The Open Letter to
President Obama from the Venceremos Brigade calls for a more humane foreign
policy towards
Cuba
including lifting the trade and
travel restrictions to
Cuba
for all
U.S.
citizens and residents.
July 13, 2009
Dear President
Obama,
On August
3rd, 2009, over
140 of us will be returning from Cuba-without a government license-in
defiance of the travel restrictions and economic embargo that our government
has imposed on that nation for close to 50 years.
We are traveling
to Cuba in order to denounce a failed and
inhumane policy towards Cuba, and to express our solidarity with
the Cuban people and their struggles. We are aware that we face repercussions
for our act of civil disobedience, but are strengthened by Martin Luther King
Jr.'s conviction that "one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust
laws".
For the past
half-century, the United States has pursued a policy implemented
with the explicit purpose of making the Cuban people suffer to such an extent
that they-out of misery and poverty-overthrow their government. The Cuban
people can no longer be collateral damage for an outdated foreign policy. We
reject such hostilities, and call for your administration to realize its own
pledges for a more diplomatic and humane U.S. that respects the sovereignty of
other nations. We strongly urge you to take meaningful steps towards ending the
economic embargo and lifting all travel restrictions to Cuba for all U.S. citizens and residents.
Many of us
identify with the philosophical principle that you were elected on-a platform
of change-and that is our incentive towards contacting you. At this historical
moment, your administration has the opportunity to start that new beginning you
mentioned the U.S. was seeking. We agree and call for
more engagement.
We are students,
teachers, medical personnel, autoworkers, social workers, artists, professors,
lawyers and community organizers, among other occupations. We are an
intergenerational group of different races, ethnicities, sexes, and sexual
orientations, and are traveling from throughout the U.S. We will be doing volunteer work (in
the past 40 years, this has varied from sugar cane harvests to painting
neighborhood hospitals to renovating schools) and meeting with Cubans
throughout the island (from rappers to hurricane relief workers to those
fighting for LGBT equality to the Federation of Cuban Women); opening up
engagement and dialogue among both people while exercising our constitutional
right to travel.
This is what
unites us: our affirmation of our constitutional right to travel, solidarity
with the Cuban people, and an absolute condemnation of a foreign policy that
has used the Cuban people's suffering as a political pawn, blocking off
engagement between both countries.
The time for
rectifying U.S. foreign policy towards Cuba is past due.
Your
administration has recently taken steps towards dialogue with Cuba. There is bipartisan support in
both houses of Congress for further opening. The majority of the U.S. population - including Cuban Americans
- is in favor of these measures. In addition, congressional momentum towards
easing the embargo has been in line with the expansion of internet-based
technologies within Cuba, as well as economic benefits for
the U.S., particularly for the agricultural
industry and small, minority- and women-owned businesses. Furthermore, the very
constitutionality of the travel restrictions, a means of enforcing the embargo,
will soon be challenged in our federal courts.
In Cuba, the highest-ranking leadership has
repeatedly expressed its willingness to discuss any topic-even offering to
release all individuals the U.S. considers political prisoners. In
just the past few years, there have been new, developing social and cultural
spaces where political critiques are being expressed - independently - by
Cubans themselves. These have been accompanied by several deregulatory measures
by the new President there.
Internationally, U..S. foreign policy towards Cuba is overwhelmingly denounced. From
the U.N General Assembly condemning the embargo for 17 consecutive years to the
Organization of American States (OAS) recently deciding to rectify the act of
excluding Cuba, the international community has
clearly called for a multilateral approach that includes-not isolates-Cuba.
Thus, the question
is not why we should lift the embargo-with the travel restrictions as part of
their enforcement- but why is it still in place? Such a justification is
inconsistent with our constitutional rights, your electoral pledge for foreign
relations based on respect and equality and the most decent, humanitarian
sentiments of the U.S. people. Such sentiments require an
opening of exchange, an end to the embargo and all other acts against Cuba, including the incarceration of the
5 Cuban patriots-sent here to cooperate with the U.S. government against terrorism- whom
you can, and should free through a presidential pardon.
Therefore, we ask
that you-with your authority as President-transcend the old, stalled politics
of yesterday. We urge you to support lifting the travel restrictions for all U.S. citizens and residents, and take
serious steps towards ending the economic embargo on Cuba. Only then can a new beginning
begin, where the U.S. and Cuba lay the foundation for a
relationship based on friendship and mutual respect.
Until then, we
will travel to Cuba as the 40th contingent of the
Venceremos Brigade, demanding a U.S. foreign policy that respects our
rights and our sentiments towards the Cuban people.
Sincerely,
Diego
Iniguez-Lopez (Tel 201-294-0941)
Bonnie Massey (Tel
917-607-2264)
On behalf of the
Venceremos Brigade, 40th contingent
Venceremos Brigade
PO
Box 5202 Englewood, NJ 07631-5202 email: vbrigade@yahoo.com
voicemail: 212-560-4360 website: www.venceremosbrigade.org
<http://www.venceremosbrigade.org/>
"...one has a
moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws" Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.