Author Archives: jillian

The Law of Thieves

avotcja-243x300The poet Avotcja from Oakland wrote this poem in response to Arizona’s SB1070 (Spanish follows)

http://avotcja.com/

THE LAW OF THIEVES

The Border
A bigger than life fantasy
An evil maze
An incredible monstrosity
A deadly lie
A creation of sanctified hallucinations
The Border
An imaginary line
Born of death & fed on misery
This poisoness nightmare
Armed & held up by a mountain of greed
Just a modern day noose of unlimited hypocrisy
And cruel trickery
The Border
A hole full of Soul stealing stupidity
A mansion created by thievery
And swimming
In hot tubs of imported tears
The Border
Just a line hiding an artificial concept
Around invisible fences
Transparent walls to protect stolen lands
The Border
Two demonic words
Two evil words
Two filthy words
Laws of
Thieves & bullies that have no right to exist
In the too awful for words sadness in the heart
Of this old black Poet

© Avotcja 4/27/2010

LA REGLA DE LOS LADRONES

La Frontera
Grandisima fantasía
Laberinto malvado
Una monstruosidad increíble
Una mentira mortal
Hecho de alucinaciónes santificadas
La Frontera
Una linea imaginaria
Nacido de la muerte y una dieta de misería
Esta pesadilla venenosa
Fortificada de un montón de codicia
Solamente una soga moderna de hipocracía ilimitada
Una ilusión cruel
La Frontera
Un cuchitril lleno de bobería desmoralizada
Una casa grande creada de robo
Y nadando
En bañeras calientes de lágrimas importadas
La Frontera
Una linea pá esconder un concepto artificial
Alrededor de vallas invisibles
Muros transparentes pá proteger tierras robadas
La Frontera
Dos palabras endiabladas
Dos palabras malvadas
Dos palabras sucias
Reglas de
Ladrones bestiales que no tienen derecho de existir
En la tristeza indescriptible del corazón
De esta vieja Poeta negra

© Avotcja 4/27/2010

Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Crystal Lee Sutton

Black Left Unity Network (BLUN) announces the formation of Cuba Working Group

map2Contact: cubaworkinggroup@gmail.com
View our documents at: www.blackeducator.org/cubasolidarity.htm
Press Release Contact: Ashaki Binta, Co-Convener 203-379-7711

National: The Black Left Unity Network (BLUN) announces the formation of it’s Cuba Working Group (CWG) today. The CWG is a national network of activists and organ-izers who are concerned about the ongoing attacks against the nation of Cuba despite President Obama’s proclamations of improving relations with the Cuban state in the Spring of 2009.

Most CWG members have traveled to Cuba and/or have been active in Cuban Solidarity work for many years and are familiar with the difficult challenges faced by the island over the last 50 years.

One of the latest attacks against Cuba was generated in the Black community late last year when a prominent group of African Americans signed on to a declaration originated by anti-Cuban activists in Latin America who accused the Cuban state of racism. Signers of the accusatory declaration include preeminent figures such as Dr. Julianne Malveaux, Dr. Ron Walters, actress Ruby Dee, film maker Melvin Van Peebles, Dr. Kathleen Neal Cleaver, and Dr. Cornel West among many others. A list of 60 notable African Americans signed on to the document.

“Our consideration is that the accusation of racism against Cuba is disingenu-ous and is in fact intended to weaken solidarity between the African American commu-nity and Cuba which has historically been very strong.,” said Alberto Jones, a member of the CWG and a native Cuban residing in Miami.

“A further consequence of this attack would then be to increase the unjustified pressure on the Cuban state to abandon its socialist character and eliminate the cru-cial gains of the 1959 Cuban Revolution in providing education, healthcare, affordable housing, and a healthy cultural life for the Cuban people,” the group said.

According to the CWG, the US government’s historic blockade and ongoing programs to foment internal dissent within Cuba contribute significantly to weakening the island nation’s ability to improve and advance the political, social, economic, and cultural gains of the revolution including the elimination of all forms of inequality and lingering remnants of slavery.

Despite this, says the CWG, Cuba has abolished institutional racism and has considerably improved the lives of all it’s citizens since the revolution including nearly eliminating illiteracy and vastly improving infant mortality rates to levels lower than those in the US, especially among African Americans. The Cuban nation has officially acknowledged that more than 60 percent of its citizens are of African descent. “We believe that those who are concerned about racism in Cuba should be in-creasing pressure on the US government to end the blockade and other illegitimate attacks against that country, rather than signing on to specious accusations that do nothing to help the people of Cuba,” the group said.

The Black Left Unity Network (BLUN) was formed in May of 2008 to strengthen and revitalize the Black Freedom Movement in the United States. The BLUN Cuba Working Group was instituted in January this year to help educate the African Ameri-can community about the importance of Revolutionary Cuba in the international fight against all forms of discrimination, exploitation, and oppression and about Cuba’s historic solidarity with the struggle for freedom of the African American people.

Press Release Announcing Formation of the CWG

The Big Lies Against Cuba

Seven U.S.Physicians trained in Cuba return from service in Haiti (photo from www.ifconews.org)

Seven U.S.Physicians trained in Cuba return from service in Haiti (photo from www.ifconews.org)

Despite President Obama‟s declaration of his administration‟s desire to “seek a new beginning with Cuba”, and to “learn from history, not be trapped by it” in April of last year, Cuba has remained under attack by the U.S. In January, new US air security policies included Cuba on a list of countries whose air passengers would get extra security screening as they enter US territory. And Cuba remains on the State Department‟s list of state sponsors of terrorism‟, notwithstanding the lack of any evidence of Cuban involvement in acts of terrorism. Cuba has vigorously protested all of these unconscionable attacks. In fact, Cuba‟s policies of internationalism have arguably been the most politically advanced in the world. From the direct military intervention to help in the defeat of Apartheid in southern Africa in 1988 (Cuito Cuanavale, Angola) to direct medical aide and solidarity with Haiti (before the earthquake).

Since the earthquake, western media has been suspiciously silent on the exceptional role Cuba has played in support of Haiti with more than 900 health care providers on the ground, the largest and most organized contingent on the island. Yet, one of the most disturbing new attacks against Cuba occurred late last year when a host of prominent African Americans signed on to a so-called “…Declaration of African American Support for the Civil Rights Struggle in Cuba”. This misguided “declaration” accuses the Cuban State of racism. It cites the imprisonment of a Dr. Darsi Ferrer, an active critic of the Cuban government, as an example of racism in Cuba. Dr. Ferrer was reportedly accused of attempting to establish a private medical clinic outside of Cuba‟s world-renowned medical system, by receiving illegally obtained construction materials.

Whatever the case, Dr. Ferrer‟s situation should immediately bring to mind the 50 year history of attempts by the US to subvert the Cuban Revolution through internal dissent and direct attack harkening back to the Bay of Pigs invasion and so on. Certainly the struggle against racism anywhere in the world is of paramount importance to all of humanity.

But can this attack against Cuba under the guise of fighting racism really be justified? We think not. Many African Americans may not know about some of the unique features of Cuban history even though African Americans and Cubans have a deeply rooted history of solidarity with each other.

For example, during Cuba‟s first War for Independence from Spain in 1868, plantation and slave owner Carlos Manual de Cespedes freed and armed the slaves on his plantation and called on them to join the struggle for Cuba‟s independence. The Afro-Cuban General Antoneo Maceo emerged as one of Cuba‟s most renowned revolutionary leaders of all time.

As a result of this struggle, slavery was abolished in Cuba by 1886. What a contrast to US history where the maintenance of slavery was a pre-condition of unity between the colonies in the American fight for independence from Britain. Although more than 5,000 Blacks fought in the American Revolution, legalized slavery continued for nearly another 100 years. And the US has historically played a role in maintaining racism in Cuba.

The US intervention and occupation of Cuba starting in 1898 during Cuba‟s second War for Independence (1895) and where more than half the fighters were Black, re-established institutional racism in Cuba. Under the intermittent US occupations there, Afro-Cubans and women, as well as the poor, were barred from voting, holding elective office, owning businesses, land, and etc. Sound familiar?

Most Cuban historians and scholars agree that the Cuban Socialist Revolution in 1959 abolished legalized institutional racism in Cuba. Cuba‟s revolutionary constitution outlawed racial discrimination while open and public debate and education since the revolution have tackled Cuba‟s history as an Afro-Cuban nation. However, the legacy of 500 years of slavery, racism, and all forms of discrimination is difficult to completely eradicate in just 50 years, especially while also under the US led attacks and blockade against Cuba.

Even so, the conditions of all Cubans have improved under the covenant of the socialist revolution in Cuba which has provided free education, free health care, land for poor farmers, reduced cost rent and utilities, the elimination of unemployment, and so on.

Racism, institutionalized or otherwise has not been abolished any place in the world. Yet Cuba, in our view, remains a hopeful beacon in the western hemisphere that humane societies can be constructed that provide the basis for the elimination of all forms of discrimination, exploitation, and oppression.

Ashaki Binta For the “Cuban Working Group” Black Left Unity Network. www.blackeducator.org/cubasolidarity.htm

You may contact the working group at: cubaworkinggroup@gmail.com

Documents from the Cuba Working Group may be viewed below.

The Big Lies Against Cuba

President Obama, We Are Very Disappointed in You!

00000afghanistanPresident Obama continues the failed policies of the Bush and Clinton administrations.  Money to bail out the rich corporations and for unending wars, at the expense of the working class, who face massive unemployment, housing foreclosures, cuts in social programs, millions without healthcare, and attacks on democratic and human rights.

After four hundreds of years of slavery, racism and injustice, and sacrifices of beatings, jailing, and deaths struggling for voting rights, democracy and liberation, the hopes and dreams of African Americans and others throughout the US and the world, was that the Obama Presidency would be different from the others.

And while we celebrated the election of Obama; a righteous expression of the unending struggle of African Americans for democracy and liberation, we must also criticize his departure from the aims of our historical struggles for a society and world without racism, oppression, exploitation and for environmental justice and world peace.

Obama’s decision to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan continues the corporate strategy to remain in that region through wars and the establishment of puppet governments and military bases, until it can control the oil and natural resources in an effort to dominate the world.

As Obama sends mainly working class young men and women to this imperialist war, where many will die, while conditions deteriorate at home, the Black Community and all who want peace must say NO to war.

These wars have helped to shaped and encourage a culture of violence in our communities.  If we support wars abroad, it is harder to oppose them at home in our communities.  If war is a must, let the people organize and make war on unemployment, poverty, homelessness, racism, all forms of discrimination and the lack of healthcare for all.

Unlike Bush, the Obama election mobilized a progressive majority; those who oppose wars, discrimination and attacks on worker rights, and who are engaged in the many movements for social justice. The African American Community was the core of this majority, and must take the lead in opposing the actions of the Obama administration that go against the interests of democracy and human rights at home and abroad.

The Black Community must let our voices be heard in opposition to the escalating war in Afghanistan.

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