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A Man Who Won’t Quit: Talking, again, with René Montes de Oca
NRO ^ | 10/6/2003 | Jay Nordlinger

Posted on 10/06/2003 7:44:51 PM PDT by Utah Girl

It has been a turbulent several days for René Montes de Oca Martija. Then again, it has been a turbulent life. Regular readers may recall that Montes de Oca is a dissident in Cuba, an official of the Human Rights party, which takes as its "patron saint," if you will, Andrei Sakharov. In May 2001, I interviewed him when he was on the lam — he had escaped from prison and expected to be caught at any moment. He was, indeed, caught three days after our conversation. (My first piece on Montes de Oca may be found here, and a follow-up piece here.)

I talked to René — as I have come to know him — again two mornings ago. He had been released from prison in July. But then, on Wednesday of last week, he had been arrested again. He was detained for just a couple of days, until shortly before we spoke together.

As before, we spoke through a translator, a supporter of the Cuban cause here in the United States. I asked René whether he thought our conversation was being monitored by the regime. He said that it surely was, but that this was to be expected, and we should just forge on.

He recounted what he had been doing since his release from prison on July 5. He, of course, had gone right back to his opposition activities. They all do. It's an amazing thing about these Cuban dissidents: The second they get out of jail, they go right back to what they were doing before, knowing they will be rearrested and imprisoned. René has been in and out of jail all of his life.

I asked him, "What motivates you to take the risk of being imprisoned once more?" He answered, "I've lived in a prison for 40 years." (René was born in 1963.) He did not mean it glibly; his words were self-evidently sincere and honest. He cannot keep still while his country is under this brutal fist.

He had spent the two and a half months since his release shoring up the Human Rights party, and he seemed especially pleased about a committee of mothers who do what they can to aid political prisoners. He further noted that, every Wednesday night from 7:30 to 8, he and many other Cubans hold "la vela," a type of ceremony at which they light a candle and pray for the prisoners. This Wednesday-night "vela" has been going on across Cuba — and among their supporters in the United States — for about two years.

René very much irked the authorities when he denounced the visit of Brazilian president Lula da Silva to the island. "Lula," as he is known throughout the world, is a great friend and supporter of Castro. As I mentioned in a column of mine the other day, Lula said about Castro — in 2001 — "In spite of the fact that your face already is marked with wrinkles, Fidel, your soul remains clean because you never betrayed the interests of your people. . . . Thank you, Fidel, thank you because you continue to exist." Da Silva also smeared Armando Valladares — the great Cuban dissident and memoirist — as a "picareta," which is Portuguese for "liar" or "fraud."

In any case, it is Montes de Oca's position that democratically elected leaders should not visit countries under dictatorship — at least without doing something to help the people who suffer from it. Needless to say, Castro's regime did not care for this talk. René was told, during his recent detention, that if he kept it up, he could be sent away for a full 20 to 30 years.

I asked René whether he thought the opposition was making progress — whether Castro was stronger than usual or weaker. He thought weaker, because "they arrested 75 members of the opposition [last spring] — independent journalists, independent librarians. And if the regime applies force in this way, it means that they are weak, that they have lost the battle of ideas."

I further asked, as I'd done two years ago, what he wanted to say, in particular, to an American audience. He mentioned a name that NRO readers may be familiar with: the Rev. Lucius Walker. It is a name that makes Cuban democrats and human-rights supporters shudder, for Walker is the head of Pastors for Peace, an organization dedicated to propping up the Castro regime. In July '01, Ross Douthat published a piece on our site that explained what Walker and his group are all about.

Montes de Oca warned Americans not to cooperate with these people, as the goods they bring to Cuba — computers, telephones, etc. — are all used by the regime to repress the opposition. The Cuban Interior Ministry is not interested in forests (believe me). They are interested in control and persecution. René is most eager that well-meaning people not be fooled by organizations, such as Walker's, that pose as charitable.

He also said that he was deeply distrustful of the "visa lottery" that takes place in Cuba — the process by which certain individuals are allowed to leave for the United States while others are not. René believes that Castro uses this system in a devious way, and wishes that the U.S. government would accept only those Cubans whom the opposition movement at large certifies as being in real danger.

While I had him on the line, I thought I'd ask René what he thought of the Bush administration, and of U.S. policy in general. He is not only in favor of the U.S. embargo, but also believes that there should be a "total [worldwide] blockade." Tourism, he says, only lines the pockets and serves the interests of the regime, keeping them in power long past their time. I asked whether dissidents on the island were unanimous in the pro-blockade view. He answered, "That's certainly the position of my party. I respect whatever other opinion anyone else may have." I reminded him that people often claim that the longstanding U.S. embargo hasn't "worked." He replied, "It has worked in the sense that the government of the United States has not cooperated with the Castro regime in oppressing the Cuban people."

He ended our conversation essentially as he did before: "God bless the people of the United States, because that's the country that has been a welcoming home to those who have been oppressed throughout the world."

René Montes de Oca is one of the most fearless and loving and selfless people I have ever encountered. It is terribly humbling to speak to him: to hear the urgency and conviction in his voice. He will almost certainly be arrested again, to face the worst abuses of the regime. After I hung up the phone with him on Saturday, I sat down to a delicious lunch and then dressed for a matinee performance at the Metropolitan Opera House, which I was covering. Somehow, it didn't feel right.


TOPICS: Cuba; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 10/06/2003 7:44:52 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
ping
2 posted on 10/06/2003 8:03:41 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: All
Lighten Up, Francis!
Fundraising posts only happen quarterly, and are gone as soon as we meet the goal. Help make it happen.

3 posted on 10/06/2003 8:04:47 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Libertarianize the GOP; Cincinatus' Wife
Oh my. Here is something further from The Corner at NRO.

FAILURE OF IMAGINATION, CONT’D [Peter Robinson ]
Derb, exactly.

My wife is Cuban, and after her father got the family out of the country, he turned over his house to a South American embassy, making it, technically, foreign territory, and therefore, by Latin diplomatic tradition, a place of sanctuary. The grounds of the house were soon crowded with Cubans seeking to escape Fidel's regime. Whereupon some of Fidel's soldiers drove up, mounted a machine gun on the back of a Jeep, and opened fire.

Here in Northern California, we have quite a few friends who think Fidel is just dandy--all that universal health care, don't you know--and a couple of our acquaintances have even urged their children to visit Havana as social workers. When we tell them what took place at my father-in-law's house just days after he himself escaped, they almost always look at us blankly for a moment, then change the subject. They simply cannot imagine it.

Which leads me to a question for our readers. Some famous person or other once said something like this: "Understanding what took place in the Soviet Union requires not only historical knowledge but an act of imagination." Can anyone tell me who said that--and where I can find the actual quotation?

4 posted on 10/06/2003 8:12:05 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
Hi Utah Girl! I'm still up watching baseball...thanks for the post. I sure enjoy Nordlinger.
5 posted on 10/06/2003 8:34:41 PM PDT by Molly Pitcher (Is Reality Optional?)
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To: Utah Girl
When we tell them what took place at my father-in-law's house just days after he himself escaped, they almost always look at us blankly for a moment, then change the subject. They simply cannot imagine it.

I've been around these types. When you speak of Castro's tyranny, they quietly look at you and move on. Either they think I'm uninformed (of course they aren't) or I'm a anti-Castro nut. It never dawns on them they're supporting an anti-American, communist tyrant.

6 posted on 10/06/2003 11:41:18 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Utah Girl; Libertarianize the GOP; All
I further asked, as I'd done two years ago, what he wanted to say, in particular, to an American audience. He mentioned a name that NRO readers may be familiar with: the Rev. Lucius Walker. It is a name that makes Cuban democrats and human-rights supporters shudder, for Walker is the head of Pastors for Peace, an organization dedicated to propping up the Castro regime. In July '01, Ross Douthat published a piece on our site that explained what Walker and his group are all about.

Not In Our Name and the World Wide Terrorism Web: The "Peace" Movement's Trojan Horse.***NION: Castro and Islamist Terror - The Interreligous Foundation for Community Organization is a pro-Castro proxy group. Members of their staff such as Lucius Walker (Executive Director), Marilyn Clement (Treasurer) and Ellen Bernstein (Grants Administrator) are all Castrophiles In Havana in November 2000, Lucius Walker proclaimed, “Long live the creative example of the Cuban Revolution! Long live the wisdom and heartfelt concern for the poor of the world by Fidel Castro!" This was a follow-up to his pro-Castro speech in 1996, commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Communist Party USA. Marilyn Clement is a co-organizer of the WILPF’s Sister-to-Sister Cuba project. The WILPF also issued a condemnation of Clinton’s Cuba policy in 1998. Bernstein was also quoted as saying she believes Cuba is the paradigm of democracy. ***

Who the Real Ogres Are - Under the Guise of Religion NCC, UMC, PASTORS FOR PEACE (Rev. Lucius Walker) ***Another one of the most militant, fanatic and violent "religious" and "humanitarian" organizations part of this network in the U.S. appearing to be working for Castro's tyranny are the "interreligious" group Pastors for Peace. These "pastors" as well as the NCC have received grants from the Arca Foundation, which according to scholar Irving Louis Horowitz is a "highly pro-Castro and partisan," grant-giving agency. From 1994 to1998, Arca awarded about $3 million for pro-Castro projects.***

7 posted on 10/06/2003 11:49:36 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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