By: José G. Valdés / Television Camagüey
Bolívar and Martí 7.30 a.m. July 26, 2010. José Martí has not died . He revives in the mind of more than 90 thousand people gathered in the center of the Cuban archipelago, to commemorate the anniversary 57 of the assaults to the barracks Moncada, in the city of Santiago de Cuba, and Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, in Bayamo, both in the oriental region of the big island. The act for the Day of the National Rebelliousness is presided over by the General of Army Raúl Castro Ruz, president of the state Council and of Secretaries.
Martí is there next to the representatives of the generation of the centennial of its birth who constituted the detonator of the armed insurrection against the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista in July 1953 and of the continuators of the fight that took the rebellious forces toward the victory of the first one of January 1959.
He is there, when claps and vítores of those gathered in the Square of the Sculptural Complex Major Ernesto Che Guevara, of Santa Clara, express the pride of the recovery of a martian par excellence, Fidel.
It is there the intellectual author of the Revolution next to the Venezuelan friends, because this commemorative act is also devoted to the Liberator Simón Bolívar and to the Bicentennial of the beginning of the fights for the independence of Our America. It is not chance. Martí was considered pupil of Bolívar, to who called “Father of towns” and was nurtured of the bolivarian thought because “of the Brave one to the Patagonia is not more than a single town”. Today that South American nation is threatened by a claw of the yank imperialism that grows per day in the horizon.
In this historical minute, the Cuban followers of the marti ideas ratify the principle “Gives me Venezuela in that to serve you.”
Bolívar and Martí are present to conquer and to build the future of our towns
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