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They
respond to a message sent by Alicia Alonso
By Pedro de la Hoz —Granma daily staff writer—
MORE than
500 prominent artists, writers and academics in the United
States have signed a message addressed to U.S. President
George W. Bush, asking him to end the blockade against Cuba
and to stop preventing cultural exchange between the two
nations.
“We are
writing you as representatives of the cultural sphere in the
U.S. We write you as American citizens. We write to express
our dismay at your administration's continuing hostility
towards Cuba. We write to express our opposition to policies
that keep us divided from our Cuban counterparts, preventing
cultural interchange between our two countries. We believe
the time has come to move towards cooperation and
constructive relations with Cuba,” the letter said.
The
initiative, sponsored by an organization called U.S.-Cuba
Cultural Exchange, was taken after many of the letter’s
signatories received a letter sent on October 26 by Cuban
prima ballerina assoluta Alicia Alonso, asking them to speak
out against the blockade and work together “so that Cuban
artists and writers can take their talent to the United
States and so that you do not prevent your artists and
writers from coming to our Island to share their knowledge
and values; so that a song, a book, a scientific study and a
choreographic work won’t be thought of, irrationally, as a
crime.”
Those who
signed the message to Bush include popular actors Sean Penn
(2004 Oscar for Mystic River), Peter Coyote (ET and Erin
Brocovich), Harry Belafonte and Danny Glover, and celebrated
writers Alice Walker (The Color Purple), William Kennedy
(1983 Pulitzer for Ironweed), Gore Vidal (Juliano and
Williwaw) and Cristina García (National Book Award finalist
1992 for Dreaming in Cuban).
Many of
the signatories are musicians and music industry executives,
such as legendary rocker Carlos Santana, composer and singer
Tom Waits, producer and guitarist Ry Cooder, who led the
first Buenavista Social Club; musicans Tre Cool (Green Day),
Mickey Hart (former drummer with the Grateful Dead) and Tom
Morello (formerly of Rage Against the Machine, now with
Audioslave); folk music icons Holly Near and Bonnie Raitt,
the latter a nine-time Grammy winner, and salsa star Andy
Montañez.
Dozens of
those who added their names are from the Latino intellectual
community, including Cuban-American academics Nelson Pérez
Valdés, Enrique Sacerio Gari and Lisandro Pérez.
Translated by Granma International
13-12-2007 |