Spoken:
1953 - Publisher: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales,
La Habana, Cuba. 1975
Translated: Pedro Álvarez Tabío & Andrew
Paul Booth (who rechecked the translation with the Spanish La
historia me absolverá, same publisher, in 1981)
Transcription/Markup: Andrew Paul Booth/Brian
Basgen
Online Version: 1997, Castro Internet
Archive (marxists.org) 2001
HONORABLE JUDGES:
Never has a lawyer had to practice
his profession under such difficult conditions; never has such a
number of overwhelming irregularities been committed against an
accused man. In this case, counsel and defendant are one and the
same. As attorney he has not even been able to take a look at the
indictment. As accused, for the past seventy-six days he has been
locked away in solitary confinement, held totally and absolutely
incommunicado, in violation of every human and legal right.
He who speaks to you hates vanity
with all his being, nor are his temperament or frame of mind
inclined towards courtroom poses or sensationalism of any kind. If I
have had to assume my own defense before this Court it is for two
reasons. First: because I have been denied legal aid almost entirely,
and second: only one who has been so deeply wounded, who has seen
his country so forsaken and its justice trampled so, can speak at a
moment like this with words that spring from the blood of his heart
and the truth of his very gut.
There was no lack of generous
comrades who wished to defend me, and the Havana Bar Association
appointed a courageous and competent jurist, Dr. Jorge Pagliery,
Dean of the Bar in this city, to represent me in this case. However,
he was not permitted to carry out his task. As often as he tried to
see me, the prison gates were closed before him. Only after a month
and a half, and through the intervention of the Court, was he
finally granted a ten minute interview with me in the presence of a
sergeant from the Military Intelligence Agency (SIM). One supposes
that a lawyer has a right to speak with his defendant in private,
and this right is respected throughout the world, except in the case
of a Cuban prisoner of war in the hands of an implacable tyranny
that abides by no code of law, be it legal or humane. Neither Dr.
Pagliery nor I were willing to tolerate such dirty spying upon our
means of defense for the oral trial. Did they want to know, perhaps,
beforehand, the methods we would use in order to reduce to dust the
incredible fabric of lies they had woven around the Moncada Barracks
events? How were we going to expose the terrible truth they would go
to such great lengths to conceal? It was then that we decided that,
taking advantage of my professional rights as a lawyer, I would
assume my own defense.
This decision, overheard by the
sergeant and reported by him to his superior, provoked a real panic.
It looked like some mocking little imp was telling them that I was
going to ruin all their plans. You know very well, Honorable Judges,
how much pressure has been brought to bear on me in order to strip
me as well of this right that is ratified by long Cuban tradition.
The Court could not give in to such machination, for that would have
left the accused in a state of total indefensiveness. The accused,
who is now exercising this right to plead his own case, will under
no circumstances refrain from saying what he must say. I consider it
essential that I explain, at the onset, the reason for the terrible
isolation in which I have been kept; what was the purpose of keeping
me silent; what was behind the plots to kill me, plots which the
Court is familiar with; what grave events are being hidden from the
people; and the truth behind all the strange things which have taken
place during this trial. I propose to do all this with utmost
clarity.
You have publicly called this case
the most significant in the history of the Republic. If you
sincerely believed this, you should not have allowed your authority
to be stained and degraded. The first court session was September
21st. Among one hundred machine guns and bayonets, scandalously
invading the hall of justice, more than a hundred people were seated
in the prisoner's dock. The great majority had nothing to do with
what had happened. They had been under preventive arrest for many
days, suffering all kinds of insults and abuses in the chambers of
the repressive units. But the rest of the accused, the minority,
were brave and determined, ready to proudly confirm their part in
the battle for freedom, ready to offer an example of unprecedented
self-sacrifice and to wrench from the jail's claws those who in
deliberate bad faith had been included in the trial. Those who had
met in combat confronted one another again. Once again, with the
cause of justice on our side, we would wage the terrible battle of
truth against infamy! Surely the regime was not prepared for the
moral catastrophe in store for it!
How to maintain all its false
accusations? How to keep secret what had really happened, when so
many young men were willing to risk everything - prison, torture and
death, if necessary - in order that the truth be told before this
Court?
I was called as a witness at that
first session. For two hours I was questioned by the Prosecutor as
well as by twenty defense attorneys. I was able to prove with exact
facts and figures the sums of money that had been spent, the way
this money was collected and the arms we had been able to round up.
I had nothing to hide, for the truth was: all this was accomplished
through sacrifices without precedent in the history of our Republic.
I spoke of the goals that inspired us in our struggle and of the
humane and generous treatment that we had at all times accorded our
adversaries. If I accomplished my purpose of demonstrating that
those who were falsely implicated in this trial were neither
directly nor indirectly involved, I owe it to the complete support
and backing of my heroic comrades. For, as I said, the consequences
they might be forced to suffer at no time caused them to repent of
their condition as revolutionaries and patriots, I was never once
allowed to speak with these comrades of mine during the time we were
in prison, and yet we planned to do exactly the same. The fact is,
when men carry the same ideals in their hearts, nothing can isolate
them - neither prison walls nor the sod of cemeteries. For a single
memory, a single spirit, a single idea, a single conscience, a
single dignity will sustain them all.
From that moment on, the structure of lies the regime
had erected about the events at Moncada Barracks began to collapse
like a house of cards. As a result, the Prosecutor realized that
keeping all those persons named as instigators in prison was
completely absurd, and he requested their provisional release.
At the close of my testimony in that first session, I asked the Court to
allow me to leave the dock and sit among the counsel for the defense. This
permission was granted. At that point what I consider my most important
mission in this trial began: to totally discredit the cowardly, miserable
and treacherous lies which the regime had hurled against our fighters; to
reveal with irrefutable evidence the horrible, repulsive crimes they had
practiced on the prisoners; and to show the nation and the world the
infinite misfortune of the Cuban people who are suffering the cruelest, the
most inhuman oppression of their history.
The second session convened on Tuesday,
September 22nd. By that time only ten witnesses had testified, and they had
already cleared up the murders in the Manzanillo area, specifically
establishing and placing on record the direct responsibility of the captain
commanding that post. There were three hundred more witnesses to testify.
What would happen if, with a staggering mass of facts and evidence, I should
proceed to cross-examine the very Army men who were directly responsible for
those crimes? Could the regime permit me to go ahead before the large
audience attending the trial? Before journalists and jurists from all over
the island? And before the party leaders of the opposition, who they had
stupidly seated right in the prisoner's dock where they could hear so well
all that might be brought out here? They would rather have blown up the
court house, with all its judges, than allow that!
And so they devised a plan by which they
could eliminate me from the trial and they proceeded to do just that, manu
militari. On Friday night, September 25th, on the eve of the third session
of the trial, two prison doctors visited me in my cell. They were visibly
embarrassed. 'We have come to examine you,' they said. I asked them, 'Who is
so worried about my health?' Actually, from the moment I saw them I realized
what they had come for. They could not have treated me with greater respect,
and they explained their predicament to me. That afternoon Colonel Chaviano
had appeared at the prison and told them I 'was doing the Government
terrible damage with this trial.' He had told them they must sign a
certificate declaring that I was ill and was, therefore, unable to appear in
court. The doctors told me that for their part they were prepared to resign
from their posts and risk persecution. They put the matter in my hands, for
me to decide. I found it hard to ask those men to unhesitatingly destroy
themselves. But neither could I, under any circumstances, consent that those
orders be carried out. Leaving the matter to their own consciences, I told
them only: 'You must know your duty; I certainly know mine.'
After leaving the cell they signed the
certificate. I know they did so believing in good faith that this was the
only way they could save my life, which they considered to be in grave
danger. I was not obliged to keep our conversation secret, for I am bound
only by the truth. Telling the truth in this instance may jeopardize those
good doctors in their material interests, but I am removing all doubt about
their honor, which is worth much more. That same night, I wrote the Court a
letter denouncing the plot; requesting that two Court physicians be sent to
certify my excellent state of health, and to inform you that if to save my
life I must take part in such deception, I would a thousand times prefer to
lose it. To show my determination to fight alone against this whole
degenerate frame-up, I added to my own words one of the Master's lines: 'A
just cause even from the depths of a cave can do more than an army.' As the
Court knows, this was the letter Dr. Melba Hernández submitted at the third
session of the trial on September 26th. I managed to get it to her in spite
of the heavy guard I was under. That letter, of course, provoked immediate
reprisals. Dr. Hernández was subjected to solitary confinement, and I -
since I was already incommunicado - was sent to the most inaccessible
reaches of the prison. From that moment on, all the accused were thoroughly
searched from head to foot before they were brought into the courtroom.
Two Court physicians certified on September
27th that I was, in fact, in perfect health. Yet, in spite of the repeated
orders from the Court, I was never again brought to the hearings. What's
more, anonymous persons daily circulated hundreds of apocryphal pamphlets
which announced my rescue from jail. This stupid alibi was invented so they
could physically eliminate me and pretend I had tried to escape. Since the
scheme failed as a result of timely exposure by ever alert friends, and
after the first affidavit was shown to be false, the regime could only keep
me away from the trial by open and shameless contempt of Court.
This was an incredible situation, Honorable
Judges: Here was a regime literally afraid to bring an accused man to Court;
a regime of blood and terror that shrank in fear of the moral conviction of
a defenseless man - unarmed, slandered and isolated. And so, after depriving
me of everything else, they finally deprived me even of the trial in which I
was the main accused. Remember that this was during a period in which
individual rights were suspended and the Public Order Act as well as
censorship of radio and press were in full force. What unbelievable crimes
this regime must have committed to so fear the voice of one accused man!
I must dwell upon the insolence and
disrespect which the Army leaders have at all times shown towards you. As
often as this Court has ordered an end to the inhuman isolation in which I
was held; as often as it has ordered my most elementary rights to be
respected; as often as it has demanded that I be brought before it, this
Court has never been obeyed! Worse yet: in the very presence of the Court,
during the first and second hearings, a praetorian guard was stationed
beside me to totally prevent me from speaking to anyone, even among the
brief recesses. In other words, not only in prison, but also in the
courtroom and in your presence, they ignored your decrees. I had intended to
mention this matter in the following session, as a question of elementary
respect for the Court, but - I was never brought back. And if, in exchange
for so much disrespect, they bring us before you to be jailed in the name of
a legality which they and they alone have been violating since March 10th,
sad indeed is the role they would force on you. The Latin maxim Cedant arma
togae has certainly not been fulfilled on a single occasion during this
trial. I beg you to keep that circumstance well in mind.
What is more, these devices were in any case
quite useless; my brave comrades, with unprecedented patriotism, did their
duty to the utmost.
'Yes, we set out to fight for Cuba's freedom
and we are not ashamed of having done so,' they declared, one by one, on the
witness stand. Then, addressing the Court with impressive courage, they
denounced the hideous crimes committed upon the bodies of our brothers.
Although absent from Court, I was able, in my prison cell, to follow the
trial in all its details. And I have the convicts at Boniato Prison to thank
for this. In spite of all threats, these men found ingenious means of
getting newspaper clippings and all kinds of information to me. In this way
they avenged the abuses and immoralities perpetrated against them both by
Taboada, the warden, and the supervisor, Lieutenant Rozabal, who drove them
from sun up to sun down building private mansions and starved them by
embezzling the prison food budget.
As the trial went on, the roles were reversed:
those who came to accuse found themselves accused, and the accused became
the accusers! It was not the revolutionaries who were judged there; judged
once and forever was a man named Batista - monstruum horrendum! - and it
matters little that these valiant and worthy young men have been condemned,
if tomorrow the people will condemn the Dictator and his henchmen! Our men
were consigned to the Isle of Pines Prison, in whose circular galleries
Castells' ghost still lingers and where the cries of countless victims still
echo; there our young men have been sent to expiate their love of liberty,
in bitter confinement, banished from society, torn from their homes and
exiled from their country. Is it not clear to you, as I have said before,
that in such circumstances it is difficult and disagreeable for this lawyer
to fulfill his duty?
As a result of so many turbid and illegal
machinations, due to the will of those who govern and the weakness of those
who judge, I find myself here in this little room at the Civilian Hospital,
where I have been brought to be tried in secret, so that I may not be heard
and my voice may be stifled, and so that no one may learn of the things I am
going to say. Why, then, do we need that imposing Palace of Justice which
the Honorable Judges would without doubt find much more comfortable? I must
warn you: it is unwise to administer justice from a hospital room,
surrounded by sentinels with fixed bayonets; the citizens might suppose that
our justice is sick - and that it is captive.
Let me remind you, your laws of procedure
provide that trials shall be 'public hearings;' however, the people have
been barred altogether from this session of Court. The only civilians
admitted here have been two attorneys and six reporters, in whose newspapers
the censorship of the press will prevent printing a word I say. I see, as my
sole audience in this chamber and in the corridors, nearly a hundred
soldiers and officers. I am grateful for the polite and serious attention
they give me. I only wish I could have the whole Army before me! I know, one
day, this Army will seethe with rage to wash away the terrible, the shameful
bloodstains splattered across the military uniform by the present ruthless
clique in its lust for power. On that day, oh what a fall awaits those
mounted in arrogance on their noble steeds! - provided that the people have
not dismounted them long before that!
Finally, I should like to add that no
treatise on penal law was allowed me in my cell. I have at my disposal only
this tiny code of law lent to me by my learned counsel, Dr. Baudillo
Castellanos, the courageous defender of my comrades. In the same way they
prevented me from receiving the books of Martí; it seems the prison
censorship considered them too subversive. Or is it because I said Martí was
the inspirer of the 26th of July? Reference books on any other subject were
also denied me during this trial. But it makes no difference! I carry the
teachings of the Master in my heart, and in my mind the noble ideas of all
men who have defended people's freedom everywhere!
I am going to make only one request of this
court; I trust it will be granted as a compensation for the many abuses and
outrages the accused has had to tolerate without protection of the law. I
ask that my right to express myself be respected without restraint.
Otherwise, even the merest semblance of justice cannot be maintained, and
the final episode of this trial would be, more than all the others, one of
ignominy and cowardice.
I must admit that I am somewhat disappointed.
I had expected that the Honorable Prosecutor would come forward with a grave
accusation. I thought he would be ready to justify to the limit his
contention, and his reasons why I should be condemned in the name of Law and
Justice - what law and what justice? - to 26 years in prison. But no. He has
limited himself to reading Article 148 of the Social Defense Code. On the
basis of this, plus aggravating circumstances, he requests that I be
imprisoned for the lengthy term of 26 years! Two minutes seems a very short
time in which to demand and justify that a man be put behind bars for more
than a quarter of a century. Can it be that the Honorable Prosecutor is,
perhaps, annoyed with the Court? Because as I see it, his laconic attitude
in this case clashes with the solemnity with which the Honorable Judges
declared, rather proudly, that this was a trial of the greatest importance!
I have heard prosecutors speak ten times longer in a simple narcotics case
asking for a sentence of just six months. The Honorable Prosecutor has
supplied not a word in support of his petition. I am a just man. I realize
that for a prosecuting attorney under oath of loyalty to the Constitution of
the Republic, it is difficult to come here in the name of an
unconstitutional, statutory, de facto government, lacking any legal much
less moral basis, to ask that a young Cuban, a lawyer like himself - perhaps
as honorable as he, be sent to jail for 26 years. But the Honorable
Prosecutor is a gifted man and I have seen much less talented persons write
lengthy diatribes in defense of this regime. How then can I suppose that he
lacks reason with which to defend it, at least for fifteen minutes, however
contemptible that might be to any decent person? It is clear that there is a
great conspiracy behind all this.
Honorable Judges: Why such interest in
silencing me? Why is every type of argument foregone in order to avoid
presenting any target whatsoever against which I might direct my own brief?
Is it that they lack any legal, moral or political basis on which to put
forth a serious formulation of the question? Are they that afraid of the
truth? Do they hope that I, too, will speak for only two minutes and that I
will not touch upon the points which have caused certain people sleepless
nights since July 26th? Since the prosecutor's petition was restricted to
the mere reading of five lines of an article of the Social Defense Code,
might they suppose that I too would limit myself to those same lines and
circle round them like some slave turning a millstone? I shall by no means
accept such a gag, for in this trial there is much more than the freedom of
a single individual at stake. Fundamental matters of principle are being
debated here, the right of men to be free is on trial, the very foundations
of our existence as a civilized and democratic nation are in the balance.
When this trial is over, I do not want to have to reproach myself for any
principle left undefended, for any truth left unsaid, for any crime not
denounced.
The Honorable Prosecutor's famous little
article hardly deserves a minute of my time. I shall limit myself for the
moment to a brief legal skirmish against it, because I want to clear the
field for an assault against all the endless lies and deceits, the hypocrisy,
conventionalism and moral cowardice that have set the stage for the crude
comedy which since the 10th of March - and even before then - has been
called Justice in Cuba.
It is a fundamental principle of criminal law
that an imputed offense must correspond exactly to the type of crime
described by law. If no law applies exactly to the point in question, then
there is no offense.
The article in question reads textually: 'A
penalty of imprisonment of from three to ten years shall be imposed upon the
perpetrator of any act aimed at bringing about an armed uprising against the
Constitutional Powers of the State. The penalty shall be imprisonment for
from five to twenty years, in the event that insurrection actually be
carried into effect.'
In what country is the Honorable Prosecutor
living? Who has told him that we have sought to bring about an uprising
against the Constitutional Powers of the State? Two things are self-evident.
First of all, the dictatorship that oppresses the nation is not a
constitutional power, but an unconstitutional one: it was established
against the Constitution, over the head of the Constitution, violating the
legitimate Constitution of the Republic. The legitimate Constitution is that
which emanates directly from a sovereign people. I shall demonstrate this
point fully later on, notwithstanding all the subterfuges contrived by
cowards and traitors to justify the unjustifiable. Secondly, the article
refers to Powers, in the plural, as in the case of a republic governed by a
Legislative Power, an Executive Power, and a Judicial Power which balance
and counterbalance one another. We have fomented a rebellion against one
single power, an illegal one, which has usurped and merged into a single
whole both the Legislative and Executive Powers of the nation, and so has
destroyed the entire system that was specifically safeguarded by the Code
now under our analysis. As to the independence of the Judiciary after the
10th of March, I shall not allude to that for I am in no mood for joking ...
No matter how Article 148 may be stretched, shrunk or amended, not a single
comma applies to the events of July 26th. Let us leave this statute alone
and await the opportunity to apply it to those who really did foment an
uprising against the Constitutional Powers of the State. Later I shall come
back to the Code to refresh the Honorable Prosecutor's memory about certain
circumstances he has unfortunately overlooked.
I warn you, I am just beginning! If there is
in your hearts a vestige of love for your country, love for humanity, love
for justice, listen carefully. I know that I will be silenced for many years;
I know that the regime will try to suppress the truth by all possible means;
I know that there will be a conspiracy to bury me in oblivion. But my voice
will not be stifled - it will rise from my breast even when I feel most
alone, and my heart will give it all the fire that callous cowards deny it.
From a shack in the mountains on Monday, July
27th, I listened to the dictator's voice on the air while there were still
18 of our men in arms against the government. Those who have never
experienced similar moments will never know that kind of bitterness and
indignation. While the long-cherished hopes of freeing our people lay in
ruins about us we heard those crushed hopes gloated over by a tyrant more
vicious, more arrogant than ever. The endless stream of lies and slanders,
poured forth in his crude, odious, repulsive language, may only be compared
to the endless stream of clean young blood which had flowed since the
previous night - with his knowledge, consent, complicity and approval -
being spilled by the most inhuman gang of assassins it is possible to
imagine. To have believed him for a single moment would have sufficed to
fill a man of conscience with remorse and shame for the rest of his life. At
that time I could not even hope to brand his miserable forehead with the
mark of truth which condemns him for the rest of his days and for all time
to come. Already a circle of more than a thousand men, armed with weapons
more powerful than ours and with peremptory orders to bring in our bodies,
was closing in around us. Now that the truth is coming out, now that
speaking before you I am carrying out the mission I set for myself, I may
die peacefully and content. So I shall not mince my words about those savage
murderers.
I must pause to consider the facts for a
moment. The government itself said the attack showed such precision and
perfection that it must have been planned by military strategists. Nothing
could have been farther from the truth! The plan was drawn up by a group of
young men, none of whom had any military experience at all. I will reveal
their names, omitting two who are neither dead nor in prison: Abel
Santamaría, José Luis Tasende, Renato Guitart Rosell, Pedro Miret, Jesús
Montané and myself. Half of them are dead, and in tribute to their memory I
can say that although they were not military experts they had enough
patriotism to have given, had we not been at such a great disadvantage, a
good beating to that entire lot of generals together, those generals of the
10th of March who are neither soldiers nor patriots. Much more difficult
than the planning of the attack was our organizing, training, mobilizing and
arming men under this repressive regime with its millions of dollars spent
on espionage, bribery and information services. Nevertheless, all this was
carried out by those men and many others like them with incredible
seriousness, discretion and discipline. Still more praiseworthy is the fact
that they gave this task everything they had; ultimately, their very lives.
The final mobilization of men who came to
this province from the most remote towns of the entire island was
accomplished with admirable precision and in absolute secrecy. It is equally
true that the attack was carried out with magnificent coordination. It began
simultaneously at 5:15 a.m. in both Bayamo and Santiago de Cuba; and one by
one, with an exactitude of minutes and seconds prepared in advance, the
buildings surrounding the barracks fell to our forces. Nevertheless, in the
interest of truth and even though it may detract from our merit, I am also
going to reveal for the first time a fact that was fatal: due to a most
unfortunate error, half of our forces, and the better armed half at that,
went astray at the entrance to the city and were not on hand to help us at
the decisive moment. Abel Santamaría, with 21 men, had occupied the Civilian
Hospital; with him went a doctor and two of our women comrades to attend to
the wounded. Raúl Castro, with ten men, occupied the Palace of Justice, and
it was my responsibility to attack the barracks with the rest, 95 men.
Preceded by an advance group of eight who had forced Gate Three, I arrived
with the first group of 45 men. It was precisely here that the battle began,
when my car ran into an outside patrol armed with machine guns. The reserve
group which had almost all the heavy weapons (the light arms were with the
advance group), turned up the wrong street and lost its way in an unfamiliar
city. I must clarify the fact that I do not for a moment doubt the courage
of those men; they experienced great anguish and desperation when they
realized they were lost. Because of the type of action it was and because
the contending forces were wearing identically colored uniforms, it was not
easy for these men to re-establish contact with us. Many of them, captured
later on, met death with true heroism.
Everyone had instructions, first of all, to
be humane in the struggle. Never was a group of armed men more generous to
the adversary. From the beginning we took numerous prisoners - nearly twenty
- and there was one moment when three of our men - Ramiro Valdés, José
Suárez and Jesús Montané - managed to enter a barrack and hold nearly fifty
soldiers prisoners for a short time. Those soldiers testified before the
Court, and without exception they all acknowledged that we treated them with
absolute respect, that we didn't even subject them to one scoffing remark.
In line with this, I want to give my heartfelt thanks to the Prosecutor for
one thing in the trial of my comrades: when he made his report he was fair
enough to acknowledge as an incontestable fact that we maintained a high
spirit of chivalry throughout the struggle.
Discipline among the soldiers was very poor.
They finally defeated us because of their superior numbers - fifteen to one
- and because of the protection afforded them by the defenses of the
fortress. Our men were much better marksmen, as our enemies themselves
conceded. There was a high degree of courage on both sides.
In analyzing the reasons for our tactical
failure, apart from the regrettable error already mentioned, I believe we
made a mistake by dividing the commando unit we had so carefully trained. Of
our best trained men and boldest leaders, there were 27 in Bayamo, 21 at the
Civilian Hospital and 10 at the Palace of Justice. If our forces had been
distributed differently the outcome of the battle might have been different.
The clash with the patrol (purely accidental, since the unit might have been
at that point twenty seconds earlier or twenty seconds later) alerted the
camp, and gave it time to mobilize. Otherwise it would have fallen into our
hands without a shot fired, since we already controlled the guard post. On
the other hand, except for the .22 caliber rifles, for which there were
plenty of bullets, our side was very short of ammunition. Had we had hand
grenades, the Army would not have been able to resist us for fifteen
minutes.
When I became convinced that all efforts to
take the barracks were now useless, I began to withdraw our men in groups of
eight and ten. Our retreat was covered by six expert marksmen under the
command of Pedro Miret and Fidel Labrador; heroically they held off the
Army's advance. Our losses in the battle had been insignificant; 95% of our
casualties came from the Army's inhumanity after the struggle. The group at
the Civilian Hospital only had one casualty; the rest of that group was
trapped when the troops blocked the only exit; but our youths did not lay
down their arms until their very last bullet was gone. With them was Abel
Santamaría, the most generous, beloved and intrepid of our young men, whose
glorious resistance immortalizes him in Cuban history. We shall see the fate
they met and how Batista sought to punish the heroism of our youth.
We planned to continue the struggle in the
mountains in case the attack on the regiment failed. In Siboney I was able
to gather a third of our forces; but many of these men were now discouraged.
About twenty of them decided to surrender; later we shall see what became of
them. The rest, 18 men, with what arms and ammunition were left, followed me
into the mountains. The terrain was completely unknown to us. For a week we
held the heights of the Gran Piedra range and the Army occupied the
foothills. We could not come down; they didn't risk coming up. It was not
force of arms, but hunger and thirst that ultimately overcame our resistance.
I had to divide the men into smaller groups. Some of them managed to slip
through the Army lines; others were surrendered by Monsignor Pérez Serantes.
Finally only two comrades remained with me - José Suárez and Oscar Alcalde.
While the three of us were totally exhausted, a force led by Lieutenant
Sarría surprised us in our sleep at dawn. This was Saturday, August 1st. By
that time the slaughter of prisoners had ceased as a result of the people's
protest. This officer, a man of honor, saved us from being murdered on the
spot with our hands tied behind us.
I need not deny here the stupid statements by
Ugalde Carrillo and company, who tried to stain my name in an effort to mask
their own cowardice, incompetence, and criminality. The facts are clear
enough.
My purpose is not to bore the court with epic
narratives. All that I have said is essential for a more precise
understanding of what is yet to come.
Let me mention two important facts that
facilitate an objective judgement of our attitude. First: we could have
taken over the regiment simply by seizing all the high ranking officers in
their homes. This possibility was rejected for the very humane reason that
we wished to avoid scenes of tragedy and struggle in the presence of their
families. Second: we decided not to take any radio station over until the
Army camp was in our power. This attitude, unusually magnanimous and
considerate, spared the citizens a great deal of bloodshed. With only ten
men I could have seized a radio station and called the people to revolt.
There is no questioning the people's will to fight. I had a recording of
Eduardo Chibás' last message over the CMQ radio network, and patriotic poems
and battle hymns capable of moving the least sensitive, especially with the
sounds of live battle in their ears. But I did not want to use them although
our situation was desperate.
The regime has emphatically repeated that our
Movement did not have popular support. I have never heard an assertion so
naive, and at the same time so full of bad faith. The regime seeks to show
submission and cowardice on the part of the people. They all but claim that
the people support the dictatorship; they do not know how offensive this is
to the brave Orientales. Santiago thought our attack was only a local
disturbance between two factions of soldiers; not until many hours later did
they realize what had really happened. Who can doubt the valor, civic pride
and limitless courage of the rebel and patriotic people of Santiago de Cuba?
If Moncada had fallen into our hands, even the women of Santiago de Cuba
would have risen in arms. Many were the rifles loaded for our fighters by
the nurses at the Civilian Hospital. They fought alongside us. That is
something we will never forget.
It was never our intention to engage the
soldiers of the regiment in combat. We wanted to seize control of them and
their weapons in a surprise attack, arouse the people and call the soldiers
to abandon the odious flag of the tyranny and to embrace the banner of
freedom; to defend the supreme interests of the nation and not the petty
interests of a small clique; to turn their guns around and fire on the
people's enemies and not on the people, among whom are their own sons and
fathers; to unite with the people as the brothers that they are instead of
opposing the people as the enemies the government tries to make of them; to
march behind the only beautiful ideal worthy of sacrificing one's life - the
greatness and happiness of one's country. To those who doubt that many
soldiers would have followed us, I ask: What Cuban does not cherish glory?
What heart is not set aflame by the promise of freedom?
The Navy did not fight against us, and it
would undoubtedly have come over to our side later on. It is well known that
that branch of the Armed Forces is the least dominated by the Dictatorship
and that there is a very intense civic conscience among its members. But, as
to the rest of the national armed forces, would they have fought against a
people in revolt? I declare that they would not! A soldier is made of flesh
and blood; he thinks, observes, feels. He is susceptible to the opinions,
beliefs, sympathies and antipathies of the people. If you ask his opinion,
he may tell you he cannot express it; but that does not mean he has no
opinion. He is affected by exactly the same problems that affect other
citizens - subsistence, rent, the education of his children, their future,
etc. Everything of this kind is an inevitable point of contact between him
and the people and everything of this kind relates him to the present and
future situation of the society in which he lives. It is foolish to imagine
that the salary a soldier receives from the State - a modest enough salary
at that - should resolve the vital problems imposed on him by his needs,
duties and feelings as a member of his community.
This brief explanation has been necessary
because it is basic to a consideration to which few people, until now, have
paid any attention - soldiers have a deep respect for the feelings of the
majority of the people! During the Machado regime, in the same proportion as
popular antipathy increased, the loyalty of the Army visibly decreased. This
was so true that a group of women almost succeeded in subverting Camp
Columbia. But this is proven even more clearly by a recent development.
While Grau San Martín's regime was able to preserve its maximum popularity
among the people, unscrupulous ex-officers and power-hungry civilians
attempted innumerable conspiracies in the Army, although none of them found
a following in the rank and file.
The March 10th coup took place at the moment
when the civil government's prestige had dwindled to its lowest ebb, a
circumstance of which Batista and his clique took advantage. Why did they
not strike their blow after the first of June? Simply because, had they
waited for the majority of the nation to express its will at the polls, the
troops would not have responded to the conspiracy!
Consequently, a second assertion can be made:
the Army has never revolted against a regime with a popular majority behind
it. These are historic truths, and if Batista insists on remaining in power
at all costs against the will of the majority of Cubans, his end will be
more tragic than that of Gerardo Machado.
I have a right to express an opinion about
the Armed Forces because I defended them when everyone else was silent. And
I did this neither as a conspirator, nor from any kind of personal interest
- for we then enjoyed full constitutional prerogatives. I was prompted only
by humane instincts and civic duty. In those days, the newspaper Alerta was
one of the most widely read because of its position on national political
matters. In its pages I campaigned against the forced labor to which the
soldiers were subjected on the private estates of high civil personages and
military officers. On March 3rd, 1952 I supplied the Courts with data,
photographs, films and other proof denouncing this state of affairs. I also
pointed out in those articles that it was elementary decency to increase
army salaries. I should like to know who else raised his voice on that
occasion to protest against all this injustice done to the soldiers.
Certainly not Batista and company, living well-protected on their luxurious
estates, surrounded by all kinds of security measures, while I ran a
thousand risks with neither bodyguards nor arms.
Just as I defended the soldiers then, now -
when all others are once more silent - I tell them that they allowed
themselves to be miserably deceived; and to the deception and shame of March
10th they have added the disgrace, the thousand times greater disgrace, of
the fearful and unjustifiable crimes of Santiago de Cuba. From that time
since, the uniform of the Army is splattered with blood. And as last year I
told the people and cried out before the Courts that soldiers were working
as slaves on private estates, today I make the bitter charge that there are
soldiers stained from head to toe with the blood of the Cuban youths they
have tortured and slain. And I say as well that if the Army serves the
Republic, defends the nation, respects the people and protects the citizenry
then it is only fair that the soldier should earn at least a hundred pesos a
month. But if the soldiers slay and oppress the people, betray the nation
and defend only the interests of one small group, then the Army deserves not
a cent of the Republic's money and Camp Columbia should be converted into a
school with ten thousand orphans living there instead of soldiers.
I want to be just above all else, so I can't
blame all the soldiers for the shameful crimes that stain a few evil and
treacherous Army men. But every honorable and upstanding soldier who loves
his career and his uniform is dutybound to demand and to fight for the
cleansing of this guilt, to avenge this betrayal and to see the guilty
punished. Otherwise the soldier's uniform will forever be a mark of infamy
instead of a source of pride.
Of course the March 10th regime had no choice
but to remove the soldiers from the private estates. But it did so only to
put them to work as doormen, chauffeurs, servants and bodyguards for the
whole rabble of petty politicians who make up the party of the Dictatorship.
Every fourth or fifth rank official considers himself entitled to the
services of a soldier to drive his car and to watch over him as if he were
constantly afraid of receiving the kick in the pants he so justly deserves.
If they had been at all interested in
promoting real reforms, why did the regime not confiscate the estates and
the millions of men like Genovevo Pérez Dámera, who acquired their fortunes
by exploiting soldiers, driving them like slaves and misappropriating the
funds of the Armed Forces? But no: Genovevo Pérez and others like him no
doubt still have soldiers protecting them on their estates because the March
10th generals, deep in their hearts, aspire to the same future and can't
allow that kind of precedent to be set.
The 10th of March was a miserable deception,
yes ... After Batista and his band of corrupt and disreputable politicians
had failed in their electoral plan, they took advantage of the Army's
discontent and used it to climb to power on the backs of the soldiers. And I
know there are many Army men who are disgusted because they have been
disappointed. At first their pay was raised, but later, through deductions
and reductions of every kind, it was lowered again. Many of the old elements,
who had drifted away from the Armed Forces, returned to the ranks and
blocked the way of young, capable and valuable men who might otherwise have
advanced. Good soldiers have been neglected while the most scandalous
nepotism prevails. Many decent military men are now asking themselves what
need that Armed Forces had to assume the tremendous historical
responsibility of destroying our Constitution merely to put a group of
immoral men in power, men of bad reputation, corrupt, politically degenerate
beyond redemption, who could never again have occupied a political post had
it not been at bayonet-point; and they weren't even the ones with the
bayonets in their hands ...
On the other hand, the soldiers endure a
worse tyranny than the civilians. They are under constant surveillance and
not one of them enjoys the slightest security in his job. Any unjustified
suspicion, any gossip, any intrigue, or denunciation, is sufficient to bring
transfer, dishonorable discharge or imprisonment. Did not Tabernilla, in a
memorandum, forbid them to talk with anyone opposed to the government, that
is to say, with ninety-nine percent of the people? ... What a lack of
confidence! ... Not even the vestal virgins of Rome had to abide by such a
rule! As for the much publicized little houses for enlisted men, there
aren't 300 on the whole Island; yet with what has been spent on tanks, guns
and other weaponry every soldier might have a place to live. Batista isn't
concerned with taking care of the Army, but that the Army take care of him!
He increases the Army's power of oppression and killing but does not improve
living conditions for the soldiers. Triple guard duty, constant confinement
to barracks, continuous anxiety, the enmity of the people, uncertainty about
the future - this is what has been given to the soldier. In other words: 'Die
for the regime, soldier, give it your sweat and blood. We shall dedicate a
speech to you and award you a posthumous promotion (when it no longer
matters) and afterwards ... we shall go on living luxuriously, making
ourselves rich. Kill, abuse, oppress the people. When the people get tired
and all this comes to an end, you can pay for our crimes while we go abroad
and live like kings. And if one day we return, don't you or your children
knock on the doors of our mansions, for we shall be millionaires and
millionaires do not mingle with the poor. Kill, soldier, oppress the people,
die for the regime, give your sweat and blood ...'
But if blind to this sad truth, a minority of
soldiers had decided to fight the people, the people who were going to
liberate them from tyranny, victory still would have gone to the people. The
Honorable Prosecutor was very interested in knowing our chances for success.
These chances were based on considerations of technical, military and social
order. They have tried to establish the myth that modern arms render the
people helpless in overthrowing tyrants. Military parades and the pompous
display of machines of war are used to perpetuate this myth and to create a
complex of absolute impotence in the people. But no weaponry, no violence
can vanquish the people once they are determined to win back their rights.
Both past and present are full of examples. The most recent is the revolt in
Bolivia, where miners with dynamite sticks smashed and defeated regular army
regiments.
Fortunately, we Cubans need not look for
examples abroad. No example is as inspiring as that of our own land. During
the war of 1895 there were nearly half a million armed Spanish soldiers in
Cuba, many more than the Dictator counts upon today to hold back a
population five times greater. The arms of the Spaniards were, incomparably,
both more up to date and more powerful than those of our mambises. Often the
Spaniards were equipped with field artillery and the infantry used
breechloaders similar to those still in use by the infantry of today. The
Cubans were usually armed with no more than their machetes, for their
cartridge belts were almost always empty. There is an unforgettable passage
in the history of our War of Independence, narrated by General Miró Argenter,
Chief of Antonio Maceo's General Staff. I managed to bring it copied on this
scrap of paper so I wouldn't have to depend upon my memory:
'Untrained men under the command of Pedro
Delgado, most of them equipped only with machetes, were virtually
annihilated as they threw themselves on the solid rank of Spaniards. It is
not an exaggeration to assert that of every fifty men, 25 were killed. Some
even attacked the Spaniards with their bare fists, without machetes, without
even knives. Searching through the reeds by the Hondo River, we found
fifteen more dead from the Cuban party, and it was not immediately clear
what group they belonged to, They did not appear to have shouldered arms,
their clothes were intact and only tin drinking cups hung from their waists;
a few steps further on lay the dead horse, all its equipment in order. We
reconstructed the climax of the tragedy. These men, following their daring
chief, Lieutenant Colonel Pedro Delgado, had earned heroes' laurels: they
had thrown themselves against bayonets with bare hands, the clash of metal
which was heard around them was the sound of their drinking cups banging
against the saddlehorn. Maceo was deeply moved. This man so used to seeing
death in all its forms murmured this praise: "I had never seen anything like
this, untrained and unarmed men attacking the Spaniards with only drinking
cups for weapons. And I called it impedimenta!"'
This is how peoples fight when they want to
win their freedom; they throw stones at airplanes and overturn tanks!
As soon as Santiago de Cuba was in our hands
we would immediately have readied the people of Oriente for war. Bayamo was
attacked precisely to locate our advance forces along the Cauto River. Never
forget that this province, which has a million and a half inhabitants today,
is the most rebellious and patriotic in Cuba. It was this province that
sparked the fight for independence for thirty years and paid the highest
price in blood, sacrifice and heroism. In Oriente you can still breathe the
air of that glorious epic. At dawn, when the cocks crow as if they were
bugles calling soldiers to reveille, and when the sun rises radiant over the
rugged mountains, it seems that once again we will live the days of Yara or
Baire!
I stated that the second consideration on
which we based our chances for success was one of social order. Why were we
sure of the people's support? When we speak of the people we are not talking
about those who live in comfort, the conservative elements of the nation,
who welcome any repressive regime, any dictatorship, any despotism,
prostrating themselves before the masters of the moment until they grind
their foreheads into the ground. When we speak of struggle and we mention
the people we mean the vast unredeemed masses, those to whom everyone makes
promises and who are deceived by all; we mean the people who yearn for a
better, more dignified and more just nation; who are moved by ancestral
aspirations to justice, for they have suffered injustice and mockery
generation after generation; those who long for great and wise changes in
all aspects of their life; people who, to attain those changes, are ready to
give even the very last breath they have when they believe in something or
in someone, especially when they believe in themselves. The first condition
of sincerity and good faith in any endeavor is to do precisely what nobody
else ever does, that is, to speak with absolute clarity, without fear. The
demagogues and professional politicians who manage to perform the miracle of
being right about everything and of pleasing everyone are, necessarily,
deceiving everyone about everything. The revolutionaries must proclaim their
ideas courageously, define their principles and express their intentions so
that no one is deceived, neither friend nor foe.
In terms of struggle, when we talk about
people we're talking about the six hundred thousand Cubans without work, who
want to earn their daily bread honestly without having to emigrate from
their homeland in search of a livelihood; the five hundred thousand farm
laborers who live in miserable shacks, who work four months of the year and
starve the rest, sharing their misery with their children, who don't have an
inch of land to till and whose existence would move any heart not made of
stone; the four hundred thousand industrial workers and laborers whose
retirement funds have been embezzled, whose benefits are being taken away,
whose homes are wretched quarters, whose salaries pass from the hands of the
boss to those of the moneylender, whose future is a pay reduction and
dismissal, whose life is endless work and whose only rest is the tomb; the
one hundred thousand small farmers who live and die working land that is not
theirs, looking at it with the sadness of Moses gazing at the promised land,
to die without ever owning it, who like feudal serfs have to pay for the use
of their parcel of land by giving up a portion of its produce, who cannot
love it, improve it, beautify it nor plant a cedar or an orange tree on it
because they never know when a sheriff will come with the rural guard to
evict them from it; the thirty thousand teachers and professors who are so
devoted, dedicated and so necessary to the better destiny of future
generations and who are so badly treated and paid; the twenty thousand small
business men weighed down by debts, ruined by the crisis and harangued by a
plague of grafting and venal officials; the ten thousand young professional
people: doctors, engineers, lawyers, veterinarians, school teachers,
dentists, pharmacists, newspapermen, painters, sculptors, etc., who finish
school with their degrees anxious to work and full of hope, only to find
themselves at a dead end, all doors closed to them, and where no ears hear
their clamor or supplication. These are the people, the ones who know
misfortune and, therefore, are capable of fighting with limitless courage!
To these people whose desperate roads through life have been paved with the
bricks of betrayal and false promises, we were not going to say: 'We will
give you ...' but rather: 'Here it is, now fight for it with everything you
have, so that liberty and happiness may be yours!'
The five revolutionary laws that would have
been proclaimed immediately after the capture of the Moncada Barracks and
would have been broadcast to the nation by radio must be included in the
indictment. It is possible that Colonel Chaviano may deliberately have
destroyed these documents, but even if he has I remember them.
The first revolutionary law would have
returned power to the people and proclaimed the 1940 Constitution the
Supreme Law of the State until such time as the people should decide to
modify or change it. And in order to effect its implementation and punish
those who violated it - there being no electoral organization to carry this
out - the revolutionary movement, as the circumstantial incarnation of this
sovereignty, the only source of legitimate power, would have assumed all the
faculties inherent therein, except that of modifying the Constitution itself:
in other words, it would have assumed the legislative, executive and
judicial powers.
This attitude could not be clearer nor more
free of vacillation and sterile charlatanry. A government acclaimed by the
mass of rebel people would be vested with every power, everything necessary
in order to proceed with the effective implementation of popular will and
real justice. From that moment, the Judicial Power - which since March 10th
had placed itself against and outside the Constitution - would cease to
exist and we would proceed to its immediate and total reform before it would
once again assume the power granted it by the Supreme Law of the Republic.
Without these previous measures, a return to legality by putting its custody
back into the hands that have crippled the system so dishonorably would
constitute a fraud, a deceit, one more betrayal.
The second revolutionary law would give non-mortgageable
and non-transferable ownership of the land to all tenant and subtenant
farmers, lessees, share croppers and squatters who hold parcels of five
caballerías of land or less, and the State would indemnify the former owners
on the basis of the rental which they would have received for these parcels
over a period of ten years.
The third revolutionary law would have
granted workers and employees the right to share 30% of the profits of all
the large industrial, mercantile and mining enterprises, including the sugar
mills. The strictly agricultural enterprises would be exempt in
consideration of other agrarian laws which would be put into effect.
The fourth revolutionary law would have
granted all sugar planters the right to share 55% of sugar production and a
minimum quota of forty thousand arrobas for all small tenant farmers who
have been established for three years or more.
The fifth revolutionary law would have
ordered the confiscation of all holdings and ill-gotten gains of those who
had committed frauds during previous regimes, as well as the holdings and
ill-gotten gains of all their legates and heirs. To implement this, special
courts with full powers would gain access to all records of all corporations
registered or operating in this country, in order to investigate concealed
funds of illegal origin, and to request that foreign governments extradite
persons and attach holdings rightfully belonging to the Cuban people. Half
of the property recovered would be used to subsidize retirement funds for
workers and the other half would be used for hospitals, asylums and
charitable organizations.
Furthermore, it was declared that the Cuban
policy in the Americas would be one of close solidarity with the democratic
peoples of this continent, and that all those politically persecuted by
bloody tyrannies oppressing our sister nations would find generous asylum,
brotherhood and bread in the land of Martí; not the persecution, hunger and
treason they find today. Cuba should be the bulwark of liberty and not a
shameful link in the chain of despotism.
These laws would have been proclaimed
immediately. As soon as the upheaval ended and prior to a detailed and far
reaching study, they would have been followed by another series of laws and
fundamental measures, such as the Agrarian Reform, the Integral Educational
Reform, nationalization of the electric power trust and the telephone trust,
refund to the people of the illegal and repressive rates these companies
have charged, and payment to the treasury of all taxes brazenly evaded in
the past.
All these laws and others would be based on
the exact compliance of two essential articles of our Constitution: one of
them orders the outlawing of large estates, indicating the maximum area of
land any one person or entity may own for each type of agricultural
enterprise, by adopting measures which would tend to revert the land to the
Cubans. The other categorically orders the State to use all means at its
disposal to provide employment to all those who lack it and to ensure a
decent livelihood to each manual or intellectual laborer. None of these laws
can be called unconstitutional. The first popularly elected government would
have to respect them, not only because of moral obligations to the nation,
but because when people achieve something they have yearned for throughout
generations, no force in the world is capable of taking it away again.
The problem of the land, the problem of
industrialization, the problem of housing, the problem of unemployment, the
problem of education and the problem of the people's health: these are the
six problems we would take immediate steps to solve, along with restoration
of civil liberties and political democracy.
This exposition may seem cold and theoretical
if one does not know the shocking and tragic conditions of the country with
regard to these six problems, along with the most humiliating political
oppression.
Eighty-five per cent of the small farmers in
Cuba pay rent and live under constant threat of being evicted from the land
they till. More than half of our most productive land is in the hands of
foreigners. In Oriente, the largest province, the lands of the United Fruit
Company and the West Indian Company link the northern and southern coasts.
There are two hundred thousand peasant families who do not have a single
acre of land to till to provide food for their starving children. On the
other hand, nearly three hundred thousand caballerías of cultivable land
owned by powerful interests remain uncultivated. If Cuba is above all an
agricultural State, if its population is largely rural, if the city depends
on these rural areas, if the people from our countryside won our war of
independence, if our nation's greatness and prosperity depend on a healthy
and vigorous rural population that loves the land and knows how to work it,
if this population depends on a State that protects and guides it, then how
can the present state of affairs be allowed to continue?
Except for a few food, lumber and textile
industries, Cuba continues to be primarily a producer of raw materials. We
export sugar to import candy, we export hides to import shoes, we export
iron to import plows ... Everyone agrees with the urgent need to
industrialize the nation, that we need steel industries, paper and chemical
industries, that we must improve our cattle and grain production, the
technology and processing in our food industry in order to defend ourselves
against the ruinous competition from Europe in cheese products, condensed
milk, liquors and edible oils, and the United States in canned goods; that
we need cargo ships; that tourism should be an enormous source of revenue.
But the capitalists insist that the workers remain under the yoke. The State
sits back with its arms crossed and industrialization can wait forever.
Just as serious or even worse is the housing
problem. There are two hundred thousand huts and hovels in Cuba; four
hundred thousand families in the countryside and in the cities live cramped
in huts and tenements without even the minimum sanitary requirements; two
million two hundred thousand of our urban population pay rents which absorb
between one fifth and one third of their incomes; and two million eight
hundred thousand of our rural and suburban population lack electricity. We
have the same situation here: if the State proposes the lowering of rents,
landlords threaten to freeze all construction; if the State does not
interfere, construction goes on so long as landlords get high rents;
otherwise they would not lay a single brick even though the rest of the
population had to live totally exposed to the elements. The utilities
monopoly is no better; they extend lines as far as it is profitable and
beyond that point they don't care if people have to live in darkness for the
rest of their lives. The State sits back with its arms crossed and the
people have neither homes nor electricity.
Our educational system is perfectly
compatible with everything I've just mentioned. Where the peasant doesn't
own the land, what need is there for agricultural schools? Where there is no
industry, what need is there for technical or vocational schools? Everything
follows the same absurd logic; if we don't have one thing we can't have the
other. In any small European country there are more than 200 technological
and vocational schools; in Cuba only six such schools exist, and their
graduates have no jobs for their skills. The little rural schoolhouses are
attended by a mere half of the school age children - barefooted, half-naked
and undernourished - and frequently the teacher must buy necessary school
materials from his own salary. Is this the way to make a nation great?
Only death can liberate one from so much
misery. In this respect, however, the State is most helpful - in providing
early death for the people. Ninety per cent of the children in the
countryside are consumed by parasites which filter through their bare feet
from the ground they walk on. Society is moved to compassion when it hears
of the kidnapping or murder of one child, but it is indifferent to the mass
murder of so many thousands of children who die every year from lack of
facilities, agonizing with pain. Their innocent eyes, death already shining
in them, seem to look into some vague infinity as if entreating forgiveness
for human selfishness, as if asking God to stay His wrath. And when the head
of a family works only four months a year, with what can he purchase
clothing and medicine for his children? They will grow up with rickets, with
not a single good tooth in their mouths by the time they reach thirty; they
will have heard ten million speeches and will finally die of misery and
deception. Public hospitals, which are always full, accept only patients
recommended by some powerful politician who, in return, demands the votes of
the unfortunate one and his family so that Cuba may continue forever in the
same or worse condition.
With this background, is it not
understandable that from May to December over a million persons are jobless
and that Cuba, with a population of five and a half million, has a greater
number of unemployed than France or Italy with a population of forty million
each?
When you try a defendant for robbery,
Honorable Judges, do you ask him how long he has been unemployed? Do you ask
him how many children he has, which days of the week he ate and which he
didn't, do you investigate his social context at all? You just send him to
jail without further thought. But those who burn warehouses and stores to
collect insurance do not go to jail, even though a few human beings may have
gone up in flames. The insured have money to hire lawyers and bribe judges.
You imprison the poor wretch who steals because he is hungry; but none of
the hundreds who steal millions from the Government has ever spent a night
in jail. You dine with them at the end of the year in some elegant club and
they enjoy your respect. In Cuba, when a government official becomes a
millionaire overnight and enters the fraternity of the rich, he could very
well be greeted with the words of that opulent character out of Balzac -
Taillefer - who in his toast to the young heir to an enormous fortune, said:
'Gentlemen, let us drink to the power of gold! Mr. Valentine, a millionaire
six times over, has just ascended the throne. He is king, can do everything,
is above everyone, as all the rich are. Henceforth, equality before the law,
established by the Constitution, will be a myth for him; for he will not be
subject to laws: the laws will be subject to him. There are no courts nor
are there sentences for millionaires.'
The nation's future, the solutions to its
problems, cannot continue to depend on the selfish interests of a dozen big
businessmen nor on the cold calculations of profits that ten or twelve
magnates draw up in their air-conditioned offices. The country cannot
continue begging on its knees for miracles from a few golden calves, like
the Biblical one destroyed by the prophet's fury. Golden calves cannot
perform miracles of any kind. The problems of the Republic can be solved
only if we dedicate ourselves to fight for it with the same energy, honesty
and patriotism our liberators had when they founded it. Statesmen like
Carlos Saladrigas, whose statesmanship consists of preserving the statu quo
and mouthing phrases like 'absolute freedom of enterprise,' 'guarantees to
investment capital' and 'law of supply and demand,' will not solve these
problems. Those ministers can chat away in a Fifth Avenue mansion until not
even the dust of the bones of those whose problems require immediate
solution remains. In this present-day world, social problems are not solved
by spontaneous generation.
A revolutionary government backed by the
people and with the respect of the nation, after cleansing the different
institutions of all venal and corrupt officials, would proceed immediately
to the country's industrialization, mobilizing all inactive capital,
currently estimated at about 1.5 billion pesos, through the National Bank
and the Agricultural and Industrial Development Bank, and submitting this
mammoth task to experts and men of absolute competence totally removed from
all political machines for study, direction, planning and realization.
After settling the one hundred thousand small
farmers as owners on the land which they previously rented, a revolutionary
government would immediately proceed to settle the land problem. First, as
set forth in the Constitution, it would establish the maximum amount of land
to be held by each type of agricultural enterprise and would acquire the
excess acreage by expropriation, recovery of swampland, planting of large
nurseries, and reserving of zones for reforestation. Secondly, it would
distribute the remaining land among peasant families with priority given to
the larger ones, and would promote agricultural cooperatives for communal
use of expensive equipment, freezing plants and unified professional
technical management of farming and cattle raising. Finally, it would
provide resources, equipment, protection and useful guidance to the peasants.
A revolutionary government would solve the
housing problem by cutting all rents in half, by providing tax exemptions on
homes inhabited by the owners; by tripling taxes on rented homes; by tearing
down hovels and replacing them with modern apartment buildings; and by
financing housing all over the island on a scale heretofore unheard of, with
the criterion that, just as each rural family should possess its own tract
of land, each city family should own its own house or apartment. There is
plenty of building material and more than enough manpower to make a decent
home for every Cuban. But if we continue to wait for the golden calf, a
thousand years will have gone by and the problem will remain the same. On
the other hand, today possibilities of taking electricity to the most
isolated areas on the island are greater than ever. The use of nuclear
energy in this field is now a reality and will greatly reduce the cost of
producing electricity.
With these three projects and reforms, the
problem of unemployment would automatically disappear and the task of
improving public health and fighting against disease would become much less
difficult.
Finally, a revolutionary government would
undertake the integral reform of the educational system, bringing it into
line with the projects just mentioned with the idea of educating those
generations which will have the privilege of living in a happier land. Do
not forget the words of the Apostle: 'A grave mistake is being made in Latin
America: in countries that live almost completely from the produce of the
land, men are being educated exclusively for urban life and are not trained
for farm life.' 'The happiest country is the one which has best educated its
sons, both in the instruction of thought and the direction of their feelings.'
'An educated country will always be strong and free.'
The soul of education, however, is the
teacher, and in Cuba the teaching profession is miserably underpaid. Despite
this, no one is more dedicated than the Cuban teacher. Who among us has not
learned his three Rs in the little public schoolhouse? It is time we stopped
paying pittances to these young men and women who are entrusted with the
sacred task of teaching our youth. No teacher should earn less than 200
pesos, no secondary teacher should make less than 350 pesos, if they are to
devote themselves exclusively to their high calling without suffering want.
What is more, all rural teachers should have free use of the various systems
of transportation; and, at least once every five years, all teachers should
enjoy a sabbatical leave of six months with pay so they may attend special
refresher courses at home or abroad to keep abreast of the latest
developments in their field. In this way, the curriculum and the teaching
system can be easily improved. Where will the money be found for all this?
When there is an end to the embezzlement of government funds, when public
officials stop taking graft from the large companies that owe taxes to the
State, when the enormous resources of the country are brought into full use,
when we no longer buy tanks, bombers and guns for this country (which has no
frontiers to defend and where these instruments of war, now being purchased,
are used against the people), when there is more interest in educating the
people than in killing them there will be more than enough money.
Cuba could easily provide for a population
three times as great as it has now, so there is no excuse for the abject
poverty of a single one of its present inhabitants. The markets should be
overflowing with produce, pantries should be full, all hands should be
working. This is not an inconceivable thought. What is inconceivable is that
anyone should go to bed hungry while there is a single inch of unproductive
land; that children should die for lack of medical attention; what is
inconceivable is that 30% of our farm people cannot write their names and
that 99% of them know nothing of Cuba's history. What is inconceivable is
that the majority of our rural people are now living in worse circumstances
than the Indians Columbus discovered in the fairest land that human eyes had
ever seen.
To those who would call me a dreamer, I quote
the words of Martí: 'A true man does not seek the path where advantage lies,
but rather the path where duty lies, and this is the only practical man,
whose dream of today will be the law of tomorrow, because he who has looked
back on the essential course of history and has seen flaming and bleeding
peoples seethe in the cauldron of the ages knows that, without a single
exception, the future lies on the side of duty.'
Only when we understand that such a high
ideal inspired them can we conceive of the heroism of the young men who fell
in Santiago. The meager material means at our disposal was all that
prevented sure success. When the soldiers were told that Prío had given us a
million pesos, they were told this in the regime's attempt to distort the
most important fact: the fact that our Movement had no link with past
politicians: that this Movement is a new Cuban generation with its own
ideas, rising up against tyranny; that this Movement is made up of young
people who were barely seven years old when Batista perpetrated the first of
his crimes in 1934. The lie about the million pesos could not have been more
absurd. If, with less than 20,000 pesos, we armed 165 men and attacked a
regiment and a squadron, then with a million pesos we could have armed 8,000
men, to attack 50 regiments and 50 squadrons - and Ugalde Carrillo still
would not have found out until Sunday, July 26th, at 5:15 a.m. I assure you
that for every man who fought, twenty well trained men were unable to fight
for lack of weapons. When these young men marched along the streets of
Havana in the student demonstration of the Martí Centennial, they solidly
packed six blocks. If even 200 more men had been able to fight, or we had
possessed 20 more hand grenades, perhaps this Honorable Court would have
been spared all this inconvenience.
The politicians spend millions buying off
consciences, whereas a handful of Cubans who wanted to save their country's
honor had to face death barehanded for lack of funds. This shows how the
country, to this very day, has been governed not by generous and dedicated
men, but by political racketeers, the scum of our public life.
With the greatest pride I tell you that in
accordance with our principles we have never asked a politician, past or
present, for a penny. Our means were assembled with incomparable sacrifice.
For example, Elpidio Sosa, who sold his job and came to me one day with 300
pesos 'for the cause;' Fernando Chenard, who sold the photographic equipment
with which he earned his living; Pedro Marrero, who contributed several
months' salary and who had to be stopped from actually selling the very
furniture in his house; Oscar Alcalde, who sold his pharmaceutical
laboratory; Jesús Montané, who gave his five years' savings, and so on with
many others, each giving the little he had.
One must have great faith in one's country to
do such a thing. The memory of these acts of idealism bring me straight to
the most bitter chapter of this defense - the price the tyranny made them
pay for wanting to free Cuba from oppression and injustice.
Beloved corpses, you that once
Were the hope of my Homeland,
Cast upon my forehead
The dust of your decaying bones!
Touch my heart with your cold hands!
Groan at my ears!
Each of my moans will
Turn into the tears of one more tyrant!
Gather around me! Roam about,
That my soul may receive your spirits
And give me the horror of the tombs
For tears are not enough
When one lives in infamous bondage!
Multiply the crimes of November 27th, 1871 by
ten and you will have the monstrous and repulsive crimes of July 26th, 27th,
28th and 29th, 1953, in the province of Oriente. These are still fresh in
our memory, but someday when years have passed, when the skies of the nation
have cleared once more, when tempers have calmed and fear no longer torments
our spirits, then we will begin to see the magnitude of this massacre in all
its shocking dimension, and future generations will be struck with horror
when they look back on these acts of barbarity unprecedented in our history.
But I do not want to become enraged. I need clearness of mind and peace in
my heavy heart in order to relate the facts as simply as possible, in no
sense dramatizing them, but just as they took place. As a Cuban I am ashamed
that heartless men should have perpetrated such unthinkable crimes,
dishonoring our nation before the rest of the world.
The tyrant Batista was never a man of
scruples. He has never hesitated to tell his people the most outrageous lies.
To justify his treacherous coup of March 10th, he concocted stories about a
fictitious uprising in the Army, supposedly scheduled to take place in April,
and which he 'wanted to avert so that the Republic might not be drenched in
blood.' A ridiculous little tale nobody ever believed! And when he himself
did want to drench the Republic in blood, when he wanted to smother in
terror and torture the just rebellion of Cuba's youth, who were not willing
to be his slaves, then he contrived still more fantastic lies. How little
respect one must have for a people when one tries to deceive them so
miserably! On the very day of my arrest I publicly assumed the
responsibility for our armed movement of July 26th. If there had been an
iota of truth in even one of the many statements the Dictator made against
our fighters in his speech of July 27th, it would have been enough to
undermine the moral impact of my case. Why, then, was I not brought to trial?
Why were medical certificates forged? Why did they violate all procedural
laws and ignore so scandalously the rulings of the Court? Why were so many
things done, things never before seen in a Court of Law, in order to prevent
my appearance at all costs? In contrast, I could not begin to tell you all I
went through in order to appear. I asked the Court to bring me to trial in
accordance with all established principles, and I denounced the underhanded
schemes that were afoot to prevent it. I wanted to argue with them face to
face. But they did not wish to face me. Who was afraid of the truth, and who
was not?
The statements made by the Dictator at Camp
Columbia might be considered amusing if they were not so drenched in blood.
He claimed we were a group of hirelings and that there were many foreigners
among us. He said that the central part of our plan was an attempt to kill
him - him, always him. As if the men who attacked the Moncada Barracks could
not have killed him and twenty like him if they had approved of such methods.
He stated that our attack had been planned by ex-President Prío, and that it
had been financed with Prío's money. It has been irrefutably proven that no
link whatsoever existed between our Movement and the last regime. He claimed
that we had machine guns and hand-grenades. Yet the military technicians
have stated right here in this Court that we only had one machine gun and
not a single hand-grenade. He said that we had beheaded the sentries. Yet
death certificates and medical reports of all the Army's casualties show not
one death caused by the blade. But above all and most important, he said
that we stabbed patients at the Military Hospital. Yet the doctors from that
hospital - Army doctors - have testified that we never even occupied the
building, that no patient was either wounded or killed by us, and that the
hospital lost only one employee, a janitor, who imprudently stuck his head
out of an open window.
Whenever a Chief of State, or anyone
pretending to be one, makes declarations to the nation, he speaks not just
to hear the sound of his own voice. He always has some specific purpose and
expects some specific reaction, or has a given intention. Since our military
defeat had already taken place, insofar as we no longer represented any
actual threat to the dictatorship, why did they slander us like that? If it
is still not clear that this was a blood-drenched speech, that it was simply
an attempt to justify the crimes that they had been perpetrating since the
night before and that they were going to continue to perpetrate, then, let
figures speak for me: On July 27th, in his speech from the military
headquarters, Batista said that the assailants suffered 32 dead. By the end
of the week the number of dead had risen to more than 80 men. In what
battles, where, in what clashes, did these young men die? Before Batista
spoke, more than 25 prisoners had been murdered. After Batista spoke fifty
more were massacred.
What a great sense of honor those modest Army
technicians and professionals had, who did not distort the facts before the
Court, but gave their reports adhering to the strictest truth! These surely
are soldiers who honor their uniform; these, surely, are men! Neither a real
soldier nor a true man can degrade his code of honor with lies and crime. I
know that many of the soldiers are indignant at the barbaric assassinations
perpetrated. I know that they feel repugnance and shame at the smell of
homicidal blood that impregnates every stone of Moncada Barracks.
Now that he has been contradicted by men of
honor within his own Army, I defy the dictator to repeat his vile slander
against us. I defy him to try to justify before the Cuban people his July
27th speech. Let him not remain silent. Let him speak. Let him say who the
assassins are, who the ruthless, the inhumane. Let him tell us if the medals
of honor, which he went to pin on the breasts of his heroes of that massacre,
were rewards for the hideous crimes they had committed. Let him, from this
very moment, assume his responsibility before history. Let him not pretend,
at a later date, that the soldiers were acting without direct orders from
him! Let him offer the nation an explanation for those 70 murders. The
bloodshed was great. The nation needs an explanation. The nation seeks it.
The nation demands it.
It is common knowledge that in 1933, at the
end of the battle at the National Hotel, some officers were murdered after
they surrendered. Bohemia Magazine protested energetically. It is also known
that after the surrender of Fort Atarés the besiegers' machine guns cut down
a row of prisoners. And that one soldier, after asking who Blas Hernández
was, blasted him with a bullet directly in the face, and for this cowardly
act was promoted to the rank of officer. It is well-known in Cuban history
that assassination of prisoners was fatally linked with Batista's name. How
naive we were not to foresee this! However, unjustifiable as those killings
of 1933 were, they took place in a matter of minutes, in no more time than
it took for a round of machine gun fire. What is more, they took place while
tempers were still on edge.
This was not the case in Santiago de Cuba.
Here all forms of ferocious outrages and cruelty were deliberately overdone.
Our men were killed not in the course of a minute, an hour or a day.
Throughout an entire week the blows and tortures continued, men were thrown
from rooftops and shot. All methods of extermination were incessantly
practiced by well-skilled artisans of crime. Moncada Barracks were turned
into a workshop of torture and death. Some shameful individuals turned their
uniforms into butcher's aprons. The walls were splattered with blood. The
bullets imbedded in the walls were encrusted with singed bits of skin,
brains and human hair, the grisly reminders of rifle shots fired full in the
face. The grass around the barracks was dark and sticky with human blood.
The criminal hands that are guiding the destiny of Cuba had written for the
prisoners at the entrance to that den of death the very inscription of Hell:
'Forsake all hope.'
They did not even attempt to cover
appearances. They did not bother in the least to conceal what they were
doing. They thought they had deceived the people with their lies and they
ended up deceiving themselves. They felt themselves lords and masters of the
universe, with power over life and death. So the fear they had experienced
upon our attack at daybreak was dissipated in a feast of corpses, in a
drunken orgy of blood.
Chronicles of our history, down through four
and a half centuries, tell us of many acts of cruelty: the slaughter of
defenseless Indians by the Spaniards; the plundering and atrocities of
pirates along the coast; the barbarities of the Spanish soldiers during our
War of Independence; the shooting of prisoners of the Cuban Army by the
forces of Weyler; the horrors of the Machado regime, and so on through the
bloody crimes of March, 1935. But never has such a sad and bloody page been
written in numbers of victims and in the viciousness of the victimizers, as
in Santiago de Cuba. Only one man in all these centuries has stained with
blood two separate periods of our history and has dug his claws into the
flesh of two generations of Cubans. To release this river of blood, he
waited for the Centennial of the Apostle, just after the fiftieth
anniversary of the Republic, whose people fought for freedom, human rights
and happiness at the cost of so many lives. Even greater is his crime and
even more condemnable because the man who perpetrated it had already, for
eleven long years, lorded over his people - this people who, by such deep-rooted
sentiment and tradition, loves freedom and repudiates evil. This man has
furthermore never been sincere, loyal, honest or chivalrous for a single
minute of his public life.
He was not content with the treachery of
January, 1934, the crimes of March, 1935 and the forty million dollar
fortune that crowned his first regime. He had to add the treason of March,
1952, the crimes of July, 1953, and all the millions that only time will
reveal. Dante divided his Inferno into nine circles. He put criminals in the
seventh, thieves in the eighth and traitors in the ninth. Difficult dilemma
the devils will be faced with, when they try to find an adequate spot for
this man's soul - if this man has a soul. The man who instigated the
atrocious acts in Santiago de Cuba doesn't even have a heart.
I know many details of the way in which these
crimes were carried out, from the lips of some of the soldiers who, filled
with shame, told me of the scenes they had witnessed.
When the fighting was over, the soldiers
descended like savage beasts on Santiago de Cuba and they took the first
fury of their frustrations out against the defenseless population. In the
middle of a street, and far from the site of the fighting, they shot through
the chest an innocent child who was playing by his doorstep. When the father
approached to pick him up, they shot him through his head. Without a word
they shot 'Niño' Cala, who was on his way home with a loaf of bread in his
hands. It would be an endless task to relate all the crimes and outrages
perpetrated against the civilian population. And if the Army dealt thus with
those who had had no part at all in the action, you can imagine the terrible
fate of the prisoners who had taken part or who were believed to have taken
part. Just as, in this trial, they accused many people not at all involved
in our attack, they also killed many prisoners who had no involvement
whatsoever. The latter are not included in the statistics of victims
released by the regime; those statistics refer exclusively to our men. Some
day the total number of victims will be known.
The first prisoner killed has our doctor,
Mario Muñoz, who bore no arms, wore no uniform, and was dressed in the white
smock of a physician. He was a generous and competent man who would have
given the same devoted care to the wounded adversary as to a friend. On the
road from the Civilian Hospital to the barracks they shot him in the back
and left him lying there, face down in a pool of blood. But the mass murder
of prisoners did not begin until after three o'clock in the afternoon. Until
this hour they awaited orders. Then General Martín Díaz Tamayo arrived from
Havana and brought specific instructions from a meeting he had attended with
Batista, along with the head of the Army, the head of the Military
Intelligence, and others. He said: 'It is humiliating and dishonorable for
the Army to have lost three times as many men in combat as the insurgents
did. Ten prisoners must be killed for each dead soldier.' This was the order!
In every society there are men of base
instincts. The sadists, brutes, conveyors of all the ancestral atavisms go
about in the guise of human beings, but they are monsters, only more or less
restrained by discipline and social habit. If they are offered a drink from
a river of blood, they will not be satisfied until they drink the river dry.
All these men needed was the order. At their hands the best and noblest
Cubans perished: the most valiant, the most honest, the most idealistic. The
tyrant called them mercenaries. There they were dying as heroes at the hands
of men who collect a salary from the Republic and who, with the arms the
Republic gave them to defend her, serve the interests of a clique and murder
her best citizens.
Throughout their torturing of our comrades,
the Army offered them the chance to save their lives by betraying their
ideology and falsely declaring that Prío had given them money. When they
indignantly rejected that proposition, the Army continued with its horrible
tortures. They crushed their testicles and they tore out their eyes. But no
one yielded. No complaint was heard nor a favor asked. Even when they had
been deprived of their vital organs, our men were still a thousand times
more men than all their tormentors together. Photographs, which do not lie,
show the bodies torn to pieces, Other methods were used. Frustrated by the
valor of the men, they tried to break the spirit of our women. With a
bleeding eye in their hands, a sergeant and several other men went to the
cell where our comrades Melba Hernández and Haydée Santamaría were held.
Addressing the latter, and showing her the eye, they said: 'This eye
belonged to your brother. If you will not tell us what he refused to say, we
will tear out the other.' She, who loved her valiant brother above all
things, replied full of dignity: 'If you tore out an eye and he did not
speak, much less will I.' Later they came back and burned their arms with
lit cigarettes until at last, filled with spite, they told the young Haydée
Santamaría: 'You no longer have a fiancé because we have killed him too.'
But still imperturbable, she answered: 'He is not dead, because to die for
one's country is to live forever.' Never had the heroism and the dignity of
Cuban womanhood reached such heights.
There wasn't even any respect for the combat
wounded in the various city hospitals. There they were hunted down as prey
pursued by vultures. In the Centro Gallego they broke into the operating
room at the very moment when two of our critically wounded were receiving
blood transfusions. They pulled them off the tables and, as the wounded
could no longer stand, they were dragged down to the first floor where they
arrived as corpses.
They could not do the same in the Spanish
Clinic, where Gustavo Arcos and José Ponce were patients, because they were
prevented by Dr. Posada who bravely told them they could enter only over his
dead body.
Air and camphor were injected into the veins
of Pedro Miret, Abelardo Crespo and Fidel Labrador, in an attempt to kill
them at the Military Hospital. They owe their lives to Captain Tamayo, an
Army doctor and true soldier of honor who, pistol in hand, wrenched them out
of the hands of their merciless captors and transferred them to the Civilian
Hospital. These five young men were the only ones of our wounded who
survived.
In the early morning hours, groups of our men
were removed from the barracks and taken in automobiles to Siboney, La Maya,
Songo, and elsewhere. Then they were led out - tied, gagged, already
disfigured by the torture - and were murdered in isolated spots. They are
recorded as having died in combat against the Army. This went on for several
days, and few of the captured prisoners survived. Many were compelled to dig
their own graves. One of our men, while he was digging, wheeled around and
slashed the face of one of his assassins with his pick. Others were even
buried alive, their hands tied behind their backs. Many solitary spots
became the graveyards of the brave. On the Army target range alone, five of
our men lie buried. Some day these men will be disinterred. Then they will
be carried on the shoulders of the people to a place beside the tomb of
Martí, and their liberated land will surely erect a monument to honor the
memory of the Martyrs of the Centennial.
The last youth they murdered in the
surroundings of Santiago de Cuba was Marcos Martí. He was captured with our
comrade Ciro Redondo in a cave at Siboney on the morning of Thursday the
30th. These two men were led down the road, with their arms raised, and the
soldiers shot Marcos Martí in the back. After he had fallen to the ground,
they riddled him with bullets. Redondo was taken to the camp. When Major
Pérez Chaumont saw him he exclaimed: 'And this one? Why have you brought him
to me?' The Court heard this incident from Redondo himself, the young man
who survived thanks to what Pérez Chaumont called 'the soldiers' stupidity.'
It was the same throughout the province. Ten
days after July 26th, a newspaper in this city printed the news that two
young men had been found hanged on the road from Manzanillo to Bayamo. Later
the bodies were identified as those of Hugo Camejo and Pedro Vélez. Another
extraordinary incident took place there: There were three victims - they had
been dragged from Manzanillo Barracks at two that morning. At a certain spot
on the highway they were taken out, beaten unconscious, and strangled with a
rope. But after they had been left for dead, one of them, Andrés García,
regained consciousness and hid in a farmer's house. Thanks to this the Court
learned the details of this crime too. Of all our men taken prisoner in the
Bayamo area, this is the only survivor.
Near the Cauto River, in a spot known as
Barrancas, at the bottom of a pit, lie the bodies of Raúl de Aguiar, Armando
del Valle and Andrés Valdés. They were murdered at midnight on the road
between Alto Cedro and Palma Soriano by Sergeant Montes de Oca - in charge
of the military post at Miranda Barracks - Corporal Maceo, and the
Lieutenant in charge of Alta Cedro where the murdered men were captured. In
the annals of crime, Sergeant Eulalio Gonzáles - better known as the 'Tiger'
of Moncada Barracks - deserves a special place. Later this man didn't have
the slightest qualms in bragging about his unspeakable deeds. It was he who
with his own hands murdered our comrade Abel Santamaría. But that didn't
satisfy him. One day as he was coming back from the Puerto Boniato Prison,
where he raises pedigree fighting cocks in the back courtyard, he got on a
bus on which Abel's mother was also traveling. When this monster realized
who she was he began to brag about his grisly deeds, and - in a loud voice
so that the woman dressed in mourning could hear him - he said: 'Yes, I have
gouged many eyes out and I expect to continue gouging them out.' The
unprecedented moral degradation our nation is suffering is expressed beyond
the power of words in that mother's sobs of grief before the cowardly
insolence of the very man who murdered her son. When these mothers went to
Moncada Barracks to ask about their sons, it was with incredible cynicism
and sadism that they were told: 'Surely madam, you may see him at the Santa
Ifigenia Hotel where we have put him up for you.' Either Cuba is not Cuba,
or the men responsible for these acts will have to face their reckoning one
day. Heartless men, they threw crude insults at the people who bared their
heads in reverence as the corpses of the revolutionaries were carried by.
There were so many victims that the
government still has not dared make public the complete list. They know
their figures are false. They have all the victims' names, because prior to
every murder they recorded all the vital statistics. The whole long process
of identification through the National Identification Bureau was a huge
farce, and there are families still waiting for word of their sons' fate.
Why has this not been cleared up, after three months?
I wish to state for the record here that all
the victims' pockets were picked to the very last penny and that all their
personal effects, rings and watches, were stripped from their bodies and are
brazenly being worn today by their assassins.
Honorable Judges, a great deal of what I have
just related you already know, from the testimony of many of my comrades.
But please note that many key witnesses have been barred from this trial,
although they were permitted to attend the sessions of the previous trial.
For example, I want to point out that the nurses of the Civilian Hospital
are absent, even though they work in the same place where this hearing is
being held. They were kept from this Court so that, under my questioning,
they would not be able to testify that - besides Dr. Mario Muñoz - twenty
more of our men were captured alive. The regime fears that from the
questioning of these witnesses some extremely dangerous testimony could find
its way into the official transcript.
But Major Pérez Chaumont did appear here and
he could not elude my questioning. What we learned from this man, a 'hero'
who fought only against unarmed and handcuffed men, gives us an idea of what
could have been learned at the Courthouse if I had not been isolated from
the proceedings. I asked him how many of our men had died in his celebrated
skirmishes at Siboney. He hesitated. I insisted and he finally said
twenty-one. Since I knew such skirmishes had never taken place, I asked him
how many of our men had been wounded. He answered: 'None. All of them were
killed.' It was then that I asked him, in astonishment, if the soldiers were
using nuclear weapons. Of course, where men are shot point blank, there are
no wounded. Then I asked him how many casualties the Army had sustained. He
replied that two of his men had been wounded. Finally I asked him if either
of these men had died, and he said no. I waited. Later, all of the wounded
Army soldiers filed by and it was discovered that none of them had been
wounded at Siboney. This same Major Pérez Chaumont who hardly flinched at
having assassinated twenty-one defenseless young men has built a palatial
home in Ciudamar Beach. It's worth more than 100,000 pesos - his savings
after only a few months under Batista's new rule. And if this is the savings
of a Major, imagine how much generals have saved!
Honorable Judges: Where are our men who were
captured July 26th, 27th, 28th and 29th? It is known that more than sixty
men were captured in the area of Santiago de Cuba. Only three of them and
the two women have been brought before the Court. The rest of the accused
were seized later. Where are our wounded? Only five of them are alive; the
rest were murdered. These figures are irrefutable. On the other hand, twenty
of the soldiers who we held prisoner have been presented here and they
themselves have declared that they received not even one offensive word from
us. Thirty soldiers who were wounded, many in the street fighting, also
appeared before you. Not one was killed by us. If the Army suffered losses
of nineteen dead and thirty wounded, how is it possible that we should have
had eighty dead and only five wounded? Who ever witnessed a battle with 21
dead and no wounded, like these famous battles described by Pérez Chaumont?
We have here the casualty lists from the
bitter fighting sustained by the invasion troops in the war of 1895, both in
battles where the Cuban army was defeated and where it was victorious. The
battle of Los Indios in Las Villas: 12 wounded, none dead. The battle of Mal
Tiempo: 4 dead, 23 wounded. Calimete: 16 dead, 64 wounded. La Palma: 39
dead, 88 wounded. Cacarajícara: 5 dead, 13 wounded. Descanso: 4 dead, 45
wounded. San Gabriel de Lombillo: 2 dead, 18 wounded ... In all these
battles the number of wounded is twice, three times and up to ten times the
number of dead, although in those days there were no modern medical
techniques by which the percentage of deaths could be reduced. How then,
now, can we explain the enormous proportion of sixteen deaths per wounded
man, if not by the government's slaughter of the wounded in the very
hospitals, and by the assassination of the other helpless prisoners they had
taken? The figures are irrefutable.
'It is shameful and a dishonor to the Army to
have lost three times as many men in combat as those lost by the insurgents;
we must kill ten prisoners for each dead soldier.' This is the concept of
honor held by the petty corporals who became generals on March 10th. This is
the code of honor they wish to impose on the national Army. A false honor, a
feigned honor, an apparent honor based on lies, hypocrisy and crime; a mask
of honor molded by those assassins with blood. Who told them that to die
fighting is dishonorable? Who told them the honor of an army consists of
murdering the wounded and prisoners of war?
In war time, armies that murder prisoners
have always earned the contempt and abomination of the entire world. Such
cowardice has no justification, even in a case where national territory is
invaded by foreign troops. In the words of a South American liberator: 'Not
even the strictest military obedience may turn a soldier's sword into that
of an executioner.' The honorable soldier does not kill the helpless
prisoner after the fight, but rather, respects him. He does not finish off a
wounded man, but rather, helps him. He stands in the way of crime and if he
cannot prevent it, he acts as did that Spanish captain who, upon hearing the
shots of the firing squad that murdered Cuban students, indignantly broke
his sword in two and refused to continue serving in that Army.
The soldiers who murdered their prisoners
were not worthy of the soldiers who died. I saw many soldiers fight with
courage - for example, those in the patrols that fired their machine guns
against us in almost hand-to-hand combat, or that sergeant who, defying
death, rang the alarm to mobilize the barracks. Some of them live. I am
glad. Others are dead. They believed they were doing their duty and in my
eyes this makes them worthy of admiration and respect. I deplore only the
fact that valiant men should fall for an evil cause. When Cuba is freed, we
should respect, shelter and aid the wives and children of those courageous
soldiers who perished fighting against us. They are not to blame for Cuba's
miseries. They too are victims of this nefarious situation.
But what honor was earned by the soldiers who
died in battle was lost by the generals who ordered prisoners to be killed
after they surrendered. Men who became generals overnight, without ever
having fired a shot; men who bought their stars with high treason against
their country; men who ordered the execution of prisoners taken in battles
in which they didn't even participate: these are the generals of the 10th of
March - generals who would not even have been fit to drive the mules that
carried the equipment in Antonio Maceo's army.
The Army suffered three times as many
casualties as we did. That was because our men were expertly trained, as the
Army men themselves have admitted; and also because we had prepared adequate
tactical measures, another fact recognized by the Army. The Army did not
perform brilliantly; despite the millions spent on espionage by the Military
Intelligence Agency, they were totally taken by surprise, and their hand
grenades failed to explode because they were obsolete. And the Army owes all
this to generals like Martín Díaz Tamayo and colonels like Ugalde Carrillo
and Albert del Río Chaviano. We were not 17 traitors infiltrated into the
ranks of the Army, as was the case on March 10th. Instead, we were 165 men
who had traveled the length and breadth of Cuba to look death boldly in the
face. If the Army leaders had a notion of real military honor they would
have resigned their commands rather than trying to wash away their shame and
incompetence in the blood of their prisoners.
To kill helpless prisoners and then declare
that they died in battle: that is the military capacity of the generals of
March 10th. That was the way the worst butchers of Valeriano Weyler behaved
in the cruelest years of our War of Independence. The Chronicles of War
include the following story: 'On February 23rd, officer Baldomero Acosta
entered Punta Brava with some cavalry when, from the opposite road, a squad
of the Pizarro regiment approached, led by a sergeant known in those parts
as Barriguilla (Pot Belly). The insurgents exchanged a few shots with
Pizarro's men, then withdrew by the trail that leads from Punta Brava to the
village of Guatao. Followed by another battalion of volunteers from
Marianao, and a company of troops from the Public Order Corps, who were led
by Captain Calvo, Pizarro's squad of 50 men marched on Guatao ... As soon as
their first forces entered the village they commenced their massacre -
killing twelve of the peaceful inhabitants ... The troops led by Captain
Calvo speedily rounded up all the civilians that were running about the
village, tied them up and took them as prisoners of war to Havana ... Not
yet satisfied with their outrages, on the outskirts of Guatao they carried
out another barbaric action, killing one of the prisoners and horribly
wounding the rest. The Marquis of Cervera, a cowardly and palatine soldier,
informed Weyler of the pyrrhic victory of the Spanish soldiers; but Major
Zugasti, a man of principles, denounced the incident to the government and
officially called the murders perpetrated by the criminal Captain Calvo and
Sergeant Barriguilla an assassination of peaceful citizens.
'Weyler's intervention in this horrible
incident and his delight upon learning the details of the massacre may be
palpably deduced from the official dispatch that he sent to the Ministry of
War concerning these cruelties. "Small column organized by commander
Marianao with forces from garrison, volunteers and firemen led by Captain
Calvo, fought and destroyed bands of Villanueva and Baldomero Acosta near
Punta Brava, killing twenty of theirs, who were handed over to Mayor of
Guatao for burial, and taking fifteen prisoners, one of them wounded, we
assume there are many wounded among them. One of ours suffered critical
wounds, some suffered light bruises and wounds. Weyler."'
What is the difference between Weyler's
dispatch and that of Colonel Chaviano detailing the victories of Major Pérez
Chaumont? Only that Weyler mentions one wounded soldier in his ranks.
Chaviano mentions two. Weyler speaks of one wounded man and fifteen
prisoners in the enemy's ranks. Chaviano records neither wounded men nor
prisoners.
Just as I admire the courage of the soldiers
who died bravely, I also admire the officers who bore themselves with
dignity and did not drench their hands in this blood. Many of the survivors
owe their lives to the commendable conduct of officers like Lieutenant
Sarría, Lieutenant Campa, Captain Tamayo and others, who were true gentlemen
in their treatment of the prisoners. If men like these had not partially
saved the name of the Armed Forces, it would be more honorable today to wear
a dishrag than to wear an Army uniform.
For my dead comrades, I claim no vengeance.
Since their lives were priceless, the murderers could not pay for them even
with their own lives. It is not by blood that we may redeem the lives of
those who died for their country. The happiness of their people is the only
tribute worthy of them.
What is more, my comrades are neither dead
nor forgotten; they live today, more than ever, and their murderers will
view with dismay the victorious spirit of their ideas rise from their
corpses. Let the Apostle speak for me: 'There is a limit to the tears we can
shed at the graveside of the dead. Such limit is the infinite love for the
homeland and its glory, a love that never falters, loses hope nor grows dim.
For the graves of the martyrs are the highest altars of our reverence.'
... When one dies
In the arms of a grateful country
Agony ends, prison chains break - and
At last, with death, life begins!
Up to this point I have confined myself
almost exclusively to relating events. Since I am well aware that I am
before a Court convened to judge me, I will now demonstrate that all legal
right was on our side alone, and that the verdict imposed on my comrades -
the verdict now being sought against me - has no justifica