Change and Struggle in Latin America Meeting at Leeds University
- 18 February 2008
Darrall Cozens |
On Thursday 7th February, having recently returned from a speaking tour
of Latin America, Darrall Cozens visited Leeds University to share his
experiences with more than 20 students and “Hands off Venezuela!”
activists.
Darrall began by explaining the conditions which have defined every
revolution in history: the ruling class becomes divided and enters into
crisis, unable to see a way forward; the middle class goes through a
state of ferment; and finally the workers and the poor enter the
political arena, determined to change their conditions. He went on to
describe how for the past 9 years Venezuelan workers have struggled
tirelessly to take their destinies into their own hands, seeing in
Chavez the embodiment of their ambitions. Despite this Darrall noted how
millions of Chavez supporters and PSUV members had simply stayed at home
during the constitutional referendum. On the one hand he pointed to the
existence of a “Fifth Column” in the Bolivarian movement – a bureaucracy
which pays lip-service to “Socialism of the 21st Century” whilst
actively sabotaging the “Si” campaign by removing any political content
from it – and the abstention of thousands of workers who have become
demoralised by the economic sabotage of the capitalists and landlords.
Following the talk was a discussion which was marked by a high political
level and a focus on what we, as socialists, can do to participate in
the revolutionary process. One student, who had recently travelled to
Bolivia, spoke about her experience talking to miners. She described how
entire generations died in their twenties and thirties, under the rock
face, for the profits of a few multinational companies. As a western
tourist she explained how the only charity she could offer was to buy
the workers dynamite so that they could continue to mine the rocks,
whilst their health deteriorated under intolerable conditions.
Everyone present agreed that the only way to support the Venezuelan
Revolution was to struggle for a revolutionary transformation of British
society. The discussion continued for a long time after the meeting had
ended, with a number of eager students asking how they could join and
get involved in Hands off Venezuela.
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