Posted at 7:40 p.m. EST Wednesday, January 21, 1998  Translation of
Castro's speech

The official translation of Cuban President Fidel Castro's statement of
welcome to Pope John Paul II:

 Holy Father,

The land you have just kissed is honored by your presence. You will not
find here the peaceful and generous native people who inhabited this island
when the first Europeans arrived. Most of the men were annihilated by the
exploitation and the enslaved work they could not resist and the women
turned into pleasure objects or domestic slaves. ...

There were also those who died by the homicidal swords or victims of
unknown diseases brought by the conquerors. Some priests have left tearing
testimonies of their protests against such crimes.

In the course of centuries, over a million Africans ruthlessly uprooted
from their distant lands took the place of the enslaved natives already
exterminated. They made a remarkable contribution to the ethnic composition
and the origins of our country's present population where the cultures, the
beliefs and the blood of all participants in the dramatic history have been
mixed.

It has been estimated that the conquest and colonization of this hemisphere
resulted in the death of 70 million natives and the enslavement of 12
million Africans. Much blood was shed and many injustices perpetrated, a
large part of which still remain after centuries of struggle and sacrifices
under new forms of domination and exploitation.

Under extremely difficult conditions, Cuba was able to constitute a nation.
It had to fight alone for its independence with unsurmountable heroism and,
exactly 100 years ago, it suffered a real holocaust in the concentration
camps where a large part of its population perished, mostly old men, women
and children; a crime whose monstrosity is not diminished by the fact that
it has been forgotten by humanity's conscience. As a son of Poland and a
witness of Oswiecim, you can understand this better than anyone.

Today, Holy Father, genocide is attempted again when by hunger, illness and
total economic suffocation some try to subdue this people that refuses to
accept the dictates and the rule of the mightiest economic, political and
military power in history; much more powerful than the old Rome that for
centuries had the beasts devour those who refused to abdicate their faith.
Like those Christians horribly slandered to justify the crimes, we who are
as slandered as they were, we choose a thousand times death rather than
abdicate our convictions. The revolution, like the Church, also has many
martyrs.

Holy Father, we feel the same way you do about many important issues of
today's world and we are pleased it is so; in other matters our views are
different but we are most respectful of your strong convictions about the
ideas you defend.

In your long pilgrimage around the world, you have been able to see with
your own eyes many injustices, inequalities and poverty; uncultivated lands
and landless hungry farmers; unemployment, hunger, illness; lives that
could be saved with little money being lost for lack of it; illiteracy,
child prostitution, 6-year old children working or begging for alms to
survive; shanty towns where hundreds of millions live in unworthy
conditions; race and sex discrimination; complete ethnic groups evicted
from their lands and abandoned to their fate; xenophobia, contempt for
other peoples; cultures which have been, or are currently being, destroyed;
underdevelopment and usurious loans, unpayable and uncollectable debts,
unfair exchange, outrageous and unproductive financial speculations; an
environment being ruthlessly and perhaps helplessly destroyed; an
unscrupulous weapons trade with disgusting lucrative intents; wars,
violence, massacres; generalized corruption, narcotics, vices and an
alienating consumerism imposed on peoples as an ideal model.

Mankind has seen its population increase almost fourfold just in this
century. There are billions of people suffering hunger and thirst for
justice; the list of man's economic and social calamities is endless. I am
aware that many of them are cause of permanent and growing concern to the
Holy Father.

I have been through personal experiences which allow me to appreciate other
features of his thinking. I was a student in Catholic schools until I
obtained my bachelor's degree. There, I was taught that to be a Jew, a
Muslim, a Hinduist, a Buddhist, an animist or a participant of any other
religious belief was a terrible evil deserving severe and unmitigated
punishment. More than once, even in some of those schools for the wealthy
and privileged -- where I was one of them -- I came up with the question of
why there were no black children there; until this day, I have not
forgotten the unconvincing answers I was given.

In later years, the Second Vatican Council convened by Pope John XXIII
undertook the analysis of some of these sensitive issues. We are aware of
efforts by the Holy Father to preach and practice sentiments of respect for
the faithful of other important and influential religions which have
expanded through the world. Respect for believers and non-believers alike
is a basic principle revolutionary Cubans try to impress upon their fellow
citizens. Such principles have been defined and consecrated by our
Constitution and our laws. If there have ever been difficulties, the
Revolution is not to blame.

We entertain the hope that never again, in no school of whatever religion
nowhere in the world, an adolescent need ask why there are no black,
native, yellow or white children there.

Holy Father, I sincerely admire your courageous statements on the events
concerning Galileo and the Inquisition's known errors; on the Crusades'
bloody episodes and the crimes committed during the conquest of the
Americas; also on certain scientific discoveries that today are not
contested by anybody but which, in their times, were the target of so many
prejudices and anathemas. That certainly required the immense authority you
have come to attain within your church.

What can we offer you in Cuba? People exposed to less inequalities and a
lower number of helpless citizens; less children without schools, less
patients without hospitals, and more teachers and physicians per capita
than any other country in the world visited by the Holy Father; educated
people you can talk to in perfect freedom with the certainty of their
talent and their high political culture, their strong convictions and
absolute confidence in their ideas; people that will show all due respect
and consciousness in listening to you. Another country will not be found
better disposed to understand your felicitous idea -- as we understand it
and so similar to what we preach -- that the equitable distribution of
wealth and solidarity among men and peoples should be globalized.

Welcome to Cuba! 


Louis Proyect

(http://www.panix.com/~lnp3/marxism.html)



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