"The first victory we can claim is that our hearts are free of hatred. Hence we say to those who persecute us and who try to dominate us: ‘You are my brother. I do not hate you, but you are not going to dominate me by fear. I do not wish to impose my truth, nor do I wish you to impose yours on me. We are going to seek the truth together’. THIS IS THE LIBERATION WHICH WE ARE PROCLAIMING."
Oswaldo José Payá Sardiñas (2002)
Friday, May 10, 2019
Project Varela: Looking back at the nonviolent campaign 17 years later
The nonviolent campaign that shook up the dictatorship in Cuba,
changed the Cuban Communist Constitution and continues to haunt the
Castro regime.
Oswaldo Payá, Tony Diaz Sanchez, and Regis Iglesias 17 years ago.
17 years ago today, carrying 11,020 signed petitions in support of the Varela Project, Oswaldo Payá Sardiñas,
Antonio Diaz Sanchez, and Regis Iglesias Ramírez walked with the bulky card
board boxes labeled Project Varela turning them into the Cuban National Assembly.
Over Twitter today Rosa María Payá, the daughter of Oswaldo Payá, recalled this important day stating: "17 years after the first installment of Project Varela. It's time to finish the feat and obtain the rights. We owe it to those who are no longer here and those who will come.
"Two days before a historic visit to Cuba by the
former President Jimmy Carter, human rights activists today delivered an
extraordinary challenge to the Communist government of President Fidel
Castro in the form of petitions signed by more than 11,000 people
seeking greater freedom.
The petition drive, known as the Varela Project,
calls for a referendum under the terms of the Cuban Constitution on
whether there should be more freedom of expression, an amnesty for
political prisoners and a chance for ordinary citizens to own small
businesses. The signed petitions were delivered this morning to
the National Assembly, after supporters painstakingly verified each
signature, in the most significant peaceful effort to bring reform to
Cuba in four decades. ''All of these Cubans, who with great courage and
sacrifice have signed Project Varela, are the social vanguard for
peaceful change in Cuba,'' said Oswaldo Paya, who led the drive. He said
changes in the rights of Cubans could only be achieved peacefully.
The three activists, members of the Christian Liberation Movement, would
pay a high price, along with dozens of others, for advocating human
rights reforms within the existing legal frame work in Cuba. In March of
2003 both Antonio Diaz Sanchez, and Regis Iglesias were arrested and
subjected to political show trials and sentenced to long prison
sentences. They would spend years in prison followed by forced exile.
Oswaldo Payá was killed, together with Harold Cepero, on July 22, 2012 under circumstances that point
to a state security orchestrated extrajudicial execution.
Tony Diaz Sanchez and Regis Iglesias, two of the three in the photograph when the signatures were turned in, reflected last year on the significance of what took place seventeen years ago.
Regis Iglesias on the 16th anniversary of turning in 11,020 signatures for a democratic change reflected on the importance of the Varela Project in AlgoritmoMag.
It
was the first time that Cubans voted or demanded to do so after almost
half a century of dictatorship that May 10, 2002, when Oswaldo Paya,
Tony Diaz and I crossed the threshold of the offices of the National
Assembly of People's Power and presented their officials the signatures that legitimized our demand for a referendum.Eleven
thousand twenty Cubans with the right to vote, protected by among other
articles 1, 3, and fundamentally 88, paragraph g of the draconian
socialist constitution in force, took the step and with their personal data
supported the demand for a referendum on the Varela Project, so that the law will guarantee the right to "political freedom", "popular
sovereignty", the freedom of political prisoners and the economic
freedoms of Cubans.More
than a civic and legal exercise the initiative of the Christian
Liberation Movement and its founder Oswaldo Paya, finally found a
methodology to create the minimum social base in the middle of a
totalitarian and repressive state in which the opposition is not
recognized and dissidence is considered treason.
Sixteen years
later we continue with many Cubans demanding these rights, only when
they are recognized and guaranteed can we rest, then we can kneel faceing the tombs of
Orlando Zapata, Oswaldo Paya, Harold Cepero, Arturo Pérez de Alejo and
many of our brothers who are no longer and tell them, "Friends, we've made it!"
The good news now is that the Eduardo Cardet Concepción, the national coordinator of the Christian Liberation Movement, is reunited with his family, and although on conditional release and a prisoner of conscience, still in strong spirits and committed to a free Cuba.
Eduardo Cardet with his family.
A couple of days before the signatures were turned over on May 8, 2002 Oswaldo Payá, coordinator of referendum petition was video recorded by the Associated Press:
"Nobody speaks any longer for the Cubans. The Cuban people should be
consulted via a referendum and be given a voice because now we want our
rights and the Varela Project is not just a test, or an intellectual
exercise. It is not a rehearsal to gain experience. It is an initial
step in our determination to acquire these rights. Because four decades
is enough and a new generation is being born that has been born without
rights".
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