"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)
"America
is a more democratic nation, a more just nation, a more peaceful nation
because Martin Luther King, Jr., became her preeminent nonviolent
commander." - President Ronald Reagan, 11/2/83
Remarks on Signing the Bill Making the Birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., a National Holiday November 2, 1983 The
President. Mrs. King, members of the King family, distinguished Members
of the Congress, ladies and gentlemen, honored guests, I'm very pleased
to welcome you to the White House, the home that belongs to all of us,
the American people.
When I was thinking of the contributions to our country of the man that
we're honoring today, a passage attributed to the American poet John
Greenleaf Whittier comes to mind. "Each crisis brings its word and
deed." In America, in the fifties and sixties, one of the important
crises we faced was racial discrimination. The man whose words and deeds
in that crisis stirred our nation to the very depths of its soul was
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Martin Luther King was born in 1929 in an America where, because of the
color of their skin, nearly 1 in 10 lived lives that were separate and
unequal. Most black Americans were taught in segregated schools. Across
the country, too many could find only poor jobs, toiling for low wages.
They were refused entry into hotels and restaurants, made to use
separate facilities. In a nation that proclaimed liberty and justice for
all, too many black Americans were living with neither.
In one city, a rule required all blacks to sit in the rear of public
buses. But in 1955, when a brave woman named Rosa Parks was told to move
to the back of the bus, she said, "No." A young minister in a local
Baptist church, Martin Luther King, then organized a boycott of the bus
company—a boycott that stunned the country. Within 6 months the courts
had ruled the segregation of public transportation unconstitutional.
Dr. King had awakened something strong and true, a sense that true
justice must be colorblind, and that among white and black Americans, as
he put it, "Their destiny is tied up with our destiny, and their
freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom; we cannot walk alone."
In the years after the bus boycott, Dr. King made equality of rights his
life's work. Across the country, he organized boycotts, rallies, and
marches. Often he was beaten, imprisoned, but he never stopped teaching
nonviolence. "Work with the faith", he told his followers, "that
unearned suffering is redemptive." In 1964 Dr. King became the youngest
man in history to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
Dr. King's work brought him to this city often. And in one sweltering
August day in 1963, he addressed a quarter of a million people at the
Lincoln Memorial. If American history grows from two centuries to
twenty, his words that day will never be forgotten. "I have a dream that
one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the
sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the
table of brotherhood."
In 1968 Martin Luther King was gunned down by a brutal assassin, his
life cut short at the age of 39. But those 39 short years had changed
America forever. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had guaranteed all
Americans equal use of public accommodations, equal access to programs
financed by Federal funds, and the right to compete for employment on
the sole basis of individual merit. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 had
made certain that from then on black Americans would get to vote. But
most important, there was not just a change of law; there was a change
of heart. The conscience of America had been touched. Across the land,
people had begun to treat each other not as blacks and whites, but as
fellow Americans.
And since Dr. King's death, his father, the Reverend Martin Luther King,
Sr., and his wife, Coretta King, have eloquently and forcefully carried
on his work. Also his family have joined in that cause.
Now our nation has decided to honor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., by
setting aside a day each year to remember him and the just cause he
stood for. We've made historic strides since Rosa Parks refused to go to
the back of the bus. As a democratic people, we can take pride in the
knowledge that we Americans recognized a grave injustice and took action
to correct it. And we should remember that in far too many countries,
people like Dr. King never have the opportunity to speak out at all.
But traces of bigotry still mar America. So, each year on Martin Luther
King Day, let us not only recall Dr. King, but rededicate ourselves to
the Commandments he believed in and sought to live every day: Thou shall
love thy God with all thy heart, and thou shall love thy neighbor as
thyself. And I just have to believe that all of us—if all of us, young
and old, Republicans and Democrats, do all we can to live up to those
Commandments, then we will see the day when Dr. King's dream comes true,
and in his words, "All of God's children will be able to sing with new
meaning, '... land where my fathers died, land of the pilgrim's pride,
from every mountainside, let freedom ring.'"
Thank you, God bless you, and I will sign it.
Mrs. King. Thank you, Mr. President, Vice President Bush, Majority
Leader Baker and the distinguished congressional and senatorial
delegations, and other representatives who've gathered here, and
friends.
All right-thinking people, all right-thinking Americans are joined in
spirit with us this day as the highest recognition which this nation
gives is bestowed upon Martin Luther King, Jr., one who also was the
recipient of the highest recognition which the world bestows, the Nobel
Peace Prize.
In his own life's example, he symbolized what was right about America,
what was noblest and best, what human beings have pursued since the
beginning of history. He loved unconditionally. He was in constant
pursuit of truth, and when he discovered it, he embraced it. His
nonviolent campaigns brought about redemption, reconciliation, and
justice. He taught us that only peaceful means can bring about peaceful
ends, that our goal was to create the love community.
America is a more democratic nation, a more just nation, a more peaceful
nation because Martin Luther King, Jr., became her preeminent
nonviolent commander.
Martin Luther King, Jr., and his spirit live within all of us. Thank God
for the blessing of his life and his leadership and his commitment.
What manner of man was this? May we make ourselves worthy to carry on
his dream and create the love community. Thank you.
Note: The President spoke at 11:06 a.m. in the Rose Garden at the White House.
“I will never be able to go back to Sweden without knowing inside myself
that I'd done all a man could do to save as many Jews as possible.”
- Raoul Wallenberg, Letter and Dispatches 1924 - 1944
"From
mid-May to the beginning of July 1944, some 440,000 Hungarian Jews were
deported to Auschwitz – the fastest, cruelest, and most efficient
killing field in the Holocaust. Wallenberg arrived as a member of the
Swedish Legation in Budapest in mid-July 1944. In a remarkable
demonstration of ingenuity and inspiration, bluff and bravado, he
rescued some 100,000 Jews in the last six months of 1944 and the
beginning of 1945, more than any other single government or
organization."
Nonviolent resistance to the radical evil of the Nazis by courageous Danes and German housewives also worked and saved thousands of Jewish people from the Holocaust.
It should come as no surprise that Wallenberg was abducted by Soviet Communist forces. The Nazis and the Soviets had been partners in the partition and conquest of Poland six years prior, in September 1939.
Today, on #RaoulWallenberg Commemorative Day, we honour the enduring legacy of Swedish diplomat and hero of the Holocaust Raoul Wallenberg, a hero who refused to be a bystander. We also mark 80 years since his disappearance into the Soviet Gulag- a profound and ongoing injustice.… pic.twitter.com/54p7TdQRFb
— Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights (@TheRWCHR) January 17, 2025
Let us honor Raoul Wallenberg for all the lives he saved, and let us also continue to demand justice for him, who had his life taken by Josef Stalin. The Russians refuse to reveal what they did to Wallenberg, and his family has filed a lawsuit against them. In 2016, Sweden declared him dead.
Today marks the 80th anniversary of the disappearance of Raoul Wallenberg.
Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg displayed outstanding civil courage and bravery when he saved tens of thousands of Jews from the Holocaust.
Cuba has been under a dictatorship for 73 years. On March 10, 1952, Fulgencio Batista brought an end to Cuban democracy. Carlos Prio, the last democratic president, and his first lady were forced into exile. An increasingly unpopular authoritarian and corrupt regime ruled Cuba for the following seven years.
The
hope for the restoration of democratic governance came to an end when
Batista refused to cede power nonviolently through a dialogue process, opening a path for Fidel and Raul Castro to take it by force. Although they had repeatedly pledged to restore the 1940 Constitution, and Cuban democracy they imposed a communist dictatorship.
Cuba's official motto was
changed from Homeland and Liberty (Patria y Libertad) to Homeland or
Death, We Shall Triumph (¡Patria o Muerte, Venceremos!).
Presidents of Cuba from 1902 to 1952 and dictator Batista
Since the beginning of their struggle on July 26, 1953, the Castro brothers
promised a democratic restoration, but all along planned a
Marxist-Leninist takeover. They imposed a totalitarian communist
dictatorship, killing tens of thousands of Cubans. The Castro regime systematically denied human rights to all Cubans while exporting their repressive model to Africa and Latin America, creating misery for millions more.
The communist regime has re-written the history of Cuba, creating myths to justify its tyranny. One of them is the so-called Cuban blockade, and the above documentary seeks to expose the false narrative.
From 1959 till now, generations of Cubans have resisted this communist dictatorship.
Hundreds of thousands of Cubans risked everything in July 2021, taking to the streets in nonviolent protests demanding an end to the dictatorship. The Castro regime responded
by firing on unarmed protesters, imprisoning over a thousand, and condemning
many of them to 20 and 30 year prison sentences for exercising their right to peaceful assembly.
Remembering this sad past, we resolve to work even harder to bring democracy back to Cuba, replacing Homeland or Death (¡Patria o Muerte!) with Homeland, Life, and Liberty (Patria, Vida y Libertad).
Both petitions are addressed to members of the international community.
Wishing
you all a happy new year in 2025, and through the continuing work and
struggle for a free Cuba may freedom be restored that will finally fulfill Cuban exiles goal of "this year in Havana!"
A reflection on the 54 year alliance between the Assad and Castro regimes.
Hafez al-Assad
seized power in November 1970 in a bloodless coup, and remained in power through brutal means until his death on June 10, 2000. The Syrian dictator ruled his country for over 30 years, and when he died in power, was succeeded by his equally brutal son
Bashar al-Assad who ruled Syria for another 24 years. Throughout these 54 years, the Castro brothers maintained a close relationship with the Assad regime.
Fidel Castro broke relations with Israel on the eve of the Yom Kippur War in 1973. This was required for all Soviet-aligned regimes, as the international communist line defined Israel as a colonial state and an arm of U.S. imperialism. However, the Cuban dictatorship went above and beyond in their hostility to the Jewish state. Noticias de Israel (News of Israel) provided a more in-depth description of what took place next.
From the highest levels of power in Havana, a secret operation was orchestrated to send military support to Syria.A tank brigade, helicopter pilots, communications agents, and intelligence and counterintelligence officers were meticulously selected for this mission.It was imperative that these men did not arouse suspicion and that they were perfectly prepared for the task entrusted to them.
The Military Brigade of Senén Casas Regueiro was mobilized, and under the command of General Leopoldo Cintra Frías, a recognized name in military circles, this surreptitious plan was put into action. In a carefully planned diversionary maneuver, the soldiers left Cuba dressed in civilian clothes, with forged passports that identified them as university students. They traveled on separate flights to East Germany, where they made a technical stopover, before reaching their final destination: Syria.
Once on Syrian territory, Soviet military equipment, including modern T-62 tanks and SAM rocket artillery, was ready for operation. Figures vary, but it is estimated that between 1,800 and 4,000 Cubans were present in Syria during the 1973 confrontation.
The surprise of this operation resulted in a series of significant losses for Israel, both in human lives and military equipment. Some civilian areas were also hit during the clash.
On March 31, 1974, Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan announced on US television that 3,000 Cuban troops had been dispatched to support Syria during the Yom Kippur War. The Economist published two articles in its Foreign Report in 1978 that highlighted Cuba's role in Syria beginning shortly after the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. Cuban tank crews fought with Syrian troops. According to Foreign Report, 180 Cubans were killed and 250 were injured.
The bodies of hundreds of victims of the 1982 massacre that Hafez al-Assad ordered against Palestinians and Lebanese in the Tel al-Zaatar Palestinian refugee camp, northeast of Beirut, Lebanon are still interred in unidentified graves. Between 1,500 and 2,000 people, primarily civilians, are thought to have been killed, although some estimate that the total number of victims during the siege may exceed 4,000.
No criticism was made by Havana regarding the massacre of these Palestinians by Assad. On the contrary the relationship between Havana and Damascus remained strong.
"An August 1985 cable from Assad to Fidel Castro on the 20th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Syria and Cuba praised the two countries' friendship as beneficial 'for the two peoples in their joint struggle against world imperialism and its allies.' A telegram from the
Syrian foreign minister on the same occasion expressed 'Syria's admiration for the fraternal Cuban people's great achievements and their firm stands against imperialist aggression on the Latin American people.'”
In 2011, a nonviolent movement against the Assad regime emerged, which was met with extreme brutality, and resulted in a civil war.
When the international community, belatedly, demanded an accounting for the rights violations committed by the Assad regime in Syria, the regime in Havana was one of a handful of governments that voted against investigating the crimes of the dynastic dictatorship in Damascus.
On August 23, 2011 the Cuban
government along with China, Russia and Ecuador voted against investigating
gross and systematic human rights violations in Syria.
On June 1, 2012 at a Special
Session on the deteriorating human rights situation in Syria with a special
focus on
the massacre in El-Houleh the Cuban regime and its allies took a stand against holding the Assad regime accountable for its gross and systematic human
rights abuses.
The Associated Press reported that
the U.N. Human Rights Council voted overwhelmingly on September 25, 2014, to share its
evidence of Syrian atrocities in hopes it will be forwarded to the
world's war crimes tribunal. By a vote of 32-5, with 10 abstentions, the
47-nation council adopted
the resolution condemning the lack of cooperation by
President Bashar Assad's government with a U.N. commission investigating
rights violations since March 2011 in Syria. Cuba was one of five nations—the other four being Algeria, China, Russia, and Venezuela—that voted against sharing evidence of
gross and
systematic human rights violations in Syria.
Ten years of civil war and bloodshed with tens of thousands disappeared, millions displaced, and over 500,000 killed, yet the Syrian regime was being normalized in 2023 by too many in the international community.
It
appears that the Assad dynasty that ruled Syria over two generations of
incredible levels of brutality and terror has come to an end. Let us
pray that what comes next after so many decades of depravity and
repression is an improvement. Assad's
decision to engage in the mass murder of the Syrian nonviolent
opposition in 2011 sparked a civil war that has claimed hundreds of
thousands of lives. Now
is the time to make an assessment of the governments who backed the
Assad regime, and call them out as we learn of the crimes of this
dynastic dictatorship.This includes the dictatorships in Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua. All supported Assad, and legitimized his rule.
"It appears that the Assad dynasty that ruled Syria over two generations of incredible levels of brutality and terror has come to an end. Let us pray that what comes next after so many decades of depravity and repression is an improvement." https://t.co/5dO3DpvHFn 1/4
Vaclav Havel,
a man who had both head and heart, understood why this kind of regime
was so profoundly inhuman: "As soon as man began considering himself the
source of the highest meaning in the world and the measure of
everything, the world began to lose its human dimension, and man began
to lose control of it."
The optimism expressed by Gorbachev and the nostalgia of Cohen fail to
take into account the human cost of the USSR. The Soviet Union took the
lives of an estimated 61 million human beings. It was a brutal and evil system that allied with Nazi Germany to start WW2 in 1939, and afterwards spawned other brutal regimes around the globe that claimed over 100 million lives. Their lives mattered. Vaclav Havel, in his 1990 New Years Speech, called on his countrymen to remember.
"The rivers of blood that have flowed in Hungary, Poland, Germany and
recently in such a horrific manner in Romania, as well as the sea of
blood shed by the nations of the Soviet Union, must not be forgotten.
First of all because all human suffering concerns every other human
being. But more than this, they must also not be forgotten because it is
these great sacrifices that form the tragic background of today's
freedom or the gradual emancipation of the nations of the Soviet Bloc,
and thus the background of our own newfound freedom."
The
number of lives lost is only the material accounting and does not take
into account the spiritual ruin visited upon billions and its aftermath
to the present day. The late Czech president explained it in the same address.
"The worst thing is that we live in a contaminated moral environment. We
fell morally ill because we became used to saying something different
from what we thought. We learned not to believe in anything, to ignore
one another, to care only about ourselves. Concepts such as love,
friendship, compassion, humility or forgiveness lost their depth and
dimension, and for many of us they represented only psychological
peculiarities, or they resembled gone-astray greetings from ancient
times, a little ridiculous in the era of computers and spaceships."
The
destruction, both material and spiritual, generated by the Soviet Union
over seventy years will take centuries to repair and transcend. That
hard truth may not be cause for celebration, but the end of the system
that wreaked so much damage is cause for celebration, not regret. To do
otherwise is to be heartless. The fact that it happened without violence
on Christmas Day in 1991 is also cause for joy.
Criminally, Vladimir Putin on February 24, 2022 expanded his war into Ukraine in what some view as an attempt to resurrect the Soviet empire and the rivers of blood are flowing again, and we do not know how it will end. Gorbachev passed away on August 30, 2022 a respected figure abroad, but reviled in Russia. He was in many ways the polar opposite of Vladimir Putin.
Secondly, the largest remaining communist regime, the Peoples Republic of
China, remains in power and with
the aid of smaller communist powers (Cuba, Laos, Nicaragua, North Korea,
Venezuela, Vietnam, and their networks) is backing Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The Chinese Communist Party
celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding in 2021. It is a
tragedy that they did not go the same way as the Soviet Union in 1991.
People of goodwill must continue to work for and pray for
the day that a second miracle can be celebrated with the the end of
communism in China, and a third miracle with the defeat of the Russian invaders in Ukraine.