When
I read Hart's article, published by Granma in commemoration
of Chibás'
birth, and saw it quoted a paragraph of the speech I delivered
at the Colón Cemetery on January 16, 1959, eight
days after my arrival in Havana following the revolutionary
triumph, many memories of fallen, heroic comrades came
to me. I thought of Juan Manuel Márquez, a brilliant
orator and follower of Marti's ideas and second chief of
the Granma expeditionary force. I thought of Abel Santamaría,
who was to take command of our forces were I to fall during
the attack on the Moncada garrison; of Pedro Marrero, Ñico
López, José Luis Tasende, Gildo Fleitas,
the Gómez brothers, Ciro Redondo, Julio Díaz
and practically all the members of the numerous contingent
of young people from Artemisa who fell at Moncada or in
the Sierra. The list is endless. All of them came from
the rank and file of the Orthodox Party.
The first problem we faced was getting Batista out of office.
Had Chibás been alive, Batista would not have been
able to stage his coup d'état, because the founder
of the Cuban (Orthodox) People's Party kept a close eye on
him and called him into question publicly and methodically.
Following Chibás' death, Batista was sure to lose
the elections scheduled for June 1, 1952, two and a half
months after the coup. Opinion polls were fairly reliable
and Batista's unpopularity was constantly growing, day after
day.
I was at the meeting where the new Orthodox candidate was
chosen. I was more of a bold intruder than an invitee. I
was to enter parliament, to struggle in the name of a radical
program. No one could have prevented this. Then, it was rumored
that I was a communist, a word which prompted many negative
reactions inculcated by the dominant classes. To have spoken
of Marxism-Leninism then, or even during the first years
of the Revolution, would have been foolish and clumsy. During
the speech I delivered before Chibás' grave, I spoke
such that the people would understand the objective contradictions
which our society faced at the time and which we still must
face.
I spoke every day at a local radio station in the capital
to deliver messages directly to tens of thousands of voters
who had spontaneously joined the Orthodox Party. I also addressed
the entire nation through the special supplements of the
Alerta newspaper on several, nearly consecutive Mondays,
publishing the proven accusations of corruption in the Prío
government voiced between January 28 and March 4, 1952.
Intuitively, I was able to predict and get inside Batista's
intentions of staging a coup. I denounced these intentions
before the party leadership and asked them permission to
use Chibás' Sunday radio time to do so publicly. "We'll
look into it", they told me. Two days later, they announced
the following: "We have looked into the matter through
our channels and there's no indication of that whatsoever".
The coup could have been prevented but nothing was done.
Months before, Chibás had already, painstakingly managed
to prevent "a pact without ideology", as he would
call it, between members of the Orthodox party and the former
Cuban (Authentic) Revolutionary Party. Most of the provincial
party leadership had supported the pact. The economic system
prevailing at the time made it easy for the oligarchy and
land-owners to take control of the party leadership in nearly
all of the country's provinces. Only one party leadership
remained loyal, the one in the capital, which was heavily
influenced by radical intellectuals.
Following the coup and at a time when unity was most dearly
needed, what the oligarchy did was abandon the vast majority
of the people at the mercy of the imperialist tempest. I
continued to adhere to my revolutionary project, only that
this time it would be an armed struggle, from the very beginning.
The day in which Chibás -whose body lay in state at
the University of Havana-, was to be buried, I proposed that
the leadership of the Orthodox Party lead the enormous funeral
procession to the Presidential Palace and seize the premises.
I had spent the entire night answering questions from radio
reporters and inciting the people to undertake radical actions.
No one at the university paid any attention to the radio
broadcasts that night. We had a disorganized, panic-stricken
government, a demoralized army that had no intention of repressing
that procession. No one would have held it back.
One year after the death
of Chib ás, I wrote a proclamation titled "A Harsh
Blow", which was mimeographed six days following Batista's
treacherous coup. What follows is the text of this proclamation.
Not a Revolution, but a harsh blow! Not patriots; but destroyers
of civil liberty, usurpers, backward-minded individuals,
adventurers thirsty for gold and power.
It was not a military uprising against the apathetic and
lazy President Prio; it was a military uprising against
the people, on the eve of an election whose results were
a foregone conclusion.
There was no order but it was the people whose duty it
was to decide democratically, in a civilized manner, on
the men who would govern them, by political will and not
by force.
A fortune would be spent in favor of the imposed candidate,
nobody denies that, but that wouldn't change the result
just as the result was not changed by a flood of funds
from the Public Treasury in favor of the candidate imposed
by Batista in 1944.
It is completely false, absurd, ridiculous and childish
that Prio would attempt a coup d'état, a clumsy
excuse; his impotence and incapacity to attempt such an
enterprise has been irrefutably demonstrated by the cowardice
with which power was seized.
We were suffering from bad governance, but we were also
suffering from years of waiting for a constitutional opportunity
to avert the evil, and you, Batista, who remained in the
shadows as a coward for four years and futilely indulged
in politicking for another three, now you appear with your
tardy, disturbing and poisonous remedy, ripping the Constitution
to shreds when we were only two months away from reaching
the goal through the official channels.
Everything you allege is a lie, a cynical justification,
concealed vanity and not patriotic decorum, ambition and
not ideal, greed and not civil nobility.
It was correct to overthrow a government made up of embezzlers
and murderers; we tried to do this by civic channels, supported
by public opinion and with the help of the masses; in contrast,
what right do they who yesterday robbed and killed indiscriminately
have to replace it in the name of bayonets?
It is not peace; it is the seed of hatred which is being
sown. It is not happiness, it is mourning and sadness which
the nation feels as it is faced with the tragic panorama
it begins to discern. There is nothing in this world as
bitter as the spectacle of a people who go to sleep in
liberty and awaken in slavery.
Once again the military boot; once again Columbia dictating
laws that remove and appoint ministers; once again tanks
rumbling menacingly through our streets; once again brute
force reigning over human rationality. We were becoming
accustomed to living by the
Constitution; we had twelve years without any great difficulties,
even though there were some errors and rash actions. Superior
states of civic coexistence can only be attained through
arduous efforts. In a matter of a few hours, you, Batista,
have demolished the Cuban people's noble illusion.
All of the ills Prío was responsible for in three
years, you committed in the course of eleven. Your coup
is thus unjustifiable; it is not based on any serious moral
reason, or on any social or political doctrine of any kind.
It finds its only reason for existence in force, and its
justification in lies. Your majority lies with the Army,
never with the people. Your ballots are guns, never free
wills; with them you can win a military uprising, but never
clean elections. Your usurping against power lacks any
principles to legitimize it; laugh if you will, but in
the long run principles are more powerful than cannons.
Principles are what form and nourish the people, what embolden
them for battle, what they die for.
Do not call this outrage revolution, this disquieting and
untimely coup, this treacherous stab in the back of the
Republic which you have just given. Trujillo has been the
first one to recognize your government; he knows who his
friends are in the covey of tyrants who are battering America;
that shows, more than anything else, the reactionary, militaristic
and criminal nature of your coup. Nobody even remotely
believes in the governmental success of your old and rotten
covey; the thirst for power is too great; there is no moderation
when there is no Constitution and law other than the will
of the tyrant and his gang.
I know beforehand that your guarantee for life will be
torture and humiliation. Your followers will kill even
though you don't want them to, and you will tranquilly
consent because you owe yourself completely to them. Despots
are masters of the people they oppress and slaves to the
force on which they base their oppression. A torrent of
lying and demagogic propaganda will rain down on us now,
in your favor, from all sources, using both soft and hard
methods, and your opposition will be deluged with vile
slander; Prío did that also and it had no effect
on the people's consciousness. But the truth which illuminates
the fate of Cuba and guides the steps of our people in
this their difficult hour, that truth which you will forbid
to be told, the whole world will know it; it will race
clandestinely from mouth to mouth, down every man and woman,
even though no one says it in public or publishes it in
the press, and everyone will believe it and the seeds of
heroic rebellion shall be sown in every heart; that is
what guides every conscience.
I do not know what the furious pleasure of the oppressors
will be, when their treacherous whip hits human backs like
a new Cain against their brothers, but I do know that there
is an infinite happiness in fighting them and raising a
strong arm while saying: I don't want to be a slave!
Cubans: again we have a tyrant, but again we will have
the likes of Mella, Trejo and Guiteras; there is oppression
in our homeland but one day there will be freedom again.
I invite all brave Cubans, all the brave militants of the
Glorious Party of Chibás; the time has come to make
sacrifices and fight; should our lives be lost, nothing
is lost, "to live enchained is to live in dishonor
and outrage. To die for the Homeland is to live."
Fidel Castro
When this irreverent article was not published -who would
dare publish it? - It was distributed at the Colón
Cemetery by friends and sympathizers in the Orthodox Party
on March 16, 1952.
On August 16, 1952, the clandestine newspaper El acusador
published an article entitled "A Critical Assessment
of the Cuban (Orthodox) People's Party, under the pseudonym
of "Alejandro". As I have already offered a critical
assessment of that party, I thought it apt to include the
following analysis:
Above and beyond the commotion of the cowards, the mediocre
and the fainthearted, it is necessary to voice a brief
but courageous and constructive assessment of the Orthodox
Movement, following the fall of its great leader Eduardo
Chibás.
The formidable and sharp criticisms of the champion of
the Orthodox Party left it such an immense profusion of
popular emotion that it brought it right to the doors of
Power. Everything was done, and all that remained was to
know how to hold on to the ground already gained.
The first question each honest Orthodox member must ask
himself is the following: Have we enhanced the moral and
revolutionary legacy left us by Chibás..., or, on
the contrary, have we misappropriated part of that legacy...?
He who thinks that until this moment everything has been
done well, that we have nothing to reproach ourselves for
is not sufficiently severe with his conscience.
Those sterile feuds that followed the death of Chibás,
those colossal scandals, for reasons that were not exactly
ideological but purely selfish and personal, still echo
like bitter blows of the hammer on our conscience.
That dreadful process of going to the rostrum to clarify
pointless disputes was a grave symptom of lack of discipline
and responsibility.
March 10th came unexpectedly. It was to be expected that
such a serious event would rip from the roots of the Party
the petty quarrels and the sterile personal ambitions.
Was that what actually happened...?
To the amazement and indignation of the Party masses, the
clumsy disputes cropped up again. The culprits were so
foolish that they did not realize that there was narrow
room in the press to attack the regime, but ample room
to attack the Orthodox Party. Those who have helped Batista
in like fashion have not been few.
No one would be shocked that such a necessary recount should
be made today, when it is the time for the great masses
who, in bitter silence, have suffered these losses, and
there is no more fitting moment than today to be accountable
to Chibás at his tomb.
That immense mass of the Cuban People's Party is on its
feet, more determined than ever. It asks at this hard moment...Where
are those who were candidates...those who wanted to be
the first in the positions of honor at the assemblies and
in the executive, those who would go on tours and chart
tendencies, those who would claim their places on the platform
at the large rallies and who now no longer go on tours,
or mobilize the grass roots, or ask for the positions of
honor in the front line of combat...?
Whoever has a traditional concept of politics could be
pessimistic when faced with this vision of truths. On the
other hand, for those with a blind faith in the masses,
for those who believe in the uncompromising force of great
ideas, the indecision of the leaders will not be a reason
for weakness or despair, because these vacancies will be
occupied in short order by upright men who come from the
rank and file.
The moment has come for revolution and not politics. Politics
is the consecration of the opportunism of those who have
the means and the resources. Revolution opens the door
to true worthiness, to those who possess courage and sincere
ideals, to those who bare their chest and uplift the banner.
The Revolutionary Party requires a revolutionary leadership,
young and from the ranks of the people, in order to save
Cuba.
Alejandro.
Later, we set up a clandestine radio station which did
what Radio Rebelde would later do in the Sierra. In relatively
little time, the mimeograph, broadcaster and the few things
we had fell to the hands of the coup officers. I then learned
the rigorous rules to which the conspiracy which culminated
with the attack on the Moncada garrison had to adhere.
Shortly, a small volume which expounds on two fundamental
ideas that were expressed in two of my speeches -the one
I delivered at the United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development held in Rio de Janeiro over 15 years ago
and at the international conference titled "Dialogue
among Civilizations", held two and a half years ago-
will be published. I ask readers to study the two documents
in depth. I apologize for this act of self-publicity, from
which I hope you, not I, will profit.
Fidel Castro Ruz
August 25, 2007
6:32 p.m.