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Guardia Bolivariano
23rd February 2003, 21:53
Artículo de Gabriel García Márquez sobre el 11 de septiembre:

Cómo se siente? ¿Cómo se siente ver que el horror estalla en tu patio y no en el living del vecino?

¿Cómo se siente el miedo apretando tu pecho, el pánico que provocan el ruido ensordecedor

las llamas sin control, los edificios que se derrumban, ese terrible olor que se mete hasta el fondo en los pulmones, los ojos de los inocentes que caminan cubiertos de sangre y polvo?

¿Cómo se vive por un día en tu propia casa la incertidumbre de lo que va a pasar? ¿Cómo se sale del estado de shock? En estado de shock caminaban el 6 de agosto de 1945 los sobrevivientes de Hiroshima. Nada quedaba en pie en la ciudad luego que el artillero norteamericano del Enola Gay dejara caer la bomba. En pocos segundos habían muerto 80.000 hombres mujeres y niños. Otros 250.000 morirían en los años siguientes a causa de las radiaciones.

Pero ésa era una guerra lejana y ni siquiera existía la televisión.

¿Cómo se siente hoy el horror cuando las terribles imágenes de la televisión te dicen que lo ocurrido el fatídico 11 de septiembre no pasó en una tierra lejana sino en tu propia patria? Otro 11 de setiembre, pero de 28 años atrás, había muerto un presidente de nombre Salvador Allende resistiendo un golpe de Estado que tus gobernantes habían planeado. También fueron tiempos de horror, pero eso pasaba muy lejos de tu frontera, en una ignota republiqueta sudamericana. Las republiquetas estaban en tu patio trasero y nunca te preocupaste mucho cuando tus marines salían a sangre y fuego a

imponer sus puntos de vista.

¿Sabías que entre 1824 y 1994 tu país llevó a cabo 73 invasiones a países de América Latina? Las víctimas fueron Puerto Rico, México, Nicaragua, Panamá, Haití, Colombia, Cuba, Honduras, República Dominicana, Islas Vírgenes, El Salvador, Guatemala y Granada.

Hace casi un siglo que tus gobernantes están en guerra. Desde el comienzo del siglo XX, casi no hubo una guerra en el mundo en que la gente de tu Pentágono no hubiera participado. Claro, las bombas siempre explotaron fuera de tu territorio, con excepción de Pearl Harbor cuando la aviación japonesa bombardeó la Séptima Flota en 1941. Pero siempre el horror estuvo lejos.

Cuando las Torres Gemelas se vinieron abajo en medio del polvo, cuando viste las imágenes por televisión o escuchaste los gritos porque estabas esa mañana en Manhattan, ¿pensaste por un segundo en lo que sintieron los campesinos de Vietnam durante muchos años? En Manhattan, la gente caía desde las alturas de los rascacielos como trágicas marionetas. En Vietnam, la gente daba alaridos porque el napalm seguía quemando la carne por mucho tiempo y la muerte era espantosa, tanto como las de quienes caían en un salto desesperado al vacío.

Tu aviación no dejó una fábrica en pie ni un puente sin destruir en Yugoslavia. En Irak fueron 500.000 los muertos. Medio millón de almas se llevó la Operación Tormenta del Desierto...¿Cuánta gente desangrada en lugares tan exóticos y lejanos como Vietnam, Irak, Irán, Afganistán, Libia, Angola, Somalia, Congo, Nicaragua, Dominicana, Camboya, Yugoslavia, Sudán, y una lista interminable?

En todos esos lugares los proyectiles habían sido fabricados en factorías de tu país, y eran apuntados por tus muchachos, por gente pagada por tu Departamento de Estado, y sólo para que tu pudieras seguir gozando de la forma de vida americana.

Hace casi un siglo que tu país está en guerra con todo el mundo.

Curiosamente, tus gobernantes lanzan los jinetes del Apocalipsis en nombre de la libertad y de la democracia. Pero debes saber que para muchos pueblos del mundo (en este planeta donde cada día mueren 24.000 pobladores por hambre o enfermedades curables), Estados Unidos no representa la libertad, sino un enemigo lejano y terrible

que sólo siembra guerra, hambre, miedo y destrucción. Siempre han sido conflictos bélicos lejanos para ti, pero para quienes viven allá es una dolorosa realidad cercana, una guerra donde los edificios se desploman bajo las bombas y donde esa gente encuentra una muerte horrible. Y las víctimas han sido, en el 90 por ciento, civiles, mujeres, ancianos, niños efectos colaterales.

¿Qué se siente cuando el horror golpea a tu puerta aunque sea por un sólo día? ¿Qué se piensa cuando las víctimas en Nueva York son secretarias, operadores de bolsa o empleados de limpieza que pagaban puntualmente sus impuestos y nunca mataron una mosca?

¿Cómo se siente el miedo? ¿Cómo se siente, yanqui, saber que la larga guerra finalmente el 11 de septiembre llegó a tu casa?

Gabriel García Márquez

Larissa
23rd February 2003, 22:16
Es increíble! Las palabras de Gabo siempre serán una obra maestra, una enseñanza y una herencia para la humanidad. Esta carta es simplemente maravillosa, gracias Genaro.

Saint-Just
23rd February 2003, 23:03
Such a poetic and emotive letter. Who is Gabriel García Márquez? does George W. Bush take notice of him?

Larissa
23rd February 2003, 23:22
Quote: from Chairman Mao on 8:03 pm on Feb. 23, 2003
Such a poetic and emotive letter. Who is Gabriel García Márquez? does George W. Bush take notice of him? Gabriel García Márquez, 1982 Nobel Laureate in Literature, born in Colombia and one of the geeatest novelist! My favorite.
http://almaz.com/nobel/literature/1982a.html
I'm reading his last book, the first part of his autobiography: "To live to tell it" (Vivir para contarla)

Saint-Just
23rd February 2003, 23:36
Quote: from Larissa on 11:22 pm on Feb. 23, 2003

Quote: from Chairman Mao on 8:03 pm on Feb. 23, 2003
Such a poetic and emotive letter. Who is Gabriel García Márquez? does George W. Bush take notice of him? Gabriel García Márquez, 1982 Nobel Laureate in Literature, born in Colombia and one of the geeatest novelist! My favorite.
http://almaz.com/nobel/literature/1982a.html
I'm reading his last book, the first part of his autobiography: "To live to tell it" (Vivir para contarla)

Ok, thank you, that helps understand it better.

Ze
24th February 2003, 01:05
Garcia Marquez is a great writer. He makes me proud to be Colombian.

Doshka
24th February 2003, 10:31
Gabriel Gacia Marquez is the best writer that ever lived!!! i read 100 years of Solitude and fell in love with him...please does anyone know if there is a translated letter in english? he makes me proud to call myself a human

Doshka
24th February 2003, 10:33
Gabriel Gacia Marquez is the best writer that ever lived!!! i read 100 years of Solitude and fell in love with him...please does anyone know if there is a translated letter in english? he makes me proud to call myself a human

Doshka
24th February 2003, 10:37
Gabriel Garcie Marquez is the best writer that ever lived. he makes me proud to be a human...please does anyone know if there is a translated letter in english? he and Isabel Allende are the only thing i live for :P

Doshka
24th February 2003, 10:40
sorry about the repeated post..i dont know whats wrong with the internet

Blasphemy
24th February 2003, 18:27
hmmm.... i bet it's brilliants, judging from marquez's extraordinary literal masterpieces, but, alas, i cannot read spanish.

Larissa
24th February 2003, 18:57
I think the English version mught be here, somewhere...
http://www.themodernword.com/gabo/index.html

Larissa
24th February 2003, 19:08
FOUND IT!!!
on September 11, 2001"

How do you feeel? How does it feel when the horror explodes in your patio and not in the living room of your neighbour? How does itr feel with fear clutching your chest, the panic from the deafening noise, the flames out of control, that terrible smell which goes to the bottom of your lungs, the eyes of the innocents walking covered with dust and blood?

How is it to lie for a day in your own house with the uncertainty of what is going to happen? How does one get out of shock? On the 6th of August, 1945 the survivors of Hiroshima walked in a state of shock. Nothing in the city remained standing after t he North American bombardier of the Enola Gray dropped the bomb. In a few seconds 80,000 men, women and children had died, Another 250,000 would die in the following years from the radiation. But this was a far away war and television did not yet exist. How did it feel when the terrible television images told you that what happened on the fatal 11th of September was not in a far away land, but in your own homeland? Another 11th of September, but 28 years back, a president named Salvador

Allende was killed resisting a coup d'etat your government had planned. There, also, were times of horror, but this happened far away from your frontiers, in an unknown little South American republic. The little republics are in your back yard and nothing disturbs you when your marines go in with blood and fire to impose your points of view. Do you know that between 1824 and 1994 your country carried out 73 invasions of various countries of Latin America?

The countries were Puerto Rico, Mexico, Nicaraugua, Panama, Haaiti, Colombia, Cuba, Honduras, Dominical Republic, Virgin Islands, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Granada. For almost a whole century your governments have been at war.

From the beginning of the XXth century, there has been hardly a war in the world in which the people of your Pentagon have not participated. Obviously, the bombs always burst outside

of your territory, except for Pearl Harbor, when Japanese aircraft bombed your Seventh Fleet in 1941. But always the horror was far away.

When the Twin Towers came down in a cloud of dust, when you saw the pictures on television or heard the cries because you were in Manhattan, did you think for even a second of what

the peasants of Vietnam felt for many years? In Vietnam the people screamed because napalm continues burning the flesh for a long time and death is frightful, as much as for those who fall in a desperate leap into space.

Your aircraft did not leave a factory or a bridge standing in Yugoslavia. In Iraq there were 500,000 dead. Operation Desert Storm took half a million lives. How many people bled to death in places as exotic and distant as Vietnam, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Libya, Angola, Somalia, Congo, Nicaragua, Dominicana, Cambodia, Yugoslavia, Sudan, and an endless list.

In all these places the projectiles were manufactured in your factories, in your country, were aimed by your boys, by people paid by the State Department, and only so that you could continue enjoying the American way of life. It is almost a century that your country has been at war with the whole world. Curiously, your country launches the horsemen of the Apocalypse in the name of liberty and democracy. But you should know that far away peoples of the world, (on this planet 24,000 inhabitants die every day from hunger or curable illnesses), the United States does not represent liberty, but a distant and terrible enemy who only sows war, hunger, fear and destruction. These always have been distant armed conflicts for you, but for those who live there it is a sad and near reality, a war where the buildings collapse under the bombs and where the people meet a horrible death. And the victims have always been, 90 percent of them, civilians, women, old people, children - collateral damage.

How do you feel when the horror knocks at your own door for just one day? What do you think when the victims in New are secretaries, exchange operators, cleaning workers, who regularly pay their taxes and wouldn't hurt a fly?

How does fear feel? How do you feel, Yankee, to know that the long war, finally, on September 11, reached your home?

Thanks to John Manning for supplying the translation.
http://www.spectrezine.org/weeklynewsrevie...wnr20,02,03.htm (http://www.spectrezine.org/weeklynewsreview/wnr20,02,03.htm)

***Please note that the link where I found this translation of Gabo's letter says "Argentine novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote this letter to junta leader Bush" - Ganriel García Márquez was born in COLOMBIA.

Larissa
24th February 2003, 20:37
I have e-mailed the spectrum site about their mistake on Gabo's nationality and got this message back:

"Dear Mariana,

Oops! I am surprised and embarrassed by this! We'll come clean with this weekend's update.

It's especially embarrasing as I first read him almost exactly 27 years ago. I can be accurate about that as I was given One Hundred Years of Solitude for my 21st birthday, a tragic event as both I and my friend who bought it for me were dirt poor at the time, and could't afford books than weren't on our course reading list, and I'd just bought and read it...I was guilty enough to read it again, which was well worth it, however. Since then I have enjoyed several of his works, without reading anything about the man. I'm sure he's routinely described as Argentine in the Brit press, which is, however, almost exclusively written by idiots whose company I don't care to join.

Still, nationality is a fairly minor detail of someone who surely belongs to all of us and none of us.

Nevertheless, we will share this detail with our readers.

Peace & solidarity,
Steve
Editor, Spectre
(and rather minor novelist...)

>>> "Mariana" <[email protected]> 02/24/03 20:16 PM >>>
To Whom It May Concern,

Please note that Gabriel Garcia Marquez was born in COLOMBIA.

Argentine novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote this letter to junta leader Bush:

http://www.spectrezine.org/weeklynewsrevie...wnr20,02,03.htm (http://www.spectrezine.org/weeklynewsreview/wnr20,02,03.htm)

I wished he were Argentine :-)

Thanks

Mariana Barrancos
Buenos Aires, Argentina

Moncho Brujo
25th February 2003, 18:56
Great, garcia marquez rulesss!!!!!!

MEXCAN
25th February 2003, 21:42
Ya GABO is great!!!I could just imagine what Pablo Neruda would of wrote about this 9/11??Having lived through 9/11/73,Pablo died at the hands of the horrible
dictartorship on 9/23/73 !!!!FUCK PINOCHET,FUCK THE CIA.