Saturday, June 2, 2007




This article featuring in The Hindu dated June 1, 2007 (Friday) caught my attention.

I always had been a great fan of Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz (born August 13, 1926) though i am not a sympathiser of the communist movement. What inspired me was the courage this man displays when the entire world( United States of America can well be called the entire world, right?) is against him.

Fabian Escalante, who was long tasked with protecting the life of Castro has calculated the exact number of assassination schemes and/or attempts by the CIA to be 638. Some such attempts have included an exploding cigar, a fungal-infected scuba-diving suit, and a mafia-style shooting. The most outrageous attempt was by his ex-lover Marita Lorenz whom he met in 1959. She subsequently agreed to aid the CIA and attempted to smuggle a jar of cold cream containing poison pills into his room. When Castro realised this, he reportedly gave her a gun and told her to kill him but her nerve failed. Castro once said in regards to the numerous attempts on his life, "If surviving assassination attempts were an Olympic event, I would win the gold medal."
Resulting from these numerous assassination attempts, Castro sent out warnings to the US government to stop the attempts or face retaliatory actions. This resulted in a theory stating that Cuba was behind the Kennedy Assassination.
What attracts me to President Castro is probably because I hate this Bush chap.
Well... most people on the earth do.


Ideas cannot be killed

Fidel Castro Ruz

The soldiers, fuelled by hatred and adrenalin, were aiming their weapons at me even before they had identified who I was. "Ideas cannot be killed," the black lieutenant kept repeating in a hushed voice.

A few days ago, while analysing the expenses involved in the construction of three submarines of the Astute series, I said that with this money "75,000 doctors could be trained to look after 150 million people, assuming that the cost of training a doctor would be one-third of what it costs in the United States." Now, along the lines of the same calculations, I wonder: how many doctors could be graduated with the $100 billion that Bush gets his hands on in just one year to keep on sowing grief in Iraqi and American homes? Answer: 999,990 doctors who could look after two billion people who do not receive any medical care today.

More than 600,000 people have lost their lives in Iraq and more than two million have been forced to emigrate since the American invasion began.
In the United States, around 50 million people do not have medical insurance. The blind market laws govern how this vital service is provided, and prices make it inaccessible for many, even in the developed countries. Medical services feed into the Gross Domestic Product of the United States, but they do not generate conscience for those providing them nor peace of mind for those who receive them.

The countries with less development and more diseases have the least number of medical doctors: one for every 5,000, 10,000, 15,000, 20,000 or more people. When new sexually transmitted diseases appear such as HIV/AIDS, which in merely 20 years has killed millions of persons — while tens of millions are afflicted, among them many mothers and children, although palliative measures now exist — the price of medications per patient could add up to $5,000, $10,000 or up to $15,000 each year. These are fantasy figures for the great majority of developing countries where the few public hospitals are overflowing with the ill who die piled up like animals under the scourge of a sudden epidemic.

To reflect on these realities could help us to better understand the tragedy. It is not a matter of commercial advertising that costs so much money and technology. Add up the starvation afflicting hundreds of millions of human beings; add to that the idea of transforming food into fuels; look for a symbol and the answer will be George W. Bush.

When he was recently asked by an important personality about his Cuba policy, his answer was this: "I am a hard-line President and I am just waiting for Castro's demise." The wishes of such a powerful gentleman are no privilege. I am not the first nor will I be the last that Bush has ordered to be killed; nor one of those people who he intends to go on killing individually or en masse.

"Ideas cannot be killed," Sarría emphatically said. Sarría was the black lieutenant, a patrol leader in Batista's army who arrested us, after the attempt to seize the Moncada Garrison, while three of us slept in a small mountain hut, exhausted by the effort of breaking through the siege. The soldiers, fuelled by hatred and adrenalin, were aiming their weapons at me even before they had identified who I was. "Ideas cannot be killed," the black lieutenant kept repeating, practically automatically and in a hushed voice.

I dedicate those excellent words to you, Mr. Bush.

(The writer is the President of Cuba. He is recovering from major surgery following a bout of life-threatening illness.)

(Courtesy: The Hindu dated Friday, June 1, 2007)


2 comments:

krishna said...

Ideas Cannot be killed....
true..but jus imagine if exactly the opposite was possible....

Strange things can happen if ideas cud be killed...

Sathyanarain said...

i think i have just got the topic to my next post!