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novum opus hominum

posts tagged "revolutionary"

This New Human Work is created by a history nerd sitting behind a laptop screen, enjoy a series of ideas he hopes to be thought provoking.
I am quite proud of my Contemplations and Discussing Islam pages. Feel free to contact me anytime.

hyungjk:

The Che Guevara Mausoleum (Mausoleo Che Guevara) is a memorial in Santa Clara, Cuba. It houses the remains of executed Marxist revolutionary Ernesto “Che” Guevara and twenty-nine of his fellow combatants killed in 1967 during Guevara’s attempt to spur an armed uprising in Bolivia. The full area which contains a bronze 22 foot statue of Che is referred to as the Ernesto Guevara Sculptural Complex.

Guevara was laid to rest with full military honors on 17 October 1997 after his exhumed remains were discovered in Bolivia and returned to Cuba. At the site, there is a museum dedicated to Guevara’s life and an eternal flame lit by Fidel Castro in Che’s memory.

Santa Clara was chosen as the location in remembrance of Guevara’s troops taking the city on December 31, 1958, during the Battle of Santa Clara. The result of this final battle of the Cuban Revolution was Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista fleeing into exile.

Nearby, in another part of the city, a Fulgencio Batista military supply train derailed by Guevara during the battle also remains in its original location.

(via amodernmanifesto)

He [Jesus] accompanied me in difficult times, in crucial moments. So Jesus Christ is no doubt a historical figure—he was someone who rebelled, an anti-imperialist guy. He confronted the Roman Empire…. Because who might think that Jesus was a capitalist? No. Judas was the capitalist, for taking the coins! Christ was a revolutionary. He confronted the religious hierarchies. He confronted the economic power of the time. He preferred death in the defense of his humanistic ideals, who fostered change…. He is our Jesus Christ.

Hugo Chavez
(If only more Christians thought like this)

(Source: peterwk)

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

Download flyer on Palestinian prisoners’ hunger strike here

As Palestinian prisoners’ hunger strike enters its second week, international solidarity is needed now, more than ever. Prisoners are being sent to isolation in increasing numbers, family visits are being denied, families threatened and identity cards conficated, lawyer visits denied, and belongings and clothing confiscated.  

Palestinian prisoners in several prisons, including Nafha prison, have reported in the past few days that they were threatened that family visits would be denied in retaliation for their participation in the hunger strike. Israeli prison officials told the prisoners that for each day they spent on hunger strike, they would be banned from family visitation for 1 month.

In addition, women prisoners participating in the hunger strike, Sumoud Kharajeh, Linan Abu Ghoulmeh, Duaa Jayyousi and Wuroud Kassem, were moved into isolation and solitary confinement, Linan Abu Ghoulmeh while under arbitrary administrative detention.

The Israeli occupation prison service also transfered prisoners from Departments 13 and 14 in the Nafha prison to other prisons; their location remains unknown. Two prisoners in Nafha, members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine who were abducted from Jericho prison with Ahmad Sa’adat have also been placed in isolation, Hamdi Qur’an and Basil al-Asmar.

During a family visit, Israeli occupation prison authorities confiscated the identity cards of the families of Palestinian prisoners Mahmoud Abu Wahdan and Raed Sayel. The families were told that because their imprisoned relatives refused to break their hunger strike, they were not allowed to visit them.

In the Ofer prison, Israeli authorities placed 9 detainees - members of the PFLP - in solitary confinement and confiscated all their personal effects, clothing and other belongings.

In Asqelan Prison, the Israeli prison administration prevented lawyers from visiting detainees. A lawyer who came to Asqelan to visit prisoners Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, Allam Al-Kaabi, and Shadi Sharafa was banned from visiting the prisoners and informed that these three and all prisoners from the PFLP who are on hunger strike are prohibited from receiving lawyer visits.

The hunger strike has been growing as well. Earlier in the day 20 prisoners from the Fateh party joined the open hunger strike, including the oldest Palestinian prisoner, Fakhri Barghouti, who entered his 34th year in Israeli prisons, and Akram Mansour, who has been imprisoned for 33 years and is quite ill with cancer. Additional prisoners also plan to announce their joining the hunger strike in the next few days. In the Negev prison, Anas Al-Shanti was placed in solitary confinement. In Ramon prison, prisoner Basem Al-Khandaqjy, a member of Central Committee of the People’s Party, joined the hunger strike.

 TAKE ACTION TO SUPPORT AHMAD SA’ADAT AND ALL PALESTINIAN PRISONERS!

1. Picket, protest or call the Israeli embassy or consulate in your location and demand the immediate freedom of Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian political prisoners. Make it clear that you support the demands of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike! Send us reports of your protests at Israeli embassies and consulates.

2. Distribute the free downloadable Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat flyer in your community at local events.

3. Write to the International Committee of the Red Cross and other human rights organizations to exercise their responsibilities and act swiftly to demand that the Israelis ensure that Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners are freed from punitive isolation. Email the ICRC, whose humanitarian mission includes monitoring the conditions of prisoners, at jerusalem.jer@icrc.organd inform them about the urgent situation of Ahmad Sa’adat.

4. Email the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat at info@freeahmadsaadat.org with announcements, reports and information about your local events, activities and flyer distributions.

The Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat
http://www.freeahmadsaadat.
org/info@freeahmadsaadat.org
Twitter:http://twitter.com/freeahmadsaadat

realsmurk:

Malcolm X and Fidel Castro

Two revolutionary leaders Malcolm X and Fidel Castro met in Harlem during the Cuban leader’s visit to the United Nations. President Castro was a victim of racism and slander in the corporate press but was greeted as a hero in the African community.

the true left in United States of America

So far, the main “problem” that i have heard of about socialists in America is that they are too spread out and in small pockets through out the country. It makes them disunited and hence, unable to carry out meaningful revolutionary action.

But i don’t think that is a weakness at all. After all, it was Che Guevara’s guerilla theory that promoted small, spread out seemingly disunited pockets of rebellion. Only thing missing is that those pockets gain followers in their areas and rise up at the same time.

So, as far as i see it, we are half way there. The pockets are very well spread out in important areas of the country. They seem to be very active in their respective communities as well. As an added bonus, they seem and are disunited too. 

So what is lacking? an overseeing organization that can direct them and link them. But even in that arena, all is not lost. Never mind the communist party, but organizations such as the Kassama project, Zeitgeist movement, etc have a very good chance of uniting those movements. 

Truly then, in the United States, i believe what the left lacks is leadership. Not the number of people willing to participate, it is not the amount of apathetic youth that prevents change either, it is the lack of true leadership.

anyone willing to step up?

On Mubaraks trial

Forgive my harsh words but i believe it to be a mummers farce. I know a trial and punishment was one of the demands of the revolutionaries but this was absolute bull. I would personally like to see Mubarak and his sons hanging and calling an end to it. But more than that, i would like to see his senators and his supporters hanged as well. I would like to see a true revolutionary government coming to power in Egypt. Instead, Egypt is still ruled by Mubaraks dogs and the revolutionary path has already been compromised. The interim government has signed a deal with the IMF, which means that Egyptian resources will continue to flow towards the world powers and no change will be seen by the farmers, unemployed, lower classes of Egyptians.

My, rather harsh, opinion: This trial should have been held quicker and Mubarak, his sons, and his dogs all should be tried, prosecuted, and hanged in the same day. Put an end to this madness once and for all. That will be the only path to true justice.

Faiz Ahmad Faiz: Legacy of a Revolutionary

Faiz was acknowledged long ago as the greatest Urdu poet after Iqbal. Even those who were critical of his progressive social and political beliefs could not deny him that position, although they always qualified their praise of him by regretting that such a good man should have fallen among the Communists. 

He was a keen student of various traditions of classical poetry in Urdu, Punjabi, Hindi, Arabic, Persian, and English among others and had realized at an early age that it was the content and not the form which was basic in the art of poetry, that originality had little to do with formal experimentation and was primarily a matter of a profound understanding of human existence in its totality and wholeness. 

His Critical essays, written mostly during his formative years, are a testimony to the fact that he had arrived at, and formulated clearly the essential elements of the poetics necessary for our age, the age of the masses. 

Iqbal had sung poems of glory to the fact of revolution and given out a clarion call to the people to rise up against the master-classes and tyrants. Faiz, having joined the people in their rebellion, and having adopted the collective cause as a poet of the revolution, made the transformation of the individual human being and his passage through the infinite variety of situations and moods in this process, the subject of his poetry. He is concerned, above all, with the experience of the individual human soul in the long and arduous journey of revolutionary struggle. 

And yet love is the leit motif of his poetry. Faiz is one of the great lyricists who seems, from one point of view, to have sung of nothing with greater passion than love. 

Faiz takes Ghalib’s plea for a deeply philosophical coordination of the poetic profession as his premise to refute the arguments of the aesthetes of his time for whom poetry was merely peripheral activity. But he goes further and comments that Ghalib’s definition of creative vision is incomplete, because the poet is not only required to see the ocean in the drop, but also has to show it to others. 

That is why, apart from being a great revolutionary poet, he was a great love poet, and there was no distinction between the two, love and revolution had become identical in him. 

(Source: faiz.com)