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QUOTATION FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Wherever death may surprise us, let it be welcome if our battle cry has reached even one receptive ear and an other hand reaches out to take up our arms … –Che Guevara

 

by Nayaba Arinde

Editor-at-Large

On the day after the January 15th death of Viola Plummer, friends and family gathered at her Sista’s Place jazz and community venue in Bed-Stuy, to commune, reminisce, and share food prepared by Attorney Esmeralda Simmons and others. Tears were held, but barely. Toasts were made to bless her journey, as her favorite song The Commodores ‘Heroes’ played in the background. “Viola Plummer was the last of the five original core founders of the December 12th Movement: Sonny Abubadika Carson, Coltrane Chimurenga, Elombe Brath, and Father Lucas, they are all gone now,” activist Omowale Clay told Our Time Press.

A snowstorm swept through New York City on Dr. Martin Luther King Day, Monday, January 15th, 2024, as news broke of the passing of activist Viola Plummer, 86, co-founder of the Bed Stuy, Brooklyn-based civil and human rights organization, The December 12th Movement.

In the official announcement Tuesday evening, Attorney Roger Wareham of The Movement said, “It is with a heavy heart that we announce the Black Liberation Movement’s loss of Comrade Viola Plummer, Chairperson of the December 12th Movement. Funeral arrangements will be announced in the next few days.”

Preliminary funeral arrangements at press time have a private wake in Queens on Friday, January 26, 2024, and a public funeral at Rev. Herbert Daughtry’s House of the Lord Church (415 Atlantic Avenue, Downtown Brooklyn) at 5 pm on Saturday, January 27th, 2024.

Charles Barron, former Assemblyman/City Councilman, told Our Time Press. “My heart Is heavy, and my tears are soaking my soul! My beloved friend of over 40 years has gone.”  With Viola Plummer passing on Dr. King’s national holiday, Charles Barron continued, “It is fitting that two people who loved our people will now be forever linked in history. My sister Viola Plummer was completely committed to our community.”

‘It snowed heavily because this is how the strong ones leave their mark,” said Divine Allah, Youth Minister of the New Black Panther Party. “She was a bold, fearless, uncompromising Black woman.  She was our sister, mother, grandmother, and auntie – our Powerful Black Warrior Queen. We are already missing her. We are thankful that we knew her, though, and we are grateful that we were able to be led and taught by her.”

Rev. Herbert Daughtry told Our Time Press that he has had seven family members and friends pass away in the last two weeks, including; “John Flateau, Sekou Odinga, and now Viola Plummer. You called her the ‘Matriarch of the Movement. I’ve been in it 70 years,” the 93-year-old ‘People’s Pastor,’ declared, “and as far back as I can remember she was on the case; fire in her eyes, her strong voice, articulate, persuasive. A voice that makes an impact – slow, deliberate, forceful way of making a point, of arguing the case.”

 

Pensive, Rev Daughtry continued, “Yeah, we had some disagreements, but we always agreed on one thing–that we wanted to see our people free. That united us. People with whom you have these arguments, you sometimes get brought closer – like a committed husband and wife because you realize that the person’s passion is not about themselves, but about the movement.”

He reflected on the beginning stages of the “Black United Front in 1980, with over a thousand people gathered in Brooklyn Armoury – Sumpter Avenue [now known as Marcus Garvey Blvd.]. Can you imagine all these super-Black ranking radicals, revolutionary brothers and sisters – all you can name, they were all there, argued and argued..and Brother Jitu Weusi – he was the center of it, they held it together. But, finally, they got a temporary constitution. I was voted temporary chairman, “ and tasked to go all over the country to bring back “all the people who were most passionate about their argument, the ones who went away the angriest, we realized that if we couldn’t bring these people back we weren’t going to have a National Black United Front. If you can’t bring people together with different ideas involved, then you don’t have a National Black United Front.

But, Viola was special. December 12th.

We lose her ubiquitous presence. We lose her voice, her passion and vigor, and her articulation of the causes that Vi espoused. We miss her. She was always on the case. In the movies they had a saying that bravery means you ride to the sound of the gun, wherever the battle is.

Wherever the cannons are booming, that’s where you want to go. Viola would be present where the issues were. She would ride to the sound of people debating the issues, and be in the middle of it all. She was fearless, and forceful with fire in her eyes and fury in her voice, and an absolutely loyal comrade. I’m glad that she’s coming home in our church.

December 12th Movement’s usually jovial Omowale Clay was somewhat somber when he told Our Time Press, “Over the past 50 years of my life, I have had the privilege and honor to be tutored and learn and follow the lead of my comrade Sister Viola Plummer in struggling to make fundamental change in the quality of life for the people. My legacy to her is to continue the struggle.”

An activist from her teenage years, Mrs. Plummer became a stalwart of staunch grassroots community advocacy. She was known for her love for people, whether it was in Brooklyn from her headquarters at Sista’s Place, to anywhere in the USA where support was needed, or in the Caribbean or on the Continent of Africa when the call was raised. She organized thousands of meetings, protests, rallies, and community actions. She was forever on the front lines. The mainstream would cite her as being a member of the (ultimately acquitted) New York 8, who beat several conspiracy charges, including attempted government overthrow in 1985. Sis. Plummer stated at the time, “We are eight people who were doing nothing more than organizing and fighting for freedom.”

Taking on big topics was her favorite space, like arguing against racism at the United Nations, fighting for the people of Zimbabwe, Haiti, South Africa, or Venezuela, and getting into the details and minutiae of law and politics at the State Capitol in Albany or City Hall in New York City, as chief-of-staff for both Assembly/City Councilmembers Inez and Charles Barron.

“Inez and I are deeply saddened by the transitioning of our dear friend, Sister Viola Plummer. Our relationship with her spans more than four decades of battling on issues impacting the Black communities here in New York, in states across the nation, and in countries across the world. Viola Plummer was a forthright, unyielding, undeterred, bold, outspoken, unequivocating warrior-leader who stood flat-footed and did not retreat. Her strident voice was a clarion call that challenged and motivated our people to get involved and take a stand. She thought no issue was too big, too strongly entrenched, or insurmountable.”

And then there she was fighting overt racism in housing, education, and police brutality, and against drugs, gun violence, gentrification, and poverty alongside colleagues Sonny Abubadika Carson, Elombe Brath, Coltrane Chimurenga, the Barrons, and Father Lucas – Viola Plummer had an impact. All the while she stood on the Harriet Ross Tubman stance of “‘I freed a thousand slaves, I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves,’ what change we could have if we all united in great numbers.”

“I didn’t just want to be a witness,” she once said. “I wanted to be a part of the movement.”  She was a local, national, and international leader on so many issues over her 50 years of people-centered activism. She left an indelible mark.

Perhaps the last victory she saw was the signing of the Reparations Bill last month, when New York State finally agreed to at least look into the demands she, the December 12th Movement, N’Cobra, Institute of the Black World, and the NAACP, and others had been making for decades to look into the impact of slavery on the Black people in New York.

“We are deeply saddened by the news of the passing of a great Movement Matriarch Viola Plummer, co-founder of the December 12th Movement,” State Senator Cordell Cleare told Our Time Press. “Viola Plummer was a community organizer for the majority of her 86 years of life. With her no-nonsense approach to advocacy, Viola was a fighter until the very end. My sincerest condolences to her family, friends, and everyone who knew her at home and abroad.”

A flurry of phone calls. There were tears. And wailing.

“We just love her,” said A.T. Mitchell, community organizer and CEO of Man Up! Inc. “Her legacy will live on through all of us who she embraced and showed the way of dedication to our people. If Sister Vi loved you, she showed you. And we will continue her work, I promise you.”

Colette Pean, a member of the December 12th Movement, told Our Time Press that Viola “was a trained teacher of elementary school and college, and she taught throughout her life. In her work, teaching was an important part of it. She taught people how to be better revolutionaries and to struggle for self-determination of the people. She traveled widely, including Vietnam during the Vietnam War, Namibia, South Africa, Ethiopia, Tanzania, and China – in support of liberation struggles.’

Retired East New York electeds Charles and Inez Barron reflected to Our Time Press, “She was not fearful, could not be intimidated, and refused to be silent. The countless battles that she waged on behalf of Black people are innumerable. Her legacy is broad and deep. Her leadership effectiveness is a model to be emulated, and her accomplishments are testimony to her mantra, ‘Do the work.’ We will miss our dear friend, but we are pleased to join the many voices who pay tribute to her life and her work. To our beloved comrade and “real” close friend, our hearts are heavy, and tears are soaking our souls. We’re going to miss you, Vi! Rest in peace and power, our sister, for a job well done. Viola, we love you forever.”

The People’s Republic of Brooklyn is in mourning of her passing, especially as it happened just one day after the Janazah and burial of political prisoner advocate Sekou Odinga, 79.  There had been a decades-long concerted community campaign to release the former Black Panther and Black Liberation Army member from prison after 33 years in prison.

Atty. Roger Wareham, December 12th Movement International Secretariat, told Our Time Press that he met Viola in 1974. He knew her for half a century. “50 years of struggle and love, and ups and downs, almost a lifetime in jail with the New York 8, and the December 12th Movement. Long live Viola Plummer. She’s alive as long as she is alive in our memories.”

The international lawyer said that to him, the pint-sized dynamic woman who was Viola Plummer symbolized “Resistance, revolution, never give up, commitment, love for her people, patience in terms of real faith in people, that they will make a revolution to change our conditions.”

“Viola Plummer is EVERY WOMAN,” cultural activist and mega clothing designer Brenda Brunson-Bey told Our Time Press. “She was kind when needed. Generous when something was asked for. Dedicated when called on. Committed when she believed in something. Strong when she had to face obstacles. Devoted to our culture through music and art. Loving to all of us, all the time. I strive to be like HER…Every Woman. Sister Viola, rest in Peace and Empowerment.”

“Mama Viola was fighting on the battlefield for Black people long before most of us got there and kept fighting long after some of us left,” said activist Bomani Mayasa of the United Front. “She was a true warrior. She taught this young warrior how to struggle. Long live Mama Viola Plummer.”

(Nayaba Arinde, a friend of Sister Plummer, is editor-at-large for Our Time Press)

The leadership of the Communist Party of Cuba visited social and economic centers in Mayabeque

The proximity to the booming scientific pole of Mayabeque province will allow students of the brand new IPVCE to interact more closely with science professionals, including the agricultural sector. Photo: Estudios Revolución

Güines, Mayabeque- The new headquarters of the Félix Varela y Morales Pre-University Vocational Institute of Exact Sciences (IPVCE) was inaugurated this week, on the occasion of the anniversary of the creation of the province of Mayabeque. The new location for the school was much desired by students and teachers.

The proximity to the province’s thriving scientific center, the University of Agrarian Sciences and many other research centers will allow the young people to interact more closely with the highly trained professionals working in these institutes, many of them luminaries in the basic sciences.

The students are also happy to be close to the territorial capital, the city of San José, which, due to its location and interconnections, shortens the commuting distance between municipalities.

Besides that, the building, a classic school in the countryside, was completely repaired, although work is still being done in the sports areas and other details, so the living and teaching conditions are very good.

Last Friday afternoon, the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party and President of the Republic, Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, and the Secretary of Organization of the Central Committee, Roberto Morales Ojeda, visited the IPVCE.

The visit was part of the tours through municipalities of the country to analyze with the municipal committees of the Party, in this case that of Güines, the priorities for 2024 in the political, economic and social areas, the assurance to them, and the current debates and implementation of the recently announced economic measures.

Continue reading The leadership of the Communist Party of Cuba visited social and economic centers in Mayabeque

The designation of Cuba as a terrorist is unjustified

Photo: Prensa Latina

The designation of Cuba on the list of sponsors of terrorism is even more insensitive and unjustified today, when Cuba is suffering the worst economic crisis in its contemporary history as a result of U.S. policy.

So warned an article published in The Hill newspaper, referring to the coercive measure reimposed three years ago by then President Donald Trump “as a farewell just days before leaving office,” which triggered a series of new sanctions against the island nation, the text stressed.

It said that last month members of Congress were furious to learn that, despite assurances to the contrary, President Joe Biden has not even begun the process of reviewing that decision. It was pointed out that the blockade against Cuba and the U.S. sanctions have deprived the island’s economy of more than 130 billion dollars.

This policy has also hindered civilians’ access to essential goods such as food, fuel and medicines, systematically undermining the fundamental human rights of the Cuban people.

In 2014,” he added, “President Barack Obama broke with half a century of systematic hostility and provided some relief to the Cuban economy, including the elimination of the designation that President Ronald Reagan (1981-1989) provided during the Cold War.

While Trump destroyed these fragile gains, many Cubans and Americans alike saw Biden’s election as an opportunity to return to the path laid out by his former running mate, he recalled.

But despite campaign promises, Biden has proven to be more Trump than Obama, and the list is a particularly egregious case in point, he emphasized.

In effect, the measure extends U.S. financial restrictions internationally, cutting the Cuban people off from the global financial system, considered the author of the article entitled Cuba’s inclusion on the list of State Sponsors of Terrorism has had detrimental consequences.

But the designation is not only deeply damaging. It is also unfounded, the columnist asserted.

In fact, senior officials in both Democratic and Republican administrations have described the designation as “bogus” and “absurd.” Colin Powell’s former chief of staff called it “a fiction we have created … to bolster the justification for the blockade,” he explained.

However, the Biden administration has maintained Trump’s baseless designation. It is unclear why.

And Democrats have little strategic justification for allowing a small group of Florida hardliners to hold their policy decisions hostage.

Meanwhile, nearly every country in the world opposes the blockade. Latin American leaders in particular have criticized U.S. policy toward Cuba, which is seen as a manifestation of the 200-year-old Monroe Doctrine.

The majority of voters, both Democrats and Republicans, want an end to the blockade.

3478. The number of Cubans killed by US sponsored terrorism since the revolution.

 

 

By Beto Rodriguez on January 4, 2024

3478. the number of Cubans killed by US sponsored terrorism since the revolution.

 

 

 

 

 

On the afternoon of November 24, 2023, the U.S. Embassy in Cuba issued an alert to its citizens wishing to enter the island for “potential terrorist acts, demonstrations and acts of violence against the United States, its citizens and its interests.” Therefore, it suggested to avoid “places frequented by tourists and sites commonly used for demonstrations”. (Suspicious…)

A day earlier, Palestinian kufiyas and flags waved along Havana’s Malecon in a march called and led by Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel in favor of Palestine and against the genocidal aggression of the Israeli regime. The demonstration started from the Avenue of the Presidents and went along the Antillean cape to the park known as La Piragua, very, very close to the headquarters of the U.S. Embassy. (Coincidence?…).

Did this demonstration cause panic in Washington? Should its citizens be afraid to travel to Cuba because of a march in solidarity with Palestine? After all, the event had already happened and from the windows of the diplomatic building on Desamparados Street everything could be observed and its occupants could enjoy their cokes quite relaxed without fear of “acts of violence” against them.

Who are the terrorists?

A fortnight later, the Official Gazette of the Republic of Cuba shook the sewers of Miami. On December 7, it published in its pages Resolution 19/2023 approved by the Cuban Ministry of the Interior with the National List of persons and entities linked to terrorism against Cuba. In short, names and terrorist organizations that since 1999 have planned, executed and conspired acts of extreme violence in Cuban territory, government and tourist facilities, sabotage, illegal incursions, human trafficking, war preparations and, yes, plans to assassinate the leaders of the Revolution.

Some of the terrorists cited in the publication are: Santiago Álvarez Fernández Magriñá, Ramón Saúl Sánchez Rizo, Ana Olema Hernández, William Cabrera González, Michel Naranjo Riverón and Eduardo Arias León.

Also on the list are: Yamila Betancourt García; youtuber Alejandro Otaola Casal (who could not hide how affected he was by being on the list and responded on his Youtube channel); the aforementioned terrorist, Orlando Gutiérrez Boronat and others such as Eliecer Ávila, Liudmila Santiesteban Cruz, Manuel Milanés Pizonero, Alain Lambert Sánchez (self-styled Cuban Paparazzi) and Jorge Ramón Batista Calero (a.k.a. Ultrack).

According to Cuban government decree, all these people (have) participated in documented acts of violence, using social networks to recruit some harmless people in exchange for a few dollars for their grotesque purposes, inside and outside Cuba.

Unconscious… or maybe not, because on the list appears the name of Alexander Alazo Baró, who, according to file 27/2020, is under investigation for having attacked with 32 semi-automatic rifle shots the Cuban Embassy in the United States in the early morning of April 30, 2020.

According to investigations, Alexander Allazo is linked to the Florida-based evangelical church, Doral Jesus Worship Center , which is attended by other anti-Cuban extremists such as Pastor Frank Lopez , close to Senator Marco Rubio , one of the leading figures in the anti-Cuban struggle.

Three years later, history repeated itself. Two Molotov cocktails crashed into the Cuban diplomatic headquarters in Washington. “Anti-Cuban groups resort to terrorism when they feel impunity, something Cuba has repeatedly warned U.S. authorities about,” declared Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla on September 24, the day of the new terrorist attack.

And the criminals? Nobody knows. Maybe the U.S. authorities do, but who knows… Right?

A jet ski and a terrorist enter through Matanzas

On December 9, Cuban media reported that a man, residentof Miami, was arrested in the province of Cienfuegos. The subject had entered by sea, aboard a jet ski adapted to withstand the 90-mile trip from Florida to Cuba. One detail: the man was carrying a gun and several full cartridges of ammunition. He intended to recruit people to burn sugar cane plantations, provoke riots, harass tourist centers, distribute propaganda against the Government of the island… in short, terrorist stuff. But the citizen’s denunciation plus the immediate action of the Ministry of the Interior managed to stop him in time.

He was not just any castaway or lost tourist. Once arrested, the subject turned out to be on the National List of Terrorists that, a few days earlier, had been published by the Cuban Government. His intentions were clear: to exercise all the violence he could against the country, by order of terrorist groups based in Miami. The Miami of Marco Rubio and Orlando Boronat. Of Mario Diaz-Balart and the youtuber Otaola. The same ones who have publicly urged Washington to drop bombs on Havana. They have received armed and physical paramilitary training and money for instructions to carry out violent actions inside Cuba.

Was this another “mentally handicapped” as Miami propagandists are trying to pass off the terrorist who shot up the Cuban embassy in 2020? Perhaps it was the action of a fanatic with a lot of initiative, a gun and a jet ski? Or none of the above. So, no one should rule out the possibility that the U.S. government knew this would happen and that is why it issued its alert about possible acts of terrorism in Cuba a few days earlier. In other words, Washington already knew in advance that anti-Cuban groups were planning to infiltrate the island to commit acts of terrorism.

The list of such actions is long. Since the triumph of Fidel Castro’s Revolution in Cuba in 1959 (and yes, it has been 65 years and counting…), U.S. intelligence has tried everything to put an end to Cuban socialism. It invaded militarily in 1961; attempted to assassinate Fidel on more than six hundred occasions; blew up a Cubana de Aviación plane in 1973; bomb explosions in hotels and resorts; assassinated a diplomat in New York in 1980; to this day kidnaps artists and sportsmen; finances human trafficking, not to mention that year after year it invests millions of dollars in permanent political, economic and media siege campaigns trying to subvert public opinion inside and outside Cuba against its government.

Uncle Sam’s responsibility

The facts indicate that they intend to reopen a new phase of violence against the island, through armed infiltration. That is called terrorism, anywhere in the world. And for less, the White House has invaded countries feigning “threats to their security”.

However, it seems that for the U.S. government terrorism only exists when it affects its economic interests. For them, there is everything from TERRORISM to “terrorism, whatever”. And what is against Cuba (as in general, against all countries, peoples and people hated by Uncle Sam) is tolerated and even financed.

And if not, the United States has the responsibility to comply with international standards and deport to Cuba the 61 Florida-based terrorists awaiting trial on the island for their acts. However, this is the hour in which Washington refuses to collaborate, collaborating with the suspicion (which is more of a certainty) that it not only consents to, but is behind the violence against Havana by these groups.

What happens is that the world continues to demand this attitude from the United States ends. Thus, last November 2, as every year, all the countries of the world (except the US, obviously, and Israel, which is a fictitious country anyway) demanded Washington lift the criminal economic and commercial blockade against the island, by means of a vote in the UN General Assembly. And they will continue to demand it together with the peoples of the world until the White House stops obstinately using terrorism as a state policy.

Source: Medium, translation Resumen Latinoamericano – English