This is a political reflection. To be
more precise: it is another proclamation. Exactly one year
ago today, on July 31, 2006, I issued the first
proclamation. But the year gone by is worth 10, for I have
had the opportunity to live a unique experience which has
afforded me information and knowledge on vital questions
facing humanity, knowledge I have conveyed to the people of
Cuba with the utmost honesty.
Today, I am bombarded with questions as
to when I will take up again what some call power, as though
that power were possible without independence. The world
knows a real and destructive power, wielded by a decadent
empire which threatens everyone.
Raúl has already responded that, as I
recover, every important decision is consulted with me. What
will I do? I will fight tirelessly as I have done my entire
life.
One year after the first Proclamation, I
can share with the people of Cuba the satisfaction of seeing
that what was then promised is reflected by today’s
unquestionable reality: Raúl, the Party, the government, the
National Assembly, the Young Communists League and
grassroots and social organizations, headed by the workers,
move forward, guided by the unshakable principle of unity.
With the same conviction, we continue to
struggle relentlessly to have the Five Heroes, who provided
Cuba with information on the United States’ anti-Cuban
terrorist plans, released from cruel and merciless prison.
The struggle against our own deficiencies
and against the insolent enemy which seeks to take
possession of Cuba must be unrelenting.
On this point, I am obliged to insist on
something which the leaders of the Revolution can never
forget: it is our duty to work untiringly to strengthen our
defensive capability and preparedness, under the principle
that, regardless of the circumstances, an unpayable price
must be paid for any invasion.
No one should entertain the slightest
illusion that the empire, which carries the genes of its own
destruction, will negotiate with Cuba. Though we have said,
again and again, that our struggle is not against the people
of the United Sates —something which is absolutely true— the
latter is not in a position to curtail the apocalyptic
impulses of its government or the foul and insane call for
what they label a "democratic Cuba", as though leaders here
put themselves forth and elect themselves without having to
pass through that inflexible filter embodied by the
overwhelming majority of an educated and cultivated people
who must support them.
In a previous reflection, I invoked the
historical figures of Martí, Maceo,
Agramonte and Cespedes. To keep alight the memory of the
innumerable people who fell in combat, of those who fought
and sacrificed themselves for the homeland, Raúl lit a flame
that shall burn for eternity, 50 years after Frank País, the
young 22-year-old hero whose example moved all of us, fell
in combat.
Life is meaningless without ideas. There
is no greater joy than to struggle in their name.
Fidel Castro Ruz
July 31, 2007
5:35 p.m.