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20 December 2004
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Written by Katherine Lahey - el23.net
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Before
I arrived here in Venezuela, I had planned to work with the
Bolivarian Circle Abrebrecha (part of the Collective Carlos Reina of El
23 de Enero) as part of a field study project in my studies at the
University of California. Looking back then, I didn't know too much
about the actual structure of the Bolivarian circles; how could I have
when the mainstream information that we receive in the US is that
Bolivarian circles are micro-terrorist organizations that infiltrate
community democracy? Nonetheless, I arrived here with a vision of
Venezuelan democracy that sought reinforcement from what I had read in
the alternative media, and with an open palate that yearned to taste
what "freedom" really was all about, to learn about the ways in which
the community designed, constructed, and achieved their own avenues of
empowerment and sovereignty. I couldn't have chosen a better place to
arrive than El 23 de Enero, ejemplo de combate.
I arrived in the hands of Gustavo Borges, whose revolutionary ideology,
bonds of solidarity, and openness immediately called my attention and
impressed upon me even more the lies and propaganda that we are told in
the US about the whole world hating us, the people of the United
States. In my first week here, I remained wide-eyed everywhere we went,
24-7, as my dream of witnessing and experiencing the people's
revolutionary organizing projects came true before me. Everywhere I
went even just in my first afternoon reaffirmed this dream; as
throughout El 23 de Enero groups of students gathered on the sidewalks
singing along to the lyrics of Ali Primera in celebration of the
Liberator Simon Bolivar's birthday, the UBEs gathering during lunchtime
to watch the latest news analysis and then to discuss their own
strategies for implementing their vision within their own communities.
Yup, I have come to the right spot, I knew in this moment upon arrival.
Having arrived in late June of 2004, the notorious referendum of August
15th was rapidly nearing upon the Venezuelan people and the rest of the
world, eagerly presenting itself as the reaffirmation of the hopes,
dreams, achievements, and power of the Venezuelan people along with
their leader, Hugo Chavez Frias. Before I even left the airport, I met
an escualido with European roots who informed me that "only the
ignorant support Chavez" and that in reference to the referendum, that
Chavez was "already gone". This fragmented and segregated perception of
reality also revealed itself when Gustavo took me to El Recreo, an
upscale, 7-story escualido mall where young women walk about with nose
job band aids and just about everyone is decked out in the latest
expensive fashions, distinctly unaware of the revolutionary process
that lies outside of this plastic playground and within the communities
that have never had access to the same luxuries that this oblivious
class enjoys. Likewise, the people of the revolution have now found and
co-created access to a life these escualidos will most likely never
enjoy; a life full of and dedicated to the celebration of the
affirmation of life itself, of the foundations of community that are
woven into the process of empowerment and collective participation, of
becoming more fully-human by sharing in the light and sacredness, along
with the pain and suffering, of other fellow human beings. This process
of political enfranchisement, discovery of the capacities and
potentials we all hold when we work together, the magic in being the
pioneers of our own future.
I quickly became immersed in the every day life of the barrio, as
Gustavo immediately introduced me to the various co-members of the
circle, most of who are involved in facilitating and supporting the
missions, such as Misión Robinson 2, and Misión Ribas. The miracles and
magic I experienced and saw within these classrooms were enough to fill
my heart with love and inspiration for a lifetime. I also spent time
with various organizers in the community who work with the urban land
and health committees, urban restoration projects, and Misión Vuelvan
Caras, all which offered itself to me as an excellent prototype for a
political analysis of community organizing structure, one which offers
hope, affirmation, collectivism, and an example of the ways in which
communities can organize to obtain resources from institutional
structures without compromising their sovereignty.
Gustavo brought me not only around various facets of organizing in El
23 de Enero, but also opened doors for me to experience the bonds of
solidarity the collective builds within the rural sectors of the
countryside. There I found groups that are embarking on the process of
empowerment and economic justice in a crusade to liberate themselves
from their oppressive local governments; now thanks to their democratic
organizing efforts, they have gained a tremendous step in their triumph
of the elections of October 31. We spent time in the southern zone of
Miranda State, with the agricultural cooperative CAFECAO, who has
organized itself, with the solidarity efforts of Gustavo and his son
Maikol, into cooperative cells as well as UBEs and the missions. Thanks
to the organizing anchor of the cooperative, communities throughout
this sector of Miranda were able to mobilize for the August 15th and
October 31st elections and achieve their own victory.
Thus above provides a preliminary framework for my experience working
in Venezuela and specifically within the community here in El 23. What
follows below is a modest attempt to illustrate the world that has been
opened up to me by the people of Venezuela, who in turn, have opened up
their doors and their hearts and shared with me their heroic tales.
Because of them, I have been offered a glimpse into what economic,
political, social, and human justice and peace mean, how people here
organize around it, and what my understanding of my role within its
process is.
The Missions
Many people I have talked with who aren't with the process criticize
the missions for not being a useful way to redirect national resources
back into the country itself. Most of this misguided analysis either
includes an inherent racist or classist perspective, as anyone who
fails to recognize the importance and revolutionary significance of
this project most definitely carries an interest to benefit by the
oppression of others. Most fundamentally, the structure of the missions
carries with it a profound sense of human dignity and basic social
justice, as well as bearing in its foundation the basic premise and
stronghold of democracy. It is an enabler of empowerment and a key tool
the community may use in facilitating its own liberation and
development, the basic principles of Simon Bolivar. Without this
crucial step, neither social justice nor any kind of real development
will ever be achieved.
Not only are the missions themselves a direct tool for empowerment and
community development, but also act as a radical example for shifting
ideologies and paradigm transformation within the educational system,
thus acting as a microcosm for the Bolivarian Revolution itself. As the
educational missions practice radical education in their content as
well as shifting social structures to enable the masses that before had
remained without access to the traditional education structure, the
health mission Barrio Adentro provides free access to professional
medical doctors, a service to which the poor have never had access, the
community markets mission Mercal provides an avenue for economic
justice by providing low cost food in poor neighborhoods, and the
employment mission Vuelvan Caras becomes an essential part of the
endogenous development strategy in which the country is moving, it is
obvious that the missions have become the heart, engine, and backbone
of the social change process.
In each of the educational missions in which I was blessed to
participate, Robinson, Ribas, and Sucre, what I encountered there was
magically revolutionary and revolutionarily magical. The students are
bright eyed, fully engaged, and full of passion, and are living
examples of community in action. I was so impressed and inspired by the
dedication of each section of students as well as their facilitators,
who are also living examples of revolutionary dedication and
participatory democracy in action; in Misión Robinson by the students
eagerness to learn and participate, often arriving to class an hour or
more early, with obvious love and admiration for their "profe", in
Misión Ribas by the students dedication and discipline, often meeting
outside of designated class time to make up work or starting class by
their own initiative if the facilitator had not yet arrived, in Misión
Sucre by the fierce questioning and analysis, tackling complex issues,
and always applying a revolutionary framework in the dialogues we
shared during my visit to their classes. They are all beyond prepared
to serve- and already do serve- as living models of the revolution and
as agents and leaders of profound revolutionary change in their
communities.
Bolivarian Circles
Using the Bolivarian Circle Abrebrecha as the model for my
understanding of the Bolivarian Circle structure, I was able to catch a
glimpse into the world of organized leadership developed in the
community through a purely grass roots model. After my arrival here,
and some explanation by Gustavo and other circle members, I was able to
see that the central framework for the Bolivarian Circles has changed
into one of adopting the line of the missions as their main form of
support in the revolutionary process. Seeing this structure take shape
mirrored to me the ways in which grass roots community organizers and
organizations can in fact, work in harmony with institutional
structures when working for a common cause with a common vision. But
what's more, is that the leadership lived and developed through this
process ensures that the community will never be forced to remain
dependent on any type of institutional structure for their livelihood
or to support them in their struggle for revolution. The gracefulness
of this leadership in its navigation of the development of its
community is a shining star for those around them to follow in its path
and has indicated to the rest of society a platform for struggle that
rests solely upon the efforts of the community itself.
Aside from the missions themselves, a central tenet of the Bolivarian
Circles is also planted in directly supporting, creating, and
facilitating all sorts of community projects, from murals and art to
community media to social movements and direct democracy campaigns to
simply acting as social vigilantes and assuming the responsibility as
social leaders within their community. Thus, the Bolivarian Circles are
the anchor of community participation, mobilization, and grass roots
political consciousness.
Bolivarian Schools
Possibly one of the most inspiring parts of the process here for me,
the Bolivarian Schools are a ray of light, hope, and foundational
instruments of social change that lies within the revolutionary
process. I have seen examples of Bolivarian Schools across the
spectrum, but when I see and experience the ones that are working in
the positive, there is nothing more hopeful or beautiful or inspiring
than to see this transformation in action. The schools are a vehicle
for the wisdom of Bolivar and the ideals of the revolutionary process
to come alive and to be lived, not only for the children as students,
but for the teachers and for the entire community. There is an
intrinsic happiness and joy in the students' and teachers' faces as new
material is explored, new relationships solidified, and social
contracts strengthened. When asked how they feel in being a part of the
process within their particular role, there are teachers who shed tears
of happiness as they express the joy and beauty they find in the
Bolivarian Schools, saying that it is there that families are formed,
community found, and purpose realized. The bonds of solidarity among
one another thus begin at an early age as the pedagogy of liberation is
taught and practiced in every relationship. Within this sphere of
consciousness of our connection to and love among one another, the
seeds for the future generation are planted and nurtured, a process
which strengthens and ensures the life of the revolution every day.
Although participation in the revolutionary process or even the
experience of life in Venezuela is enough to politicize and mobilize
millions, the fact still remains that we must create a space for
transforming the mentalities of self-centeredness, individuality, and
brutal capitalism that are often beaten into us from early on. The
Bolivarian Schools serve society as an excellent framework to teach
revolutionary and transformative values while the children of today's
understanding of themselves and of their world is still being formed.
The example of the teacher as well as the content and manner of
presentation of the material are extremely crucial in indicating values
of cooperation, peace, collectivism, justice, and respect. As the
children spend practically all day in school, where they receive their
meals as well, there is a tremendous opportunity to reflect these
values onto the youth.
If the values and vision of a society are to truly change in a
direction of more social awareness and compassion for each and every
person, we must stretch ourselves beyond the rhetoric we talk of in the
streets and commit ourselves to practice and live these beliefs and
ideals. Che talked about the "new [hu]man" within the context of
revolution. The Bolivarian Schools provide an excellent arena to
facilitate the ideals of this process, as they provide a context for
shaping our social beings so that we may grow to be participatory,
caring, compassionate actors in society.
Urban Land and Health Committees
Time and time again in my reflection upon and analysis of successful
community organizing, I return to the structure upon which organizing
strategies are based in El 23 de Enero. This is a blueprint which not
only constructs an avenue down which resources may trickle, bringing
benefits to the community, but also acts as a larger mechanism through
which the community implements its own ways of uniting to solve common
problems and empowers itself to steer its own course. It appears to be
the only real way in which the sovereignty of the community may be
achieved or long-term development of a community may come about, as it
requires the organization and initiative of the community itself.
Whatever type of government may enter the political spectrum in years
to come, this organizational structure ensures that the community will
always have a collective model to fall back on in case the tune of the
government changes.
I learned something very important from the work I saw within the urban
land committees. The concept of economic justice is more than gaining
resources or fair income; at its most basic level lies the concept of
human dignity. The solidarity process in helping people gain resources
to repair and if necessary, rebuild their homes so that they may live
in dignity is one of the most fundamental pieces of the process, and it
is a process that begins at the grass roots level. Without the
participation of the people on the ground and building of bridges
between institutions, leaders, and the people within the community,
government resources that trickle down from institutional orgs such as
Fundabarrios and Fundacomun would not be nearly as effective or at all
serve as a window for the community to organize itself in an
independent and sovereign manner.
The health committees comprise a similar structure that exemplifies the
way in which bottom-up organizing creates a foundation upon which
communities may build their unity and search out avenues for internal
support. Once again, this bridge of support between the community and
the mission Barrio Adentro creates a link within the community, through
which the people, organizers, and Cuban doctors are connected.
Similarly to the structure of the urban land committees, without this
organizing on the ground by the people themselves, the efforts of the
Cuban doctors who have arrived in the barrios to work with the poor
would not be nearly as effective.
Portuguesa
As I ventured outside of the Caracas organizing bubble, I encountered a
sphere of contradictions within the revolutionary process itself- empty
promises, revolutionarily-principled organizers lacking methodological
structure necessary to organize communities, and escualidos using
"Bolivarian" institutional frameworks. Not to say that there aren't
those who are quite organized, principled, and successful in
engineering social change in their communities; for example those
working in Acarigua for ongoing social change as well as for the
Chavista primary elections held October 10, but what I saw was the
absence of a domineering culture of community organizing structure that
is so present in historically revolutionary communities such as El 23
de Enero, or even Caracas itself. The Portuguesa government claims to
be Bolivarian in nature, came out strongly in condemning the 2002 coup,
and has put many programs in place for the rehabilitation of homes,
among other programs. So how is it different? Why do people there
trying to improve their communities insist on hopelessly smashing their
heads against institutional structures that operate so beauracratically
and in an ideological sense offer no alternative to the Fourth Republic
structure? I understand it as a fundamental lacking in the example of a
paradigm of self-mobilizing culture that people can implement in their
own communities to work for their own liberation. In attending a
conference given by the state governor, Antonia Muñoz, I listened to
her as she repeatedly to her constituencies in what should have been a
talk solidifying her campaign apologized for the lack of community
projects put forth by the government, saying "there's no money, there's
no money". The next day, in conversing with a member of a poor
community about organizing strategies, I listened as he said, "but we
don't have any money, how can we organize?" It was only too easy to see
the framework mirrored to the community by the institutional structure.
The government has not yet indicated to its people the struggle that
takes shape by collectively organizing in a democratically
participatory manner amongst themselves in their own communities,
developing an ideology that only they themselves can work for their own
liberation; to remain dependent on an institution to give them what
they need, no matter how "revolutionary" the institution claims to be,
will never give way to sustained revolution. It is not a question of
money, it is about coming together and creating outlines for projects
with the resources that they share. If they (the government leaders)
aren't careful, there is the potential threat of moving people to the
right when they perceive that the "Bolivarian government" doesn't
practice what it preaches, or even if what it preaches often fails to
formulate a truly revolutionary foundation for its constituencies.
What was especially powerful about this visit was in gaining a better
understanding of what it means to talk about the "revolutionary
process" instead of coining the Bolivarian Revolution as one event or
associating it simply with the Chavez national government. Those who
claim to be agents of the process but arrive with no more than hollow
rhetoric will most certainly ensure the stagnancy of the process in
many parts of the country and the ability of the opposition to remain
alive and active.
Merida
The ecological paradise which Merida boasts is likewise a mixed bag,
with the politics of the ULA acting as a penetrative force to the
spreading of revolutionary movements. Before I arrived, I had always
envisioned that Merida was another organizing stronghold, largely in
part due to the massive student population that resides there. The
lesson learned from Merida, specifically the ULA? Don't equate student
organizing with Chavismo necessarily. Although I met all sorts of
professionals and students alike organizing in accordance with the
revolutionary process, I as well encountered escualido student groups
who took on "revolutionary" rhetoric, but as nothing more than an empty
shell.
Miranda, CAFECAO
Thanks to the collective Carlos Reina, specifically Gustavo and son
Maikol Borges, I was granted access to another organized, revolutionary
front in the mountains of the southern zone of Miranda, bordering
Guarico State. As I arrived in June, the entire community was
undergoing political organizing formation and strategies, and several
of our trips up to the mountain consisted of attending UBE meetings and
the like instead of focusing on the economic functionality of the
cooperative. What I realized, though, is that a cooperative is not just
an alternative economic entity- it has the potential to act as an
organizing prototype for an entire community, a mobilizing agent
through which community members may instrument social change. Within
the Bolivarian Revolutionary process, this is the intended course for
all of the cooperatives; to form a platform upon which all community
projects and organizing may be mounted and a collective paradigm
formed.
Probably the most impressionable aspect of this community was its
fierce organizing efforts and solidarity with the process in the face
of such fascist economic and political repression and campaigns of
violence led by the notorious Mendoza government. This government has
changed since the victorious elections of October 31, but many legacies
of the former system of inequality still linger. The solidarity efforts
orchestrated between the mountain towns such as Macania, Los Rosales,
and El Jovito and the Guarico pueblo San Francisco de Macaira have in
fact been a great source of hope and also living examples of what
organized people can accomplish, even under the darkest of
circumstances. For years the two community zones have organized
transportation of agricultural products by means of a make-shift
highway, often unnavigable after heavy rains. The main route consists
of a three to four hour trip one way; after rains, considerable
additional time is needed to basically reconstruct parts of the road
using picks and humanpower of pushing the trucks over large mud
deposits. Day in and day out the youth and workers of the region make
these trips not only for economic survival but also in hope that the
dream of a viable highway will one day reach their community. In the
kinds of organizational strategies that have surfaced here in the
mountains echoes the type of organizing structure found in the
revolutionary barrios such as El 23 de Enero. With the knowledge that
no change will ever truly form for the long term without the grass
roots organization and empowerment of the people themselves, the
community here has aggressively taken it upon itself to organize into
cells, not only for the functionality of the cooperative CAFECAO, but
also in a search to construct a framework for problem-solving and
conflict transformation within the community as well as a grass roots
political platform from which a revolutionary campesino movement may
spring. These cells act as mobilizers and active vigilantes of the
efforts of the community, much like the Bolivarian Circles. In this
way, a solid base of participatory, community organization has taken
place, in whereas these cells are now able to act as bridges between
the community and the types of institutional structures that can
provide funding for projects such as the construction of a real
highway.
With sustained efforts by community members as well as with the recent
election of the new Miranda governor Diosdado, the dream of a highway
is coming true. In and of itself this achievement is an inspirational
example of what is possible within an organized community, one that has
for long been forgotten and without available resources. Because of
sustained community efforts in the mountains of Miranda, the people
have gained access to programs such as Misión Robinson, Ribas, and
Barrio Adentro.
As I have seen countless cooperatives that function as "empty shells"-
borrowing a cooperative structure often times simply to gain access to
funding, I have come to understand the essentiality of ideology
building and construction of a profound revolutionary change that
begins with each individual yet built by community. The missions and
Bolivarian schools play a tremendous role in this construction, but its
birth also lies within collective community projects, where step by
step, people learn what collectivism is all about and how its magic can
begin to not only profoundly change economic, social, and political
structures and transform barriers, but also in our relation to one
another as human beings.
Sucre en Comunidad
There is not a single better example that I have seen that illustrates
this capacity of social transformation than the community newspaper
here in El 23 de Enero, Sucre en Comunidad. This breathtaking,
fascinating project has succeeded in mobilizing a poor community, all
through completely grass roots means, to collective, animated
participation in a project that highlights the efforts, problems,
organizing, and cultural events of the community, lending itself as an
instrument for furthering the unity of the community, self-reflection,
and a space created for possible solutions to problems. Its articles
and photos bring to light community events, urban culture, projects of
community groups such as the Bolivarian Circles and urban land and
health committees, and local celebrations organized and supported by
community members. Its strict adherence to community and refusal to
give itself in to empty cooperative structures for funding gives it a
unique flavor and the ability to remain independent in its reporting
and political analysis of events as well as political figureheads. It
is a project that has spearheaded a collective participation in El 23
de Enero and a passion of every day community members to get involved
in a project that they feel represents them.
Sucre en Comunidad acts not only as a microcosm for the kinds of
organizing processes developed by the people and alliance building
between revolutionary actors and other community members, but also as a
macrocosm as it is a project which itself mobilizes a community and is
in fact a product of their own mobilization. It is indeed an inspiring
example of what is possible when people unite for their own empowerment
and the improvement in the quality of life in their community, and a
living example and manifestation of what the community, when organized,
is capable of producing. It then lends itself as a tool through which
the community can begin to fine-tune its organizing efforts and work on
solving its own problems. Its publication through the collaboration of
many members of the community- not just a few here and there-
demonstrates that organized communities have the distinct capability of
solving problems such as crime or delinquency by creating a
participatory environment for its members. Thus, the newspaper provides
an avenue for social change itself- both in the micro organizing
strategies such as putting together the paper itself and also in the
larger ways in which a community can embark on its own process of
solving its own problems.
So really, community media is not just about highlighting community
projects and having members of the community participate- although this
is a tremendously important piece of community empowerment and
sovereignty, but it is also about remaining independent from the type
of institutional structures that potentially infringe on expression of
the community. Even the alternative media cooperative structure here in
Caracas remains incapable of bringing the justice of sovereign
expression to the barrio, as a contingency for funding lies in
publishing propaganda that supports government programs like FIDES or
specific leaders such as Freddy Bernal. Thus, part of the community's
expression is potentially censored, if for example, the need for
critique becomes necessary. This is an example of "institutionalized"
revolution- part of the process which corrupts the idea of what a
cooperative is in the name of gaining access to available funds.
Thus, this project of Sucre IS the community, a manifestation of the
collective participation of reclaiming one's community for itself and
more, a celebration of urban culture...of course a culture with deep
roots in revolution. It is about people being excited and passionate
about participating, about animating them to collective action. As the
vision began as a project just within Barrio Sucre, but little by
little the idea is that it becomes a newspaper of all of El 23 de
Enero, as El 23 doesn't have its own newspaper.
By contributing and participating, the community ensures the life of
the paper, as it is not a project of Gustavo; rather he is a
facilitator of its publication and organization. It is a project of the
people, where they can hold their paper and point to their
collaboration and identify with the project, a project which inspires
people to collective action and collaboration, where they become
co-creators in the ideology that shapes their lives in the barrio and
springs them to action.
El23.net
Like Sucre, el23.net functions as a network of grass roots community
empowerment projects that illustrate direct social change movements
within a community as well as connecting these efforts to international
events and issues and larger networks of information. Its user-friendly
layout gives way to involvement in community struggle through
collective creative imagination and construction of alternatives,
suggesting that the neither internet nor web design are the exclusive
property of an elite class. El23.net also plays a part in animating
much of the community to use computers and the internet, which when
used in this way is a tremendously powerful tool in coordinating
collective action and movements and in building links of support. This
webpage has not only succeeded in developing these bridges of
communication, participation, and support within the Caracas area
itself, but has served as an instrumental force in connecting
communities worldwide and also is a great source of pride for the
community of El 23 de Enero in having a website they can call their
own.
Community Radio
As a US citizen, the vast numbers of community radio stations and
projects here in Venezuela continue to inspire me and are just an
incredible result of the process itself which carries with it a mandate
for people to take charge of their own media, and thus, community
expression. This is one of the most powerful ways in which a community
can reclaim what is theirs, the power of representation. The different
projects I have seen and participated in, from community radio in Los
Teques (Radio Comunitaria Carrizal), to programs Polémicas and
Bolivarians Without Borders in headquarters YVKE Mundial, have shown me
the different ways in which different nations and international
communities as well as the local nucleus of a people may interact,
communicate, and forge merging struggles and paths into one united
front. As community radio is practically outlawed by the "forces of the
market" in the United States, while stations are one by one snatched up
by huge corporate right-wing structures in collaboration with the FBI
who raids pirate and community stations, thus forcing them off the air
and out of public consciousness, the hope for a collective, communal
voice becomes rarer and rarer. This hope dims even more as even
independent internet sites are being shut down internationally, such as
indymedia.org in some countries. There is an imminent, global emergency
for community voice and expression through the air ways, a movement
that Venezuela pioneers, a beacon of light within these dark times.
15-A
The August 15th referendum was a triumph on so many different levels,
and a firm affirmation of the direction of the country as well as the
efforts and ties of solidarity among the people themselves. Like Sucre,
August 15th serves as a mirror for the micro and macrocosms in effect
that are reflected in this movement, those towards economic and
political sovereignty of the Venezuelan people as well as community
empowerment and the building of a collectivist mentality.
The crucial precedent was also set in terms of a "defeat for the NED"
(National Endowment for Democracy, a right-wing private institution in
the US used as a tool for destabilization campaigns). After years of
contributing millions to opposition groups in Venezuela, providing not
only an economic support base as well as a political momentum for the
opposition, one of the lessons of the historic recall was that this
type of instrument of which the US is so fond of using, no longer will
succeed in Venezuela; the masses of society have assumed control and
power over the direction of their own country.
Without repeating everything that has been published in mass since the
historic victory not only for Venezuela, but for Latin America in its
entirety, what now follows in the aftermath is equally important. The
Venezuelan masses, who after 40 years living in a two-party, falsely
painted democracy, have been mobilized once again to come out to the
polls and participate in electoral politics, something which the
majority had given up on after countless false promises, now in a new
hope and faith that their chosen leaders will respond to their needs
and their trust. It is crucial, thus, that these leaders- not only
Chavez but all of the Chavista mayors and governors that were elected
in the October 31 elections- comply with the word of the people. The
masses have opened up to them their dreams and their faith in the Fifth
Republic system...if they are failed not only is it likely they will
never believe in electoral politics again, but that a new opening for
the opposition will expand.
Being present here for this historic and magical moment and day was
more than I could ever have dreamed. Seeing, hearing, and feeling the
energy of the people as they patiently waited in line to cast their
vote, as they anxiously awaited Chavez' arrival in El 23 de Enero, or
observing the vast differences that appeared between not only the
Chavista and opposition media channels but also the differences (and
similarities) between the (opposition) Venezuelan and US news (thus
revealing the quite obvious connection between local struggles for
power and against imperialism). It was a day (and night) filled with
light, love, and celebration, Venezuelan-style with a people and their
leader, which I can only describe as a divine pleasure and profound
inspiration to which have been a part. Thank you to the Venezuelan
people for showing me and filling me with hope to continue on in the
struggles that lie for us in the United States and in the world.
In a humble attempt to thank all of here who have made my experience so
memorable and who have subsequently knowingly or not politicized me
through their incredible revolutionary example, I realize that this
space is small; know that the space I hold for you all in my heart is
great, and will not shrink with time. To Gustavo- someone who has been
a supervisor, friend, comrade, and mentor to me over these six months-
has been there through thick and thin, and has been a guide and
inspiration throughout. To all the members of Bolivarian Circle
Abrebrecha and Collective Carlos Reina- Iliana and Marjorie Villalobos,
Mari Reina, Alexander, Gustavito, Maikol- you have all been so
wonderful, fun, beautiful, amazing revolutionaries and friends. Your
dedication and devotion to your work, to your people, to the Revolution
most certainly will never die, Patrulleros, Patrulleras! To all of the
beautiful and inspiring students in Misión Robinson, Ribas, Sucre,
Vuelvan Caras- here in Caracas and El 23 de Enero, as well as Macaira,
Amazona, and communities throughout Venezuela, it has truly been a
pleasure. I look forward to the next time. To Eduardo, another
cooperative organizer here in Venezuela, thank you for the laughs,
wisdom, and support. Magaly, Freddy, and all the folks who have given
me shout outs and space on their radio programs, it was a blast and an
honor, and I'll keep my dial tuned your way in the States. Thank you!
To the commie family and Boris and friends in Portuguesa and Merida,
the colorful and joyous folks in Amazonas, friends in Sucre...keep
shining, and thank you for all you have given me. I love you all.
For more info, visit:
www.el23.net
www.cybercircle.org
PDF files of community
newspaper Sucre en Comunidad available at el23.net, link
Prensa Comunitaria
Previous letters
from Katie (published by the Cybercircle.org)
Katherine Lahey
Correspondent el23.net
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