Honduran Ex-President
Mel Zelaya meets with Chicago teachers and youth
Asks for solidarity to stop funding of military, increase international human rights presence
Asks for solidarity to stop funding of military, increase international human rights presence
Four years and one day after the military shot their way
through his back gate, Honduran Ex-President Mel Zelaya’s front door opened to
a delegation of teachers and youth from Chicago. Members of the Chicago
Teachers Union, Fearless Leading by the Youth and La Voz de los de Abajo sat
for an hour with President Zelaya as well as teacher leader Yanina Parada exchanging
ideas about the struggle for a world where human lives have more value than
private profit.
Zelaya receives a Chicago Teachers Union t-shirt From left: FLY member Victoria Crider, Honduran teacher/congressional candidate Yanina Parada, Mel Zelaya, CTU member Cynthia Smith |
As the social movements and Zelaya’s government began to work
together, they decided to push for deeper changes, seeking to re-found the
country and push for a new constitution. Zelaya agreed to launch a non-binding
referendum about whether or not to give Hondurans the chance to vote on
drafting a new constitution, a process that would take place after his
presidency since Honduran presidents have only one term. The mere prospect of people
having the chance to express their will about re-founding the country scared
the economic elite of Honduras and their U.S.-backers so much that they planned
and executed a military coup. On June 28th, 2009, the military
violently kidnapped Mel Zelaya, took him to the U.S. military base Palmerola
and then flew him out of the country.
Zelaya shows La Voz de los de Abajo coordinator Vicky Cervantes the bullet holes where the military entered his house during the coup |
Ever since the people have been in the streets. A resistance
movement was born that has surpassed the expectations of people on all sides for
its longevity, its size, its determination and its diversity. People weren’t
prepared to quietly give up the first ground they had gained in decades.
They have paid dearly for their resistance. Hundreds have
been killed in cold blood, assassinated in their homes, at the schools where they
teach, at protests, leaving funerals and union meetings. But the resistance has
been undeterred and a year ago launched a new party called LIBRE, Freedom and
Re-foundation. Mel Zelaya’s wife, Xiomara, is running for President in the
November 24th elections and all polls show her in the lead.
Alongside her people from grassroots struggles, from teachers to grandmothers
to young people around the country are running as LIBRE candidates for every
level of government. Yanina Parada, who set up today’s meeting with Zelaya, is
one example of many. A teacher whose long trajectory of struggle has earned her
great respect amongst teachers and others in the grassroots, she is now a LIBRE
candidate for congress. The powers that be are scared. They are killing off and
disappearing LIBRE candidates and members around the country in an attempt to
create a climate of fear and terror. Some within the resistance doubt that the
military will allow a clean election to happen and continue to prioritize the
social struggles against the government’s aggressive push to privatize
everything, break the unions, and criminalize protest. But many are putting all
of their energy into the upcoming electoral process.
Honduras is an important battleground between two radically
different visions. One vision, supported by the U.S. government, the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Honduran elite, says that
attracting investment and allowing big companies to make profit is the only path
to “development.” This vision is
based on the economic ideas of neo-liberalism, most famously associated with
Milton Friedman and the University of Chicago School of Economics. On the other
hand the Honduran resistance, like social movements around the planet, believes
that human rights to land, housing, quality education, healthcare and
employment are more important than profit and will be won only when the poor
majorities have the power to determine their own fate.
Chicago is also a battleground. While Honduras since the
coup has become the murder capital of the world, Chicago has one of the worst
murder rates in the United States. Chicago has long been a laboratory for
neoliberal policies. Public housing has been wiped out, 54 schools were just
closed, mental health clinics have been shuttered, health centers privatized,
and banks and rich corporations lavished with subsidies. The University of
Chicago, whose economics school produced many of the policies the Honduran
resistance fights against, is surrounded by some of the neighborhoods hardest
hit by violence yet refuses to attend to those being shot down at its hospital because
a trauma center would be “too expensive.” Meanwhile, vastly more money is being
spent on locking up youth in jails with deplorable conditions and subsidizing
profitable banks and corporations than providing resources so they can live in
peace.
As in Honduras, these policies have produced resistance.
Youth on the south side have built Fearless Leading by the Youth (FLY) and are
fighting for healthcare and education and against criminalization and
incarceration. Progressive teachers have taken control of the Chicago Teachers
Union and had the first teacher’s strike in 25 years, fighting to defend public
education and joining with parents and students to demand corporate subsidies
be reinvested into schools. It is youth and teachers from these struggles whom
Ex-President Zelaya opened his doors to today.
CTU and FLY members talking to Zelaya |
Corey Mason, a youth leader and FLY-cofounder going into his senior year at Philander Smith College, opened up the meeting
by asking President Zelaya what was the role of teachers and students in the
resistance and what the LIBRE party’s educational program is. President Zelaya responded
explaining that LIBRE is not a political party as much as a social movement
with political aims, that it seeks not to change the people in power but to
change the system itself. He also explained that globalization has led to a
situation where people are being bombarded by corporate influences every day
that often influence them more than formal education. Above all, he emphasized
that those with a direct stake in education, not corporations or powerful
international institutions, need to be making the decisions about it.
“Our educational plan is to associate ourselves with the
teachers. This current government has repressed the teachers under orders from
the International Monetary Fund, who says that the expenditures on salaries must
be cut. Do you think it is possible to have education without teachers? We must
be of one accord as governments, teachers, parents and students.”
He also explained, however, that he doesn’t believe
education can be tackled in isolation from broader issues of inequality. “We
must address education, health, social security, employment, citizen safety,
holistic development. If you just deal with education and don’t fix the rest,
it will come to nothing,” the former President responded to Corey.
“What struck me was when asked about his vision and the
vision of LIBRE regarding the educational system he talked about the need to
put in place a program that could help people develop ten years from the
present into their fullest potential rather than look at it from the
perspective of what business interests want at the moment. It was a thoughtful
and hopeful model of human development that says the people should determine
what education looks like, not the wealthy,” reflected Jackson Potter, staff
coordinator for the Chicago Teachers Union.
The conversation went from education to the upcoming
elections to repression to philosophy. When Chicago Public Schools special
education teacher Cynthia Smith asked Zelaya if he feared a coup if Xiomara
wins, he said he didn’t think that another coup will take place because the political
consequences of the last coup were too great for the U.S.. Many others in the
resistance, however, ask why the military would allow what they took by force
to be taken away from them at the polls. Nonetheless Zelaya strikes an
optimistic and determined tone, insisting that there is no choice but to
continue to struggle to honor all those who have fallen.
Zelaya with FLY youth leader Corey Mason |
When asked about if he has undergone a personal
transformation through this process, Zelaya said, “I am just a human being who
thinks we can all live in better conditions if we are just, if we have social
responsibility.”
When asked what advice he has for young revolutionaries, he
said, “Know yourself. Figure out why you believe what you believe and then you
will never stray.”
His words had a strong impact on the teachers and youth
leaders. Victoria Crider, a 17-year-old FLY leader and a junior at Martin
Luther King College Prep on Chicago’s south side, summarized her experience
saying, “Meeting the ex-president was powerful and intriguing. This meeting
gave me hope. The president had a thought that not one politician in the U.S.
has acknowledged, ‘what can I do to help those who doesn't have everything they
need?’ It gives me hope but it also puts into perspective the cruelty of the U.S.
government. Our system needs to be torn down and rebuilt with the bricks of
freedom, peace, humanity and this can be achieved through revolution.”
At the close of the meeting, La Voz de los de Abajo coordinator Vicky Cervantes asked Zelaya what the international community can do to show solidarity with Honduras. He made clear that the Honduran people's determination to change their country will prevail, but only if the powerful stop using violence as a tool of negotiation. He called on the international community to stop the flow of arms and military financing into Honduras and to establish a major presence to ensure the transparency of the election process and the monitoring of human rights violations. Before letting the delegation out the front door, he took it to the back gate to show the bullet holes that are still there from when the military violently removed him from power. "I leave it like this as a reminder of what we can never allow to happen again."
At the close of the meeting, La Voz de los de Abajo coordinator Vicky Cervantes asked Zelaya what the international community can do to show solidarity with Honduras. He made clear that the Honduran people's determination to change their country will prevail, but only if the powerful stop using violence as a tool of negotiation. He called on the international community to stop the flow of arms and military financing into Honduras and to establish a major presence to ensure the transparency of the election process and the monitoring of human rights violations. Before letting the delegation out the front door, he took it to the back gate to show the bullet holes that are still there from when the military violently removed him from power. "I leave it like this as a reminder of what we can never allow to happen again."
Ex-President Zelaya with FLY leaders Darrius Lightfoot and Victoria Crider |