You may be thinking that your little boat is making its
way upstream, but if the current is stronger, you will be going
backwards.
Make
no shameful concessions to the empire’s ideology;
I have said this and today, I say it again.
Nobody shall ever read from my humble pen any opportunistic
praise that would besmirch his or her behaviour.
It is for this reason that I resolutely support the decision
by the Party and the Council of State to replace the Minister
of Education.
It is well known that, throughout my whole life, since I had
a revolutionary conscience, I have dedicated myself, first
and foremost, to the subject of education, ever since the Literacy
Campaign up to the universalization of higher education. Despite
the economic blockade and aggression, we have managed to attain
a privileged and unique position in the world in this field.
The
man in charge of this responsibility, Luis Ignacio Gómez
Guriérrez, was truly exhausted. He had lost energy
and revolutionary conscience. He should not have made
the last speeches and refer to future meetings with the educators
of the hemisphere and the world, extolling a body of work that
was the authentic product of numerous revolutionary cadres,
and not a personal accomplishment as he would have the guests
believe.
I am really sorry if any of our self-sacrificing teachers
interpret this as an unfair statement.
I
should point out that in the course of ten years he travelled
abroad more than 70 times. During the last three years
he did so at a rate of one trip per month, always under the
excuse of promoting international cooperation with Cuba. For
this and other elements of judgement, we can no longer trust
him; to be more exact: we do not trust him at all.
Who is to replace him? This was the other part of the problem.
It had to be done, and quickly. We searched through many possibilities.
A list of fifteen of the best was drawn up; two had shown remarkable
progress in that field:
Ena
Elsa Velázquez Cobiella, PhD in Educational Sciences,
currently the rector of the Frank País Higher Pedagogical
Institute in Santiago de Cuba. She graduated in 1980,
accumulated teaching experience in a wide variety of educational
responsibilities, with distinction; she is 52 and at the triumph
of the Revolution, in her hometown, the capital of the former
Oriente Province, she had just turned two years old.
Cira
Piñeiro Alonso holds a Summa Cum Laude Bachelor’s
Degree in Psychology, Provincial Director of Education in Granma
Province, with 16 years of experience in various teaching capacities. Her
success as head of education in Granma has been acknowledged
by the entire country. She is 39 years old.
Both comrades, because of their merits and achievements, were
proposed by the candidacy committee and elected as deputies
to the National Assembly.
Both
of them shall be instated in the Ministry of Education: Ena
Elsa as Minister and Cira Piñeiro as assistant to the
Minister and future cadre in the position to which she is appointed.
They shall be replaced in their current tasks by professionals
plucked from our inexhaustible reservoir of teachers and revolutionaries.
In this special and important case, besides my personal assessment,
I was fully consulted and informed.
When
I had the privilege of also being consulted on the eve of
the election of the Council of State, I did not hesitate
in proposing that prestigious military leaders –who
brought our heroic people glory and moral authority– such
as Leopoldo Cintras Frías and Álvaro López
Miera, who are mature, modest, brimming with experience and
energy, younger than the military officer who is one of the
strongest and most threatening candidates for the leadership
of the empire, should be proposed to the National Assembly
as candidates for membership in the Council of State. I know
other cadres, quite a bit younger than they are, highly qualified,
with excellent training and not very publicized, people whom
we must consider.
I don't like in the least to offend anyone, but I cannot hesitate
in explaining the facts with absolute clarity in order to protect
the work of the generations who have contributed their sweat,
sacrifice and, in several instances, even their health and
their lives to the Revolution.
I
hope that my compatriots understand that the forced work
imposed on me by nature at this stage of my life obliges
me, both to friends and adversaries, to express my thinking
straightforward and with the irrefutable moral evidence within
my reach. Therefore,
I shoulder full responsibility for this decision, whatever
the reactions and consequences may be.
The
enemy libels will accuse me of applying psychological terror
from a position of moral authority. It is absolutely nothing
of the kind for those who are conscious of the fact that
true psychological and physical terror –with endless
human and moral suffering for our people– would come
from the return of imperial domination in Cuba. In such a sad
case, the cause would not be a lack of literacy or culture,
but a lack of conscience.
I shall never resign myself to the idea of anyone aspiring
to power out of selfishness, complacency, vanity and the supposed
indispensability of a human being.
I shall express my modest opinion while I can and need to
do so.
Together, the living and the dead shall fight on!
Fidel Castro Ruz
April 22, 2008
6:18 p.m. |