From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


The Militant - July 9, 2001 -- Cuban youth leaders in South Africa build
world youth festivalTHE MILITANT  Vol.65/No.26     July 9, 2001
Cuban youth leaders in South Africa build world youth festival
(feature article)
 
BY T.J. FIGUEROA  
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa--Three youth leaders from Cuba are touring
Southern Africa in order to "consolidate the relationship of friendship and
solidarity" with student and youth organizations in the region and to
encourage participation in the 15th World Festival of Youth and Students in
Algeria, said Julio Mart�nez, Second Secretary of the Union of Young
Communists (UJC) of Cuba, in an interview here June 8.
Describing the importance of the August 8-16 meeting in Algeria, which will
bring together thousands of youth from around the world, Mart�nez said that
"the Youth Festival movement is the only international tribune where
imperialism is openly condemned."

The delegation is visiting Angola, Zimbabwe, Namibia, and South Africa, said
Juan Carlos Mars�n, UJC international relations director. In Angola the
delegation is meeting with the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola
Youth League; in Namibia with the South West Africa People's Organisation
Youth League; and in both countries with youth councils and ministries.

In South Africa they met with the African National Congress (ANC) Youth
League, the ANC, South African Communist Party, the National Youth
Commission, the Congress of South African Trade Unions, and others. In
Zimbabwe, the three-person delegation will be hosted by the Zimbabwe African
National Union--Patriotic Front and plans to meet with various other groups.

In South Africa, said Mart�nez, the ANC Youth League is planning to be
well-represented at the Youth Festival. The ANC is supporting the
international event, as is the South African Communist Party. "We hope that
this is what we will find in other countries we're going to visit," he
added, noting that a special effort is being made in Cuba to ensure that
some young people from countries in Africa and elsewhere who are currently
studying in Cuba can attend the festival.

The theme of the gathering is "Let's globalize the struggle for peace,
solidarity, development, against imperialism," Mars�n said. "The word
'struggle,' or 'fight,' present in that slogan, shows the festival has an
active, not a passive, attitude," he said. "It calls on youth to take action
against the conditions we confront today." Ofelia Sandar, a journalist for
Radio Rebelde, pointed out that the Algiers event would be an opportunity
for youth from around the world to exchange experiences about struggles they
are involved in. 

The Cuban youth leaders said they are also looking forward to the Second
Cuba-U.S. Youth Exchange scheduled for Havana July 22-30. Mars�n said the
event will enable young people from the United States "to know the reality
of Cuba, our democracy, and the war of ideas that we are waging against the
policies the government of the United States is applying against Cuba."

U.S. imperialism, he said, "is trying to justify the blockade of our country
with the so-called human rights issue. Discussions during the exchange will
offer youth from the United States arguments that will enable them to fight
against that campaign from within the United States. This is very important
for the Cuban people. The event also aims to establish an exchange of youth
that is an example of the kind of normal relationship that could exist
between our two countries."

Noting that Cuba "was very much committed in the struggle against apartheid,
which was the worst expression of racism," Mars�n said the Cuban government
would be participating in the United Nations World Conference Against Racism
in Durban, South Africa, August 31 to September 7. Cuban organizations, he
said, would participate in a forum of non-governmental groups being held
alongside this meeting.

On their first full day in South Africa, the Cubans visited Soweto, the
sprawling black township in the southwest of Johannesburg. The brief visit
made an impression on them.

Mars�n said two political realities struck him. First, is the effort to
"rescue history. This is very important. The past of this country should not
be forgotten. Not only because apartheid was shameful to humanity, but
because all humanity needs to prevent it in the future."

Mars�n also saw "the challenges facing this society after many years of
apartheid. When you see the opulence of a small part of the population
versus the poverty of the majority of the people, you start to appreciate
the changes" that have taken place since apartheid was ended. He was
impressed by "the will to erase the legacy of apartheid."

Sandar commented on the example Cuba offers to those living on the African
continent, which has been devastated by its colonial past and held in chains
today by imperialist domination. "The clearest example Cuba has given, not
only to African youth, but to the world, is the example of courage,
resistance, and of defending at any price the conquests of our society," she
said, noting that there are 457 Cuban doctors working in South Africa alone,
many of them in rural assignments refused by South African doctors.

Cuba represents a "people's decision on what their social system will be,
with their own means, without international prescriptions. This is inspiring
to people who want to choose their own destiny," said Mart�nez.
 
http://www.themilitant.com/2001/6526/652650.html


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