army. Captain White would take charge of the movement, and he trusted that the various Trade Unions would see to it that all their members joined this new army of the people, so that Labour might no longer be defenceless, but might be able to utilise that great physical power which it possessed to prevent their elemental rights from being taken from them, and to evolve such a system of unified action, self-control and ordered discipline that Labour in Ireland might march at the forefront of all movements for the betterment of the whole people of Ireland.”


Like the loud rolling of a multitude of drums the cheers broke out again. This was what was long wanted --- a Citizen Army !  What could not Labour accomplish with an army trained and disciplined by officers who held the affection and confidence of the workers ! Now they would get some of their own back; and vivid visions of “Red-coats and Black-coats flying before them” floated before the imaginative eyes of the Dublin workers filled with an almost intoxicated by the wine of enthusiasm.


And once again the cheers rang out as the tall, athletic figure of Captain White appeared, and his boyish face was aglow with gratification as he listened to the cheers that seemed to proclaim to him a ready realization of the schemes he contemplated towards the disciplined consolidation of the lower orders in the battalionised ranks of an Irish Citizen Army.


Captain White told them that the work would commence immediately. He told them to attend the very next day at Croydon Park, Fairview, where they would be marshaled, divided into battalions, sub-divided into companies, and put through the elementary stages of military training. “This was a day of Hope for the workers,” continued Captain White, “the definite result of their plans depended now on the efforts and sincerity of the workers themselves. The Irish Citizen Army would fight for Labour and for Ireland. He asked all those who intended to second their efforts by joining the army, and training themselves for the fight for Social liberty, to hold up their hands.”


Almost every hand was silhouetted out against the darkening sky, and a last long deafening cheer proclaimed the birth of the Irish Citizen Army.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Remembering Michael Devine

By Eamonn McCann

But I remember after Mickey Devine died. Reading one of those little left-wing British papers, that are sort of, I forget the name of it, on demonstrations. And it had one of those little 'lists of events' down the sides, you know? Like, a PARIS DEMONSTRATION with a little paragraph, demonstration about such and such. And SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA : DOCKERS STRIKE BROKEN UP ! and blah blah blah! In the middle of this, it said "MEXICO!", it said "Last week in Mexico, students in Mexico University gathered in thousands and stood for a minutes silence in memory of Michael Devine, the Irish Hunger striker. And it struck me that in some curious way, and there's nothing mystical about it, but WE ALL FIGHT FOR ONE ANOTHER ! And what we're involved in here, just what Mickey Devine was involved in, is no small, narrow, parochial dispute ! It's not some little sordid thing going on in a backwater ! It is part of something great ! What we've been involved in over the last 20 years has been something great and we should be proud to have been involved in it ! It's a great thing to have been part of ! It would be a great thing to see the completion of ! Long Live Michael Devine !" ----Eamon Mc Cann

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

RADIO REBEL GAEL Presents : Klass Warriors & Musical Insurgents !


 http://spinxpress.com/bronxgael/


FEAT. Exclusive Interviews w/ Chris of The Wakes, Collie (Northside Dubliner & Rapper), and Ernesto Ayala of La Raza Unida !

And Brand New Tunes by The Kreelers, McGillicuddys, Dropkick Murphys, Emish, & Mischief Brew !

And tons more !

http://spinxpress.com/bronxgael/


The cause of labour is the cause of Ireland, the cause of Ireland is the cause of labour.


    • – James Connolly, Workers' Republic  8 April, 1916

http://spinxpress.com/bronxgael/

IN REMEMBRANCE OF COMRADE LUDO MARTENS

IN MEMORY OF THE FOUNDER OF THE WORKERS PARTY OF BELGIUM
(PTB) COMRADE LUDO MARTENS




After a long and serious illness, on June 5, 2011, former chairman of the Workers Party of Belgium (WPB), Ludo Martens (1946-2011) died. Politician and scientist Ludo Martens conducted extensive research on the causes of the collapse of socialism in the USSR and Eastern Europe, and he has written several books on the subject. He believed in the strengthening and unification of the international communist movement on the basis of scientific socialism and in the spirit of internationalism. Many of us knew him especially as the initiator of the annual International Communist Seminar, which from 1992 to early 2000-s took place under his personal chairmanship. Our party, the AUCPB also took an active part in the seminars.

Ludo Martens began his revolutionary activities in May 1968, becoming one of the most prominent student leaders of the European events of May 1968. He brought innovative ideas from around the world to universities through the establishment of student union movement (SVB), developed solidarity with the struggle of black people in America for equal rights, fought against the narrowness of nationalism and made great efforts to enhance solidarity
between the student and worker movements.

In 1979, Ludo Martens was one of the founders of the leftist Workers Party of Belgium, originated in the merger of student and labour movement in the turbulent 1970's. Ludo Martens turned into reality the slogan "serve the people" among other things by supporting the organization "Medicine for the People".

11 "Medicine for the People" clinics that are free today, service more than 25000 patients and have been and remain one of the most important achievements of the WPB. The WPB today has 4,500 members and has grassroots organizations in 30 cities and 120 workplaces Belgium.

Ludo Martens led the WPB until 1999. In the last decade of his life, he was particularly active in the Congo. With his books on the Congolese freedom fighters - Patrice Lumumba, Pierre Mulele and Leonie Abo he wanted to support the progressive movement in Congo. "Returning history to those who made it," as he would put it.

The Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks in connection with the untimely death of Comrade Ludo Martens, expresses deep condolences to the members of the Workers Party of Belgium (WPB), close relatives and friends of Comrade Ludo Martens, and to everyone who knew and worked with him. His bright image of a politician, communist, scientist, intelligent, very humble and charming man will live forever in our hearts.

The General Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of
Bolsheviks (CC AUCPB) N.A. Andreeva

Thursday, May 26, 2011

JUSTICE FOR BRENDAN LILLIS !

I just emailed , the Secretariat, at the European Council for the Prevention  of Torture, Diane Penaueau, asking for them to help in bringing justice and  compassion to the Irish Political Prisoners in Maghaberry Prison, at behest of  Caroline Kelly, please , if you even have 5 minutes , take the time to send a  similiar message to Diane, at :

cpt.doc@coe.int and bbernath@apt.ch
and let her know about this grevious injustice in Maghaberry Prison !




Dear Diane Penaueau,


I felt the need to highlight the injustice taking place in HMP  Maghaberry Prison in Maghaberry, Lisburn, Northern Ireland, whereby it has come  to my attention, that despite all the peaceful and nonviolent efforts of the  Irish Political Prisoners there, they were consistently, forcibly strip  searched, unmercifully beaten, and several of their number, thrown into solitary  confinement, and continue to live in inhumane conditions that are a clear  violation of their rights, a clear violation of human rights and the European  Convention on Human Rights, and , speaking specifically, regards, Political  Prisoner, Brendan Lillis, his continued detention, while the Prison Authorities  refuse to give Brendan proper medical care, and insist, instead to drug him, as  he continually suffers from the incurable medical condition, known as ankylosing  spondylitis , is in clear violation of Article 5, the Right to Liberty and  Security, and Article 6, the Right to a Fair Trial. As a colleague recently  stated, , Brendan Lillis, also has a protected right under the EU HR Convention  to the Provision of Medical Services under Article 2 the Right to  Life.


Brendan Lillis and his fellow Political Prisoners are being held in  inhumane conditions due to their political convictions and I urge you and your  colleagues to investigate this injustice and let the world know that while  Brendan Lillis and his fellow Political Prisoners are held in these unjust  conditions, we will not rest until justice is done.


Sincerely,

Rory Dubhdara,

New Brunswick, NJ, USA


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

JUSTICE & FREEDOM FOR THE MAPUCHE HUNGER STRIKERS

From Void Mirror

From Athens Greece, from Mexico city to London, from New York to Bilbao, from Hamburg to Sofia and from Katmandhou to San Francisco, from all the active cells of Void Network we are expressing our solidarity to the struggle of Mapuche for Mother Earth, for the Dignity and Freedom of their communities, for the Freedom and Dignity of all of us. The Struggle of Mapuche people is our own struggle, their dreams are our own dreams! Freedom for all political prisoners, Freedom for all Mapuche prisoners NOW!

Dear Friends,

this is a message from Mexico City, 23rd March 2011.
Last September we contacted you during the more than eighty day hunger strike staged by Mapuche political prisoners in Chile. At that time we also made a call for international support, numerous individuals and organizations signed up to this cause and responded to the call for support. This included various meetings in the Chilean Embassy in Mexico City in Europe and in other countries around the world which formed part of the international events to provide solidarity and support to these political prisoners in Chile. The hunger strike was ended with an agreement on the part of the Chilean government to not try the detained under terrorist law (which also permits repeated prosecution for the same crime). The hunger strike and the mass support in Chile and beyond made a huge impact, pressurising the Chilean government to respect the basic individual guarantees for the prisoners. Last March all of the seventeen Mapuche political prisoners, persecuted for supposed terrorist crimes, were cleared of those supposed crimes and the majority of them were freed.

However, four prisoners who are members of the Arauco Malleco Organisation (Coordinadora Arauco Malleco) have been condemned to prison sentences of between twenty and twenty five years. These are Ramón Llanquileo Pilquiman, José Huenuche, Jonathan Huillical and Héctor Llaitul. It is important to note that the Arauco Malleco Organisation is one of the Mapuche organisations which is most active in the defence of communal land against forestry companies and which vindicates indigenous autonomy most rigorously. It is clear that the sentences are not only severely disproportionate however there are also political reasons behind their invention. The prisoners have now begun another hunger strike which started on the fifteenth March. At the time of writing this hunger strike continues. The prisoners defence will appeal against the sentences, presenting a call to declare the charges void to the Chilean Supreme Court of Justice. The principal arguments are that in these cases “faceless witnesses” were permitted. These secret witnesses are anonymous and the defence is not permitted to have any form of contact with them. Furthermore, during their detention and time in prison there have been violations of constitutional guarantees, confessions under torture, declarations outside of the allowed time limit and without the presence of defending lawyers. There has also been repeated trial for the same alleged crime.

It is therefore that support groups from various parts of the world will impulse diverse actions of solidarity for the prisoners and pressure on the Chilean government. The objectives are to support the demand to declare the charges and trial void that have been declared against these four prisoners. In these actions we also send a message of solidarity to those prisoners on hunger strike.

As part of these actions we also send another letter to you with the hope that we can once again count on your signature. We send you warm regards.

Support Organisation for the Mapuche political prisoners in Chile [ Mexican Section.]

We, artists, academics, indigenous, civil and popular organisations of various nationalites wish to make public our concern for the sentences against the Mapuch political prisoners in Chile, Ramón Llanquileo Pilquiman, José Huenuche, Jonathan Huillical y Héctor Llaitul. We find the enormous sentences against them alarming as well as the fact that they have not had the legal guarantees that protect the most basic of human rights. It must be considered that the State can not respond to indigenous demands of land, territory and autonomy by criminalising social protest. We call upon the Chilean State to guarantee the due and proper trial of the detained, a trial without the use of secret witnesses, with tribunal impartiality, dignified conditions of detainment and an end to repeated trial for the same alleged crimes. We call upon the Chilean State to the rights and basic guarantees of the Mapuche people, to recognise the rights of indigenous peoples consecrated in the 169th declaration of the WLO and to respond urgently to the demands of the hunger strikers. We send a message of solidarity from all over the world to the prisoners and their families.
autonomía! autogestión! horizontalidad! libertad!



Jovenes en Resistencia Alternativa
www.espora.org/jra
ciudad de méxico: 36266692
Void Network
[Theory, Utopia, Empathy, Ephemeral Arts]
http://voidnetwork.blogspot.com
please send your messages of solidarity:
the signs will be received in
libertadpresosmapuche@gmail.com
for more info about the Mapuche Nation:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapuche

1954 : Coup d'etat and Civil War in Guatemala


When Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman attempted to nationalize the United Fruit Company, a US-based corporation that controlled much of Guatemala’s agricultural land, a CIA-sponsored coup d’etat replaced him with a brutal military dictatorship.
Mural depicting Guatemalan President Arbenz and symbolizing the reign of military terror following the CIA backed coup in 1954, Collaborative art by HIJOS, Zone 1, Guatemala City, Guatemala. Copyright © Donna De Cesare.

Arbenz had tried to follow international law, offering the US company compensation. Arbenz had based his offer on the estimated value the United Fruit Company itself used in its tax declarations. The company had deliberately underestimated the value of its land holdings to avoid paying Guatemalan or US taxes.

After refusing the $600,000 buyout Arbenz offered as too low, the United Fruit Company, its banking supporters and the CIA argued that he was either a communist , or a socialist who would make Guatemala prey to Communist takeover. At the height of cold war tensions, these assertions persuaded US President Eisenhower to support a CIA coup plot. Arbenz was forced into exile and died in Mexico in 1971. The US continued to support the succession of military regimes that followed waging war for the next 40 years on anyone they decided was “communist” including their own Mayan population.

From :

http://www.destinyschildren.org/en/timeline/coup-d-etat-and-civil-war-in-guatemala/

Guatemala to Restore Legacy of a President the U.S. Helped Depose




MEXICO CITY — After President Jacobo Arbenz was overthrown in a C.I.A.-backed coup in 1954, the Guatemalan government reversed his policies and branded him a Communist, all but erasing his brief presidency from history.
Nearly six decades later, a democratic Guatemala has promised to restore his legacy and treat him as a statesman.

In an agreement signed with Mr. Arbenz’s descendants last week, the government promised to revise the school curriculum and grant Mr. Arbenz the treatment afforded to historical heroes. It will name a main highway and a museum wing after the ousted president, prepare a biography of him, publish his widow’s memoir and mount an exhibition about him and his legacy in the National History Museum.
The post office will even issue a series of stamps in his honor.

“When you say his name, my generation and older generations automatically pick sides,” said Dr. Erick Arbenz, Mr. Arbenz’s grandson, an anesthesiologist in Boston. “The younger generation don’t know who he was or how he shaped history. Part of that is the culture of silence created by the C.I.A. and the perpetrators.”

After winning the presidency in a landslide election in 1950, Mr. Arbenz began an effort to modernize the economy, including a land-redistribution program that angered American corporations and the United States government. President Eisenhower, convinced that Mr. Arbenz was giving the Communists a foothold in the Americas, authorized a coup that ousted the Guatemalan president in nine days.

The deposed president died in 1971 at the age of 57, a broken man in Mexico, leaving his widow, children and, later, grandchildren to fight unsuccessfully in the Guatemalan courts for his reputation and their confiscated property.

In 1999, the family went to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in Washington. It accepted the complaint in 2006, leading to five years of stop-and-start negotiations.

The agreement, signed last Thursday, includes monetary reparations, which were not disclosed. The Guatemalan government will also hold a public ceremony to admit the state’s past role in the coup and send a letter apologizing to the family.

The government has “acknowledged its responsibility for wrongdoing and its desire to make it right and restore this man to his place in Guatemalan history,” said Richard J. Wilson, a law professor at American University and the director of the law school’s human rights clinic, which argued the Arbenz family’s case.

President Álvaro Colom, Guatemala’s first left-leaning president since Mr. Arbenz held office, has given human rights organizations a freer hand in demanding an accounting of the crimes committed during the brutal 36-year civil war that began a few years after the coup.

“We’re working for the historical memory of our country,” Ruth del Valle, president of Guatemala’s presidential human rights commission, wrote in an e-mail. Ms. del Valle acted as her government’s negotiator. “It’s important to guarantee that events such as these are never repeated,” she said.

As part of the agreement, the family insisted on measures it believes can promote change in Guatemala, where, Dr. Arbenz said, the social chasm that lay behind the coup and its aftermath still persists. The government agreed to set up a degree program in human rights for public officials and indigenous leaders.

Dr. Arbenz said the agreement finally corrects the historical record, even if neither the president nor his wife, María Cristina Vilanova, who died at 93 in 2009, lived to see it.

“Justice does take time, even if it skips a generation,” Dr. Arbenz said. “My grandmother taught us to be tenacious, to be courageous, to be brave, and eventually there will be a solution.”


Thursday, May 19, 2011

MACHUCA : A Film By Andres Wood


I wanted to recommend this brilliant Chilean film that I saw the other night, MACHUCA, it is basically the only movie I have ever seen that shows the truth of Class War from the point of view of grade school students, a story of a school kid growing up in Santiago when Salvador Allenda was in power and shortly after removed by the CIA backed military junta of Augosto Pinochet,  and the repercussions on the poor after Pinochet took power .

This film shows the massive chasm that lies between the haves and the have nots of Santiago in the early 1970's, which could really be any place or town or city or nation, in Europe, North, Central or South America, today, showing, El Barrio of New Brunswick with its poverty and desolation and less than two miles away, the sparkling estates and condominiums of South Brunswick, or North Brunswick, or perhaps taking you from the yuppie splender of Park Slope to the bleak ghettoes of Bedford Stuyvesant, and the fight for social and economic equality by those who opposed such a inequality and the radical changes brought about by  socialists like Salvador Allende, whose legacy has, I believe, sparked the massive move towards socialism and socialist governments in modern Latin America, with Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, former Roman Catholic Bishop and political prisoner, Fernando Lugo, in Paraguay, a student of "liberation theology" (which is often termed  "Christian Marxism" by its detractors due to its emphasis on the fight for the poor and social justice), and Evo Morales in Bolivia, the first indigenous leader to become a president of Bolivia, when he was elected in a massive landslide of 53.7 % of the popular vote (the largest electoral victory in Bolivian history) on December 18, 2005, only to substantially increase this majority in a recall referendum on August 14, 2008, where he won more than two thirds of the votes, and again won the presidential elections in December 2009 with a 63% majority in tbe national vote.


This movie teaches the timeless lesson of Class War and even focuses on proponents of "liberation theology", in this movie, in the form of a rebel priest, who is shown as being either socialist or very sympathetic to socialist ideas, Father McEnroe, who is allegedly based on the historical rebel priest, Father Gerardo Whelan, who was the priest who taught at the school that this film's director, Andres Wood attended, Saint George's College, a rebel priest who stands up against the wealthy "elite" and their fascist backers. Great film and a recommended film for any socialist or anyone who understands the importance of Class War in *any revolutionary struggle*

-- Rory Dubhdara, The New Brunswick Bolshevik