Raúl
had invited him. He replied he didn’t want to come
see me so I wouldn’t catch the flu he had. That was
nothing but a pretext to avoid the torture of my habitual
questions. “What am I taking vitamin C for?” I
told him in a message. Should we expect all the heads
of State who attended the Rio Group’s warm and successful
last meeting to get sick?
He
was content, euphoric about that battle for peace and his
role in it recognized by international cables-- made him
happy. He was serene, persuasive, thoughtful and with an
excellent sense of humor. Even Bolivar, who was never wholly
satisfied with anything, would have been pleased at that
moment.
At
the end, he sang “Quisqueya.” The meeting had
proven fruitful and, flu and all, his musical voice and ear
could finally take the floor.
He
remarked that oil prices had gone up 5 dollars. He asked
to be excused by Leonel who, in a reflex-reaction, overcome
with joy, had begun to cough.
Many
of the countries who had gathered there export coffee and
cocoa to the U.S. market, in addition to all kinds of vegetables
and fruits. I am not up to date as regards the latter’s
prices, but the price of coffee and cocoa is about what it
was 50 years ago, when the dollar had a few dozen times the
purchasing power it has today.
Simple
trade, increasingly unequal, is crushing the economies of
many Latin American countries. Some African countries are
oil producers. Others produce coffee and cocoa. Some attract
transnational capital like bees around a honey pot. Others
attract debt and its steep interests. And all suffer the
scourge of rising food prices.
Today,
Saturday, I had a long conversation with Chávez. We
are like brothers. The decision to publish what we discussed
is not mine to make, as it has never been and will never
be. Venezuela is not Brazil. I will publish only what he
authorizes in my memoirs. All I can say is that the meeting
was excellent. And I have yet to feel any flu symptoms.
Fidel
Castro Ruz
March 8, 2008
3:17 p.m. |