Cuba, Fidel Castro
The miracle of Armando
Valladares
By Judi McLeod
Tuesday, November 15, 2005
It has to be one of the most curious coincidences ever. A letter, subject “The Shepherd ‘Blesses’ The Wolf,
found it’s way to my email on Monday.
In that letter, author and Cuban anti-communist crusader
Armando Valladares laments the recent visit of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone,
Archbishop of Genoa to the “island prison” called Cuba.
A former Cuban political prisoner of some 22 years,
Valladares was American ambassador before the Human Rights Commission of the
United Nations in Geneva under the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George
Bush Senior.
Anybody who reads the canadafreepress.com website knows I am no fan of the corrupt and
scandal-plagued Kofi Annan-led UN.
In short I do not believe that the UN is anywhere close to the warm and fuzzy
blanket image it ascribes to itself in myriad media releases, but a political
agenda in the making.
As an author, Valladares won rave reviews for his
book-testimonial Contra toda esperanza (Against
All Hope), in which he relates his life in
Fidel Castro’s soul-killing prisons.
That’s where coincidence steps in. The book I happened to be reading when the Shepherd Blesses
the Wolf letter arrived was Against All Hope.
I don’t know how it’s even possible but that’s how it
happened.
Published circa 1985, It’s not as though Contra toda
esperanza is a new book. I picked it up in a second hand
bookshop in September and didn’t get around reading it until now. Once I started the book, I was held
spellbound. It’s a compelling
story and the unvarnished truth,
In the middle of the night, Valladares was dragged from his
home in front of his mother and sister.
It was to take some 22 years before an international campaign of protest
saw him set free.
As I was reading the book, I felt myself wishing that I
could somehow someday meet its courageous author. Then came the letter.
In the important praise for Against All Hope are the words of someone else who holds my
admiration, Claudia Rosett, the journalist who put the UN Oil-For-Food scandal
on the journalism map.
“If the book has a fault, it is that the author chronicles
more variations on cruelty than anyone should ever know. That fault belongs not to the writer,
but to a regime so invasive that it would do anything to blot out the private
dissent of a 24-year-old Postal Savings Bank bureaucrat, which is what Mr.
Valladares was at the time of his arrest,” said Rosett.
Castro and Company may have taken 22 years of Valladare’s
life, but they couldn’t take the fighting spirit of a hero, who to this very
day remembers and will always remember his companions who were tortured and
murdered in Fidel Castro’s jails or the thousands of prisoners still suffering
in them.
No one should be surprised to find Valladares calling on
Cardinal Bertone for the details he revealed at a press conference, where he
claimed that “the Church in Cuba is viewed with respect by the government” and
that “Castro himself manifested great appreciation for the Church”.
Imagine the heartache for the relatives of thousands of
Cuban prisoners having to hear from the Cardinal’s lips that in the island
prison of Cuba “already the opening is total”.
Propaganda is hard to take no matter what its source, but
propaganda from an official representative of the Vatican comes with vinegar.
It would take what the Spanish-speaking people call a
“Milagros” for Fidel Castro to manifest “great appreciation for the Church”.
There is about as much hope for an epiphany for Castro, as
there would be for his Russian master Vladimir Putin.
The only milagros on the landscape is Armando Valladares.
Canada Free Press founding editor Most recent by Judi McLeod is an award-winning journalist with 30 years experience in the print media. Her work has appeared on Newsmax.com, Drudge Report, Foxnews.com, Glenn Beck. Judi can be reached at: judi@canadafreepress.com
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