*Point of Information and little known facts: Jose Marti spent time in New
York City while working on behalf and towards the Cuban revolution against
Spanish imperialism, he also traveled many times to Tampa, Jacksonville and
to Key West which were a hotbeds for sending arms, money and to recruit
people to fight for the Cuban revolution.*
*
*
*In Ybor City, the Latin section of Tampa on November 26 and 27, 1891, he
delivered two speeches there—Con Todos Y Para Todos ("With All and For
All"), and Los Pinos Nueyog ("The New Growth")—which outlined the goals of
the United Cuban Revolutionary Party. Both speeches were reproduced in
newspapers and journals in the United States and Cuba and inflamed Cuban
desire for independence. In 1893 Martí delivered the speech that many feel
led directly to war. More than 10,000 Cubans jammed into a small outdoor
area in front of the V.M. Ybor Cigar Factory, punctuating Martí's speech
with cries of "Cuba Libre!" (Free Cuba!) Following that rousing evening,
workers from all the factories pledged to give one day's pay a week to the
revolutionary fund.
*
*
*
*Sadly the US co-opted that phase of the Cuban revolution, where have we
seen this before?*
*
*
*Cort*

http://www.cubarte-english.cult.cu/paginas/actualidad/opinion.detalle.php?id=5621
The Need for Poetry: Marti´s Philosophy
Autor: Carmen Súarez León | Fuente: CUBARTE | 30 de Mayo 2013
It is of no use to turn to Marti´s texts in search of systematic and
theoretical approaches to dealing with an issue. He did not have time for
such methodical exercises of thought, although he spent his life writing
books, some of which did assume this type of thought. The truth is he did
not have vocation either. He was a total poet, someone who could synthesize
and integrate, and he acted in life in the same way.

The surprising and solid dialectic of his thought leads us, when we
research the meaning of a concept included in one of his texts, to find
that the ideas move beyond one single meaning and level and they adapt
according to the level at which they are being examined. That is what
happens with the concept of culture. The proposal for the central role of
culture in his programme of transformation for the republics of Latin
America is summarised, as we know, in his essay entitled "Our America":
“...in America the imported book has been conquered by the natural man.
Natural men have conquered learned and artificial men. The native
half-breed has conquered the exotic Creole. The struggle is not between
civilization and barbarity, but between false erudition and Nature.”

That “natural man", as José Martí called authentic man, in harmony with the
circumstances and conditions of life, was then the true subject of culture
in Latin America, the only one capable of building a harmonious
relationship with nature, which is the same as saying that he could make
truly human history and culture with his actions.

>From this general concept of "civilisation", a word frequently used last
century, one can glean a coherent idea of his thoughts on art, or what we
call today, artistic culture, as a result of his reflections on culture as
a way of man´s interrelating with nature, in which one can identify
different sociocultural expressions.

Among Martí´s ideas on the subject of art, there are four that I would
highlight as central and active:

l. The inseparable and interactive nature between artistic culture and life;

2. The need for artistic culture as a balancing force and affirmation of
the subjectivity of the individual;

3. The need for artistic culture as a force for integration and
conservation of the nation;

4. A call to disseminate knowledge and culture.

In 1882, on publishing Ismaelillo, a poetry anthology, José Martí
repeatedly stated his fear that he would classed as a "poet of verse"
instead of a "poet of actions", in that way classifying his own life´s
journey as an artistic construct. From that we can deduce that for Martí
man was required to produce or create his actions with the beauty and
coherence with which one writes a poem or paints. And this was the height
of the condition of creator, in which ethics and aesthetics were
inseparably intertwined.

Furthermore, Martí confers the status of art to the creation of organic
life itself, seeing in inherited culture, creative actions which could be
attributed to nature itself. On describing the book “The Law of Heredity”,
by W.K. Brooks, in 1884, Martí says: “Life is a slow grouping together and
a wonderful unfolding. Life is an extraordinary work of art.”

Presupposing a deep connection between life and art, Martí confirms the
far-reaching need for poetry —understood as art or art culture in general—,
when, with reference to a talk by Thomas Huxley, he wrote in 1882:

Beauty is a relief: a beautiful song is a good action: he who welcomes art
and others into his heart has company throughout this bitter life: a good
song is a welcome friend. And verses do not fade! They last longer than the
empires in which they were sung, and than the fortresses that defended the
empires. Troy is in ruins, not the Iliad.

And from this standpoint that affirms the importance of art for the
individual, we can move to Martí´s categorical statement that says: "Oh,
divine art! Art like the seasoning of food, preserves nations!" in an
analysis in 1880 on "Art in the United States", no less, in which he also
writes that "imagination is on watch so that nations are not corrupted",
reflecting a clear idea of the social function of art as something able to
shape national culture and to strengthen the preservation of traditions on
which people´s sense of identity is founded.

>From this philosophy on artistic culture inevitably derived the call to
disseminate culture in general, as a body of knowledge and human
achievement interacting with nature, so that man is in step with his times.

Martí expressed the conviction that one of the ways to achieve this level
of general knowledge and even knowledge of science —knowledge that he
considered essential and at the forefront in the modern world—, would be
through learning about art culture: "Art brings the eye to life, makes it
bigger and stimulates it, and it ennobles, makes things easier to perceive,
and is called for by all cultures," is one fragment of his writings.

So that when Martí states that “Being educated is the only way of being
free,” he is basing his assertion on a solid conception of culture as a
liberating force and generator of humanism. Martí did not aspire to simply
achieving a general state of illustration, and much less to ensuring an
impossible standardisation of education and culture. He wanted much more,
nothing less than a transformation of the spirit that emanates from the
real social emancipation of man.

Artistic culture was one of the most powerful allies of the transformation
programme of this man of Our America.

Translation: Jackie Margaret Camon (Cubarte)


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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