[NYTr] Venezuela: The Revolution of the Land Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2007 13:07:44 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit Granma Daily - Oct 26, 2007 http://www.granma.cubaweb.cu/english/news/art40.html The Revolution of the Land By RONALD SUAREZ RIVAS Photos by ALBERTO BORREGO AVILA MERIDA, Venezuela.b Jesus Guerrero was murdered for defending small farmersb right to work the land. A bullet ended his life in front of his comrades while they worked a piece of land taken from a large estate. He left a wife, children and his example of courage to the 67 men and women who consider him a martyr of their struggle. They decided to name, after him, the cooperative they began four years ago, despite the siege of the large landowners and their hired assassins. The healthy looking cattle and their banana, yucca and cocoa crops are their pride, the fruit of their hard work. For many years back, and until that afternoon of 2003 when they broke the fence and occupied the piece of land given them by the Venezuelan government, these 651 hectares were idle, covered in weeds and part of an extensive landholding three times as big. Housewives, workers and other unemployed persons joined the group that hoped to make farming a way of life. They knew the struggle would be hard. Even though President Hugo Chavez had signed the Land Law and they received authorization to occupy the land, the real struggle would begin when the affected landowners decided to use violence to plant terror. Venezuelan Ministry of Agriculture and Lands statistics speak for themselves. More than six million tons of food consumed each year in the South American country is imported. Meanwhile, around 60 percent of the farmland is in the hands of 5 percent of the landowners, who donbt work them. The war against the large estate is considered an act of justice by the Venezuelan revolution. Itbs more than just a question of land. The impetus to the farm sector has attracted people from the cities and generated a need for knowledge to guide the arms willing to work. With this in mind, more than 600 Cuban farm technicians are providing the young cooperatives with assistance. Specialists in plant health and protection, agronomy and forest engineers, veterinarians and economists contribute to the local efforts. Rene Gonzalez is one of them. Hebs been in the state of Merida for 13 months on a mission to train the 67 members of the Jesus Guerrero cooperative, the majority of whom had little knowledge about farming, seeds, fertilizers and harvests. "Our role consists in accompanying them in the activities. In Cuba, there are soil and climate studies, and the farm techniques are more specific. Here the situation is completely different; we are starting from scratch," he noted. "In the beginning we were unorganized but thanks to the experience of the Cubans we have moved forward," said Ezequiel Luna, a farmer. He added, "The large estate is one of the great poisons of capitalism. Now it is different, we are helping to build a better country." And itbs not all farm work. After each daybs work, the tools are exchanged for pencils and notebooks. In his wood and zinc-roof house, Gustavo Contreras improvises a primary school classroom and Deinys Duran another for high school. Outside, the children are playing; a gift of those who are making the revolution of the land. * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================