April,
1999
Pastors for Castro
© ABIP 1999
by Agustín Blázquez with the collaboration of Jaums
Sutton
Supposedly "religious" and
"humanitarian" organizations in the US appear to be working for Castro's tyranny
in Cuba. The interreligious group Pastors for Peace has received grants from the Arca
Foundation, which according to a paper by scholar Irving Louis Horowitz is a "highly
pro-Castro and partisan," grant-giving agency. From 1994 to 1996, Arca Foundation
awarded close to $2,000,000 for pro-Castro projects.
According to Arca Foundation annual reports,
a 1993 grant for $20,000 went to "educational work related to the Pastors for Peace
caravan to collect and deliver humanitarian aid to churches in Cuba." A 1994 grant
for $57,000 went "to organize "friendshipments" of humanitarian aid to
Cuba, and to make the American public aware of the terms of the US embargo and efforts to
challenge it." A 1995 grant for $15,000 went to "respond to humanitarian needs
in Cuba, and to familiarize the business community in the Twin Cities with US policy
toward Cuba." And in 1996, a grant for $15,000 went to "educate religious
grassroots constituencies in the United States about the humanitarian impact of the US
embargo against Cuba."
Obviously, Arca and Pastors for Peace have a
well-defined political agenda to defy and change US laws, and are actively part of the
pro-Castro Lobby in the US. Their intent is for the US to change its policy toward Cuba
without any hint of a desire for democracy for Cuba. It appears that they do not have the
slightest concern for the institutional violations of human rights in
Cuba. They promote the biased notion that all the problems in Cuba are caused by the US
embargo and not by Castro.
The Pastors for Peace often make claim that
their humanitarian cargoes of medicines, computers, school buses and other items go
directly to hospitals and other such institutions. However, unmentioned is the fact that
in Cuba, everything is owned by the state and Castro is the state. So, ultimately,
everything ends up in Castro's hands.
There have been reports from tourists and
others in Cuba that the medicines Pastors for Peace have given "directly to
hospitals" are being sold at the government's "foreigners-only" stores.
Regular Cuban citizens are not allowed to own a computer in their homes, so the computers
the Pastors take there end up in Cuban government hospitals for the elite, foreigners and
the patients who can pay in US dollars. There were reports from Cuba that the school buses
donated were being used by Castro's repressive police for raids to apprehend Castro's
undesirables.
So the $107,000 Arca granted to Pastors for
Peace went ultimately for Castro, apparently as intended. The average Cuban citizen has
not benefited from the "friendshipments." It appears that the humanitarianism or
religiosity is just an excuse to hide the Pastors' real intentions: to help Castro.
Pastors for Peace apparently couldn't care
less about the war that Castro has been waging for decades against his own people, causing
the deaths of about 97,000. They don't care about the deaths that follow his
drug-trafficking and guerrillas in Central and South America, not to mention Angola and
the Horn of Africa.
Recently, Pastors for Peace spoke of the
sentences of the four pro-democracy activists - two of them black and one woman - who had
been declared prisoners of conscience by Amnesty International, "Under the
circumstances, we think the sentences (3 1/2-5 years) were pretty reasonable . . .."
Reasonable, to be sent to jail for the
non-violent exercise of their natural born right to freedom of expression and association,
a right held sacred by all Americans?
Mario, a friend of mine, said, "This is
the ultimate in bad taste and it clearly shows that Pastors are not the humanitarians they
claim, but just another propaganda organ of Castro's international public relations
machine. Don't these people have anything better to do than to falsely accuse those who
seek democracy and pluralism for their nation?"
On March 27, Pastors for Peace participated
along with the pro-Castro Committee of Dominicanos Friends of Cuba and the infamous
Venceremos Brigades in a fundraiser in New York. They featured "food, dancing,
mingling, brief presentations, slide show, tabling . . .." They advertised,
"Learn about Cuba and New York-based pro-Cuba efforts. Bring friends. Spread the
word." The fools who fell for that event, surely learned a lot about Castro's version
of reality.
Rev. Lucius Walker, head of Pastors for
Peace, participated on October 23, 1996 in a national teleconference linking 65 cities
across the country by delivering a pro-Castro speech for the celebration of the 75th
anniversary of the Communist Party USA. Rev. Walker travels to Cuba often and is given
Castro's royal treatment in exchange for his unwavering allegiance. Rev. Walker looks the
other way in relation to the absence of blacks in high-ranking positions on his comrade's
island, as well as the overwhelming black prison population in Castroland.
As Pastors for Peace, many groups are a
vital part of the pro-Castro Lobby in the US. They are composed of ignorants, romantics,
idealists, anti-American fanatics, die-hard socialists and communist sympathizers
pretending to be humanitarians or religious people. These people dislike and distrust the
US and oppose US policies toward leftist regimes. They work so hard for Castro that it
makes one wonder if Castro is slipping them money
under the table.
These groups are very damaging to the
freedom and human rights of others, and are not as harmless as they seem. They are well
organized and financed, and are associated with organizations that claim to be working for
peace or humanitarian causes. For decades, these groups have been a roadblock for people
working for democracy in Cuba.
These groups claim (and some members may
actually believe) they are helping the "Cuban people" on the island when they
are actually helping Castro and his goals. When there is a pro-Castro crusade in the media
or on Capitol Hill or a demonstration against US policy toward Cuba, they are loyally
there. You never see them protesting against Castro's repression, or his crimes and
violations of human rights, or demanding freedom for his political prisoners, or asking
for democracy for Cuba.
As Americans, these groups have the freedom
to dissent and oppose the policies of their country, to elect their representatives and to
unseat them, a freedom that those groups need in order to exist. And they use and abuse
that freedom to their own advantage, to advance and impose their own political agenda on
others, who are not as fanatic, militant or well financed. All the while working to
support a regime in Cuba that would prohibit their very existence.
They ought to stop interfering in Cuban
affairs and let the Cubans solve their own problems. Their blind fanaticism helps the
tyrant that Cubans have been trying to get rid of for 40 years. Every time a Cuban is
executed or dies in the Florida Strait, is tortured or has his or her human rights
violated, it is the indirect result of these pro-Castro groups. Is that humanitarian?
© ABIP 1999
Agustín Blázquez is a
Washington-based documentary film producer and director, including the
films "Covering Cuba," "Cuba: The Pearl of the
Antilles" and "Covering
Cuba 2: The Next Generation."
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