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Book by John Maxwell
How to Make Our Own News: A Primer for Environmentalist and Journalists
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Children of Prometheus
By John
Maxwell
The modern
world was invented in the Caribbean.
Two hundred
years ago the Haitians defeated the armies of Europe's
major powers, Napoleon's France (twice), Britain and
Spain, destroying slavery and precipitating the birth
of capitalism, destroying European empire in the Western
hemisphere and helping launch the United States as a
world power. And they promulgated, for the first time on
Earth, the reality of universal human rights.
The Haitians
have been paying for their temerity ever since.
Fifty years
ago, the Cubans threw off the neocolonial yoke, outlawed
capitalism in Cuba and successfully asserted the right
of any country, no matter how small to choose its own
path to development. In the process the Cubans reordered
Gorge Canning's boast that he had brought a new world
into being to redress the balance of the old: The Cubans
completed the liberation of Africa dealing a death blow
to apartheid and the repulsive doctrine of ethnic
difference and superiority.
For their
sins the Cubans and Haitians continue to be punished,
the Haitians by slow motion genocide, by compound
interest and by state terrorism, by armed banditry in
support of criminal monopolists and by the kidnapping of
their elected leader. The Cubans have been punished by
terrorism, by invasion, by biological warfare and by a
brutal and illegal economic blockade.
The two
peoples nearest us—to whom most of the hemisphere owe
their freedom—are punished as Prometheus was for
stealing divine fire and giving it to ordinary mortals..
Zeus punished Prometheus when he finally caught up with
him, by having him chained to a rock—perhaps in South
Ossetia (!), where a vulture would come to feast on
Prometheus' liver, magically regenerated overnight.
Nature has
dealt the Haitians and Cubans some serious blows. These
blows are so many and so devastating that some people
have begun to question whether what is happening is
entirely natural.
Does someone
‘own’ the weather?
Cuba's
fertile province of Pinar del Rio, which grows
everything from plantain to the worlds' best tobacco,
has been hit 14 times in 8 years by hurricane or storm.
Comparing the strike rate over the last century suggests
that global warming or some other force is tormenting
Cuba.
‘I have
never seen anything as painful …’
Dr Paul
Farmer, an American physician, medical anthropologist
and Harvard professor has spent about half his adult
life dedicated to healing the world, especially Haiti
the poorest country in the hemisphere. When the first
storms broke over Haiti, Paul was in Rwanda, doing what
he does all over the world, setting up systems to help
ordinary people help heal themselves and their
neighbours. He dashed back to Haiti from which he
reported on Wednesday
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…we need food, water, clothes, and,
especially, cash (which can be converted
into all of the above)—so that Zanmi Lasante
(ZL), and thus all of us, can do our part to
save lives and preserve human dignity.
"The need is enormous. After 25 years spent
working in Haiti and having grown up in
Florida, I can honestly say that I have
never seen anything as painful as what I
just witnessed in Gonaïves—except in that
very same city, four years ago. Again, you
know that 2004 was an especially brutal
year, and those who work with PIH know why:
the coup in Haiti and what would become
Hurricane Jeanne. Everyone knows that
Katrina killed 1,500 in New Orleans and on
the Gulf Coast, but very few outside of our
circles know that what was then Tropical
Storm Jeanne, which did not even make
landfall in Haiti, killed an estimated 2,000
in Gonaïves alone. |
Paul Farmer
thought he would have found organisations and
institutions working on disaster relief. Instead,
Farmer's health care organisation – Partners in Health (Zanmi
Lasante in Haitian) have been forced into the front
line. PIH is a network of locally directed
organizations working in 10 countries to attack poverty
and inequality and bring the fruits of
modernity—healthcare, education, et cetera—to people
marginalized by adverse social forces.
In Haiti they
have now been forced into a different role—which is why
Paul Farmer is apologising to his staff and friends for
asking for money, food, and other resources.
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.
. . we saw not a single first-aid station
or proper temporary shelter. We saw, rather,
people stranded on the tops of their houses
or wading through waist-deep water; we saw
thousands in an on-foot exodus south toward
Saint-Marc. |
Farmer is
appealing desperately for help against a background of
official ignorance and failure.
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A
speedy, determined relief effort could save
the lives of tens of thousands of Haitians
in Gonaïves and all along the flooded coast.
The people of that city and others have been
stranded without food or water or shelter
for three days and it's simply not true that
they cannot be reached. When I called to say
as much to friends working with the U.S.
government and with disaster-relief
organizations based in Port-au-Prince, it
became clear that, as of yesterday, there's
not a lot of accurate information leaving
Gonaïves, although estimates of hundreds of
deaths are not hyperbolic. |
Part of the
problem in Haiti is that the American managed coup
against President Aristide was a coup against democratic
community organisations as well. The Haiti Democracy
Project, USAID and John McCain's International
Republican Institute calculated that they would fatally
undermine Aristide by destroying the grassroots
organisations. What they did was to destroy the
Haitians' capacity to help themselves.
Evacuating the population of Jamaica
Cuba is
organised as a mutual aid society in which every citizen
has his responsibilities, his duties and his place. When
hurricanes threaten Cuba, people move out of the way
guided by the neighourhood Committees for the Defense
of the Revolution–CDR. They move the old and the young,
the sick and the healthy and their cats, dogs, parrots,
their goats, donkeys and cows, to safe places.
Here is a
truly incredible fact. Last week the Cubans moved
2,615,000 people—a number nearly equivalent to the
entire population of Jamaica, to safety. Four people
died in the storm, the first fatalities for years. It is
a remarkable statistic. Three years ago when Texas tried
to evacuate a million or so ahead of hurricane Rita more
than a hundred people died in the evacuation.
The
hurricanes hitting Cuba this year have been peculiarly
destructive, Gustav leaving behind wreckage which
reminded Fidel Castro of the wreckage of Hiroshima.
Cuba needs
food, not because of poverty—as in Haiti, but because
its crops have been devastated and food stores
destroyed. When the Cubans asked the Americans to allow
them to buy supplies from the US, Condoleezza Rice said
no!
The Cubans
were not asking for charity.
Some of us
have long suspected that for some Americans, ideology
was more important than humanity. That celebrated
rhetorical question in the Bible has now been answered
by Secretary Rice: If your brother asks for bread, will
you give him a stone?
The essence
of being human is that other humans recognise your
humanity, I, and probably many others, are unable to
recognise Ms Rice as human.
It is
savagely ironic, or, perhaps, barbarically ironic that
it is the Cubans who should be treated in this way. When
people are in trouble anywhere in the world the Cubans
send help no matter what the state of relations is with
their governments, to Honduras, Guatemala and Pakistan
among others. When Katrina hit the US the Cubans
organised a 1,500 strong medical brigade which would
have saved many lives, had their help been accepted.
But, as the
Bible says, let the dead bury their dead.
We need to
organise to help as many people as possible survive the
effects of the hurricanes.We need to organise funds for
Haiti and food for Cuba.
I would hope
that this newspaper organises a relief fund for our
worst hit neighbours and I will offer what I can,
$10,000. I would urge us to demonstrate our sympathy and
solidarity by giving as much as we can, no matter how
small.
Copyright ©2008 John Maxwell
jankunnu@gmail.com
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posted 16 September 2008 |