May 12, 1997
CUBA'S NEW INDEPENDENT FARMERS: A Mission Statement
Prior to the Revolution, Cuban peasants were mired by
backwards conditions and social marginalization, the
ownership of the land by a few, and general
underdevelopment. We placed our faith, hope and energies in
a political process in which, once and for all, we would put
an end to social injustice.
So it was that, forgetting the dangers inherent in
violent revolutionary processes, we encountered the
so-called "rebel" movement which on January 1,
1959 usurped power.
A sense of great hope filled our simple peasants'
hearts, seeing the seizure of others' property as the
solution to our own predicament. Something like "taking
from the rich to give to the poor".
But our dreams were quickly crushed. The socialist
model of collectivized agricultural and fishing industries,
controlled by the State, forcibly seized control of all our
lands, our products, and even our very lives.
Our response to this was one of two: Join the massive
exodus from the countryside to urban areas, or stay behind
and conform to the new order, feeling complete apathy
towards our work. Under the new system, many under-paid
laborers and farmers pretended to work, and the State
pretended to pay them. Others managed to carve out some
autonomy in the system and produce farm products at a
subsistence level, secretly selling small amounts of food in
the new underground economy in order to survive.
These two responses were in effect a form of passive
resistance, a way of making do while we waited for a real
solution to our problems, for new agricultural policies
which would truly respond to our needs.
Thirty-eight years have now passed. Today we are
witnesses to the massive level of impoverishment to which
the entire nation has fallen. Our families are at risk of
malnutrition and disease, and our life energy is consumed by
unnecessary struggles and sacrifice.
Therefore, we farmers, being of legal age and in full
physical health, wish to bring together our own resources
and personal initiative to seek ways in which we can help
ourselves and our families, and perhaps even the nation, to
meet our most basic needs.
Towards this end, we subscribe to the National
Salvation Program outlined by the Cuban Orthodox Renovation
Party:
[a] Freedom of association, and of non-association,
according to the individual's interests;
[b] Freedom to work the land, in terms of method,
quantity and quality;
[c] Free Farmers' Markets Agricultural and
fishing products will be sold as is most practical in terms
of place, time and clientele. The State will be a client on
equal footing with average citizens.
[d] The marketing of farmers' products, including
coffee, cacao, sugar cane, etc., will not be restricted by
the State;
[e] A portion of farmers' goods will be sold to foreign
markets and the tourist industry in order to raise the funds
necessary to purchase the equipment and fuel needed for our
labor;
[f] Farmers will be free to raise all type of animals,
including cattle, with which to guarantee our family's diet
and engage in commerce according to market conditions and
sanitary regulations.
[g] Farmers will be free to negotiate with any and all
domestic and foreign institutions interested in financing
these projects, limited only by our own capabilities and
national financial regulations.
[h] We will organize and struggle to demand that the
Government suspend all those measures and regulations which
harm the peasantry, crushing our productivity and plunging
us deeper into poverty.
In order to bring about all of the above, we come
together under the principles and rights of an NGO
(Non-Governmental Organization) to establish this
agricultural/fishing cooperative which we have named "Transicion".
The Transicion Cooperative is currently comprised of 20
members, or 80 family members, who have channeled 54
hectares of arable land 10.5 hectares of grazing
land, 13.5 hectares of coffee fields, 7 hectares of fruit
groves and 23 hectares currently unused.
Development Projects
Livestock: Construction of cow stalls for milking and
shade. Electrification, digging of wells and watering holes.
Build access roads. Subdivision of lots for grazing.
Hogs: Construction of stalls for reproduction and
feeding.
Poultry: Construction of aviaries for reproduction,
feeding and egg production. Installation of incubators.
Coffee: Seeding and re-seeding of the most productive
varieties. Planting / pruning of shade trees. Bean
processing plant.
Misc. crops: Planting of viands, vegetables and
cereals.
Fisheries: Reproduction of various species for human
consumption and for animal feed.
Basic needs: Construction of new family housing. Obtain
clothing and work shoes. Guarantee daily dietary needs of
workers and their families.
Materials and Equipment: Installation of irrigation
systems. Multipurpose tractor and cargo truck. Construction
materials. Plowing equipment. Chainsaws for cutting/trimming
trees. Fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides. Gasoline and
lubricating oils.
Financing for animal feed, sanitation and veterinary
attention as well as seeds.
Signed on behalf of the Transition Cooperative
Jorge Bejar Baltazar
President
Distributed by Cubanet