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 [image: Umsebenzi Online]

  *Volume 10, No. 3, 2 February 2011*

   *In this Issue:*

   - The Cuban Revolution in its 52nd anniversary: An inspiration to
   
humanity<http://us.mc595.mail.yahoo.com/mc/welcome?.gx=1&.tm=1291024936&.rand=0i5784ejerg28#redpen>

   *Red Alert *

*The Cuban Revolution in its 52nd anniversary: An inspiration to humanity*

 *Blade Nzimande, General Secretary*
On the eve of 31 December 2008, and into the 1st January 2009, I had the
honour of being in Cuba representing the SACP, and celebrated, together with
the heroic Cuban people, the 50th anniversary of the triumph of the Cuban
revolution over the US backed Batista dictatorship.
For the first time last week I visited Cuba in my deployment as Minister of
Higher Education and Training, and this time got even a deeper insight into
the achievements of the Cuban revolution in the field of higher education
particular.
Indeed during this visit, sections of the print media, in blatant
collaboration with the DA, and other elements aggrieved by the deepening
relations between South Africa and Cuba, went on yet another offensive
against both the SACP and the Department of Higher Education and Training,
as if the latter two were the same. From late last year, using faceless,
personally aggrieved sources and anti-communist sympathizers, the media
concocted lies about my planned visit to Cuba. At the heart of these lies is
an ideological agenda aimed at casting aspersions on the role of communists
in government, but most significantly an attempt to try and rubbish the
relations between South Africa and Cuba.
The Mail and Guardian went for the bait and, in the process, it has become
the most useful tool of this anti-communist, reactionary propaganda against
Cuba and the South African Communist Party, particularly its venomous and
reactionary offensive to try and undermine the longstanding relationship
between Cuba and South Africa.
For a long time now, the Mail and Guardian, posing as a progressive
newspaper, is increasingly becoming marginal, and nothing more than a useful
tool in the hands of the conservative liberals in their struggle to
discredit the ANC-led alliance and our democracy, especially the role of the
SACP in the struggle for the reconstruction and development of our country.
It is for this reason that it is increasingly becoming irrelevant in the
broader debates about the current and future direction in our country, and
instead has become a newsletter for dinner table, cynical and oppositionist
gossip by a minority (and often racialised) elite! So blinded is this
tabloid by its (racialised) elitism that they even think some government
ministers` overseas trips have to be approved by directors-general, instead
of the President!
The SACP will however not be distracted by all these in its principled
struggle towards a better life for the overwhelming majority of our people,
the majority of whom do not even read or get disturbed by the `opinions` of
mainstream print media. It is for this reason that we must continue to learn
from countries like Cuba about alternative possibilities to advance a human
development agenda liberated from the barbarism of capitalism and its media
outlets.
Yes, the SACP is for media freedom, given its long history of struggle for a
free media under apartheid colonialism. In the process we are proud that we
produced some great journalists and writers, including Govan Mbeki, Brian
Bunting, Ruth First, Alex la Guma, Mzala Nxumalo, to mention but a few. But
surely media freedom does not mean freedom to fabricate lies and defame
public figures!
The Cuban revolution will this year be celebrating the 50th anniversary of
the defeat of the US sponsored `Bay of Pigs` counter-revolutionary invasion
of a newly liberated Cuba, whose immediate aftermath led to the formal
declaration of Cuba as socialist country. In other words, imperialist
attempts to defeat a heroic people`s revolution against dictatorship
produced its opposite, a socialist Cuba.
It is commitment to a socialist path that Cuba has achieved what many
countries, including some of the developed capitalist countries have never
achieved. At the victory of the Cuban revolution in 1959, there were only
three universities, but by 2010 Cuba had 69 universities, with a university
campus in all their municipalities. All this provided through free education
from kindergaten to PhD qualifications in universities. During the same
period, a population of only 11 million, has produced over one million
university graduates.
One critical lesson from the Cuban revolution is the necessity for dedicated
and focused investment on people through the rolling back of the capitalist
market which tends to see education and training as a commodity rather than
a social and developmental good!
Driven by values of solidarity the Cubans also played no small part in the
defeat of the apartheid regime in Angola thus laying the foundation for the
liberation of Namibia and South Africa. It is indeed a shame that some of
South Africa`s liberals (by the way many of whom willingly served in the
apartheid army and its war against the majority of South - and Southern -
Africa`s people) have forgotten that some of the freedoms they enjoy today
came from this supreme sacrifice by the Cuban people.
Cuba has, since 1994, trained hundreds of black South African doctors, many
of whom are now serving our people in the deepest of rural areas where many
of our South African trained doctors dare not go. In fact thousands of Cuban
professionals, in a variety of fields, are to be found in some of the
poorest countries of the world, in South Africa, in Venezuela, in Bolivia,
in Ghana, Haiti, to name but just a few.
However, all the above achievements of the Cuban revolution, have not
blinded the Cuban people from some of the weaknesses and shortcomings in
their own revolution. It is because of this that Cuba is currently
undergoing a programme of revitalization of its economy. Nevertheless the
single biggest culprit for Cuba`s problems today is not its socialist path,
but the illegal and criminal blockade by the United States against this
small island of 11 million heroic people. Otherwise why would the US
continue with this blockade if socialism in Cuba is inherently a failure?
Why is the blockade not lifted in order to test whether Cuba`s socialism is
inherently a failure? The answer is simple, without the blockade Cuba would
have made even more advances for the benefit of its peoples!
Incidentally the above also begs the question as to why today there are
people`s revolts in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, and of late Jordan? Some of these
revolts in countries which for years have been backed by US imperialism, and
paraded as models of successful experiments of neo-liberalism in the
developing world, are in fact the conclusive proof that the neo-liberal idea
has not only failed, but that it is in deep crisis! We shall however return
to these developments in the forthcoming editions of Umsebenzi online, as we
continue to reflect on why socialism is the only best alternative to the
current barbarism of capitalism!
We dare South Africa`s capitalist print media to reprint this edition of
Umsebenzi, in the interests of freedom of expression and a supposedly
democratic South African media!
*Asikhulume!*
Contact Mhlekwa Nxumalo at 011-339 3621/2(office hours) or
072 517 7761(mobile)




-- 
Gugu Ndima
+27 76 783 1516

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