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Dear comrades,
Reading your message filled me with
emotion. None of you had been born when the
Revolution triumphed. The ideas that this
message beautifully express sprang from
history's deepest furrow. Their roots are
sustained by every act of sacrifice and heroism
of an admirable people, who was able to overcome
all obstacles. They find fertile ground, too, in
the example and the values created by other
peoples.
What is a life bereft of ideas
worth? Marti once said that “trenches of ideas
are more valuable than trenches of stones”. Are
ideas born of a man? Do they perish with him?
Ideas have come into being all throughout the
history of the human species. They will exist as
long as our species does. Never before has the
latter faced as serious a threat, owing to the
combination of society's political
underdevelopment and the fruits of technology,
which appears limitless and whose capacity for
self-destruction is beyond reason. Genocidal
wars, climate change, hunger, thirst, inequality
are everywhere we look.
Human beings need to cling to a
hopeful prospect, to seek a means of survival in
science itself, and it is only fair to look for
it and offer it to them. There would be no room,
in that brighter future, for the horrible
injustices bred by today's developed capitalist
system under a worldwide dictatorship.
“To be or not to be”, I believe Shakespeare
wrote in one of his plays. That is the
alternative facing young people now. To ignore
this would be opting to live in the most idyllic
of worlds but for a handful of decades, which
are less than few seconds in the history of
time.
If young people fail, everything
will fail. It is my deepest conviction that
young Cubans will struggle to prevent this. I
have faith in you.
Fidel Castro Ruz
June 23, 2007
12:30 p.m.
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