Showing posts with label Cuban Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuban Culture. Show all posts

Film Screening at the West Perth Lotteries House  


This is an open invitation for all ACFSers and their family and friends.

A great opportunity to discuss greening Cuba and its example for a sustainable
and greener world.

Learn about the Southern Cross Brigade to Cuba from 28 Dec 2011 to 20 Jan 2012
www.cubabrigade.org.au

Join us and spread the word.

More information: acfsperth@gmail.com

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Jose Marti commemoration by Perth ACFS  


On Thursday 28th January the ACFS Perth called for a special meeting to celebrate the 157th anniversary of birth of Cuban hero of independence Jose Marti.

It was a very moving celebration to pay homage and remember one of the greatest Latin American poets and revolutionaries who committed their lives to the people.

The ACFS screened the documentary on the life of Marti, ‘Soldier of light” which gives a brief description of the rich life of the apostle of Cuba. Members of the society discussed the life of Jose Marti and read one of his famous poems: “Versos Sencillos”.

ACFS also discussed Cuban’s contribution in Haiti as well as condemned the occupation carried out by the Obama Administration in contrast with Cubans medical assistance.
The attendees demanded Cuba be removed from the US list of countries sponsors of international terrorism.

ACFS has sent letters to the US ambassador based in Canberra demanding the removal of Cuba from the US terrorist list. ACFS also sent an open letter to the Australian Foreign Affairs minister, the Hon Stephen Smith asking the government to make a donation of medicines to the Cuban health brigade in Haiti.

ACFS read a message of solidarity sent by local member Dr Katherine Edyvane who is currently working with a team of Cuban doctors in East Timor.

Finally, we all enjoyed a delicious cake specially baked for the occasion by local member
Rhonda Andrews.

Viva Cuba,
Viva Jose Marti
Long live the friendship between Australia and Cuba!

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Jose Marti celebration 28 Jan 2010  


Please join us for a celebration to commemorate Jose Marti's birth. A short documentary will be screened, join us and feel free to invite your friends along. There will also be a brief discussion about the latest developments of US policy on Cuba such as the inclusion on the list of 14 countries that sponsor terrorism. Bring a plate to share, we will have drinks there.

Thursday 28 January
6.30pm Perth Activist Centre 
(15 / 5 Aberdeen St, East Perth - next to McIver station)

[Please note this meeting doesn't replace our first branch meeting for 2010 which will be held at the activist centre on Monday 1st February at 6:30pm]

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Royal Ballet and upcoming ACFS event  



Dear ACFSers:

We have posted here a video on the Royal Ballet recent visit to Cuba. You can also look at the comments posted by viewers: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlOYra_wzKU

The anniversary of birth of Cuban hero of independence Jose Marty is on this Thursday 28th January. We will endeavor to organise a short meeting to pay homage to him. Details to follow.

We will also include a discussion on the recent inclusion of Cuba as a country sponsor of international terrorism by the Obama administration.

In friendship,

Vinnie Molina





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Juanes: this Concert is the Greatest Deam of Love and Peace( Videos)- (Eng.& Span.)  

Van Van Closes Peace without Borders Concert

HAVANA, Cuba (acn) Van Van, the popular Cuban band, was in charge of closing the 2nd Peace without Border Concert in this city, attended by over one million Cubans.

Worldwide Repercussion over Peace Concert in Havana

ACN Breaking News: Over One Million People at Peace Concert

Concert for Peace: Jovanotti Returns to Havana

World Music Stars Parade on the Peace Concert Stage in Havana

Love and Peace in Mega-concert in Havana

Puerto Rican Olga Tañon Opens Peace without Borders Concert

Pictures Taken by ACN news agency: Roberto Morejon, Sergio Abel, and Ismael

Juanes: this Concert is the Greatest Dream of Love and Peace
HAVANA, Cuba, Sep 20 (acn) “This concert is the greatest dream of peace and love I have experienced after the birth of my children,” affirmed on Sunday Colombian singer Juanes before over one million Cubans enjoying Colombian singer Juanes (L) performing in Havana City along Spanish Miguel Bose (R)the Peace without Borders presentation in this city.

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¡Más de un millón de cubanos
cantaron con Juanes a la Paz!

Abrazo emocionado tras la materialización de un sueño. Miguel Bosé, Olga Tañón y Juanes.  Foto: Sergio Abel  ACNEn la Plaza de la Revolución este domingo. Fusión de pueblo y artistas, de sueños y esperanzas. El cierre del fabuloso espectáculo fue con Los Van Van. Conmovedoras palabras de despedida de los participantes y estremecedor abrazo de Juanes, Olga Tañón y Miguel Bosé en el escenario. Muchos lloraron por la emoción de haber logrado este noble propósito. Agradecidos los cubanos aclamaron al elenco manifestándole cariño y admiración. Fue un regalo para Cuba y un hermoso tributo a la solidaridad

Participantes en el concierto Paz sin Fronteras: Juanes, Miguel Bosé, Víctor Manuel y Luis Eduardo Aute, Juan Fernando Velasco, Jovanotti, Olga Tañón, Danny Rivera, Silvio Rodríguez, Amaury Pérez, el grupo Orishas, Carlos Varela y X Alfonso, Cucu Diamante y Yerba Buena y la orquesta Los Van Van. los artistas de España, Colombia, Italia, Ecuador y Puerto Rico, coincidieron en destacar al pueblo como el gran protagonista de la jornada.
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Video de Juanes tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Video de Danny Rivera

De los intérpretes en el espectáculo

Juanes: a pesar de las diferencias todos somos hermanos, el amor es más fuerte que el odio y nada hay más importante que la paz. Aquí vemos lo importante que es el amor y la paz, este es el mensaje no más.Todos estamos conectados. Lo importante es el amor, lo importante es la paz. No creo lo que mis ojos ven, este concierto es el sueño más grande de paz y amor.

Van Van cierra a ritmo cubano, bailar sin parar, ¡la candela!
Carlos Valera
canta Colgando del cielo
Luis Eduardo Aute:
habrá un antes y un después de este histórico concierto
Silvio Rodríguez
canta El Escaramujo y Ojalá
Orichas :
¡que se sienta Cuba en todo el mundo!
Cucú Diamante y Yerba Buena:
Cuba, que viva Cuba
Jovanotti:
en el concierto se habla el mismo idioma, el de la paz
Miguel Bosé:
la paz, el derecho más grande que tiene el ser humano
Víctor Manuel:
feliz de estar nuevamente en Cuba
Amaury Pérez
cantó Yo tengo un amor difícil y Hacerte venir
Juan Fernando Velasco:
agradecido por la oportunidad de enviar al mundo un mensaje de paz
Danny Rivera:
hay que luchar por la justicia
X Alfonso
canta con un coro de niños
Olga Tañón:
Cuba y Puerto Rico son de un pájaro las dos alas

tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Olga Tañón inició el desfile y dejó caliente la pista
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Víctor Manuel, Amaury, Miguel Bosé, Carlos Varela, Jovanotti, Cucú Diamantes y Yerbabuena
Después del concierto:
Juanes: la alegría que siento es indescriptible, muy fuerte, estoy muy emocionado, queremos muchísimo a los cubanos y deseamos que esta relación sea más intensa
Olga Tañón: nunca me arrepentiré de haber venido, este es el viaje más importante de mi vida
Víctor Manuel: ha sido la tarde de domingo más completa
Amaury Pérez: me siento orgulloso de ser cubano y haber tomado parte en el concierto
Danny Rivera: parecía que el mundo estaba cambiando
Antes del concierto:
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)
Olga Tañón: será el concierto del siglo
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)
Miguel Bosé: canto a los mejores sueños de los seres humanos
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Yotuel Romero: vi en los ojos de Juanes la pureza y la paz
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Jovanotti: será una experiencia única, inolvidable
tri_red.gif (91 bytes)Danny Rivera: es como si toda América pueda tocarse con las canciones

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ACFS group booking at Che film premiere  

CHE Film - with Australia Cuba Friendship Society 6:00 PM
Please join the Australia Cuba Friendship Society for the opening of the Benicio Del Toro film on the life of Che Guevara at the cinema Paradiso in Northbridge on Thursday 1st October -- The evening will commence at 6:00pm with greetings from the Branch President of the Society followed by the latest hits from Guatemalan singer/songwriter Carlos Castellanos --- The film starts at 6:30pm with drinks and nibbles to follow for those who wish to stay on after the film. Tickets are available now by ringing Vinnie on 0419 812 872 or Elizabeth 0421 113 443 - Bookings and tickets available now! please dont miss out as numbers are limited -- Prices: $15 ($20 solidarity) All proceeds to go to Las Tunas Children's hospital in Cuba -- Please collect your raffle door ticket at the door and try your luck for a surprise Cuban prize.

Vinnie Molina ACFS president 0419812872

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Review of new Che Guevara film  

Join ACFS at the opening night in Perth on October 1, 6.30pm, Paradiso.
Email: acfsperth@gmail.com for details


Che Film in two parts
Film directed by Steven Soderburgh
Review by Richard Titelius

According to the notes accompanying the release of the movie there were 7 years of research and filming undertaken to make this movie of the life of Che in two parts which comes in at just over four hours.

Upon seeing the movie one will be struck by the efforts taken to present a historically accurate, passionate and compelling rendition of the life of arguably the world’s most iconic revolutionary.

The movie received its world premier at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2008, for which Benicio Del Toro received the award for Best Actor for the colourful, engaging and serious portrayal of the Argentine physician who went on to lead the Cuban revolution with Fidel Castro in the 1950’s.

The movie has gone on to receive mixed reviews around the world where the First World bourgeois media feels compelled to acknowledge the icons enduring legacy in front of the rest of the world, while also pandering to those who support its capitalist interests which Che fearlessly denounced on their own soil and in front of their own institutions.

The movie played to mild protests from Cuban expatriates at its opening in Miami and on the other side of the Florida Straits a few days later in November 2008, the movie played to a strong ovation, according to the official Cuban media Granma.

The movie has been released in Australia and is unlikely to receive much interest from the Cinema multiplexes around Australia and will spend much of its release in art house cinemas where its thoughtful and difficult though universal themes of justice, freedom and liberty will receive a more receptive audience.

The movie starts with the auspicious meeting of Fidel Castro (Mexican actor Demian Bichir) and Ernesto “Che” Guevara in the home of a Cuban friend in Mexico City in July 1955.

The movie follows in tone and sentiment with 2004’s “The Motorcycle Diaries” which traced the journey of the young Che Guevara with his friend Alberto Granado from Argentina, through Chile and Peru and eventually to Venezuela. It was on this trip that the young Che saw the harsh conditions and exploitation under which many people lived in the Latin continent and awoke in him the fierce desire to change the material conditions under which these people lived.

Soderburgh’s Che then passes from Mexico City to the southern shores of Cuba via the good ship Granma and on to the mountains of Sierra Maestra where the revolutionaries scored their first significant victories.

Part I alternates in grainy black and white film to the occasion in 1964 when Che visited the United States and gave an interview to the US media and delivered a passionate and fiery speech to the UN General Assembly on the resolve of the Cuban people.

The movie has its strong portrayals of battle with the armed forces of the government of Fulgencio Batista though these battles do not glorify war or violence in any way but show that a people who want justice, liberty and a better life must be prepared to fight those who will use violence including torture and other deprivations to resist the struggle of the people for a better life.

The movie contrasts with the texture of the usual Hollywood movies about the wars fought in the interests of capital where the protagonists of the conflicts and its soldiers have little interest in bringing freedom, justice and a better life to the lands where the wars are fought. In this sense Che the movie is the antithesis of most war movies (the wars of imperialism) where the protagonists of these movies are usually seen engaged in destruction and messing around with the women and messing up themselves. In this war Che makes it clear that any revolutionary can leave at certain times if they are not ready or able to continue and are given explicit instructions about the rules of engagement with the masses and the consequences for transgression which can include death. The revolutionaries also take care of the wounded of their enemy as well as their own.

The first part of the movie was shot in Cuba itself and the smaller part actors are peppered with the accents of indigenous Cuban actors and the vegetation and buildings in the towns and countryside are also reminiscent of a recent visit to Cuba-as are the old yet immaculately kept US cars from the late 1940’s and 1950’s which adorn the set in the urban settings. Part II is shot in Bolivia and Spain.

Part I of the movie concludes as the army buoyed by their victory in Santa Clara head on to the final victory in Havana.

If the tone of this Part I is predominantly upbeat as one knows the outcome of the Cuban Revolution, the tone of the second part is grim and forbidding though still engaging as is the enigma that surrounds much of this period of Che’s when he withdrew from his posts in Cuba and went to Bolivia.

He went there ostensibly to start the liberation of South America where the oppression and contradictions were at their greatest.

The colour and setting are more austere in Bolivia in line with the tone or theme of this part of Che’s life.

Though Fidel Castro had advised his comrade and friend against going to Bolivia as the timing was not right and to wait for things to calm down, it was Che who said to Fidel in Mexico at the start of their adventures together that if the Cuban campaign was successful that he did not want to be stopped from taking the revolution to Argentina and Bolivia.

However, almost as soon as he got there he found that he did not have the support of the Bolivian Communist Party, partly because they did not trust a foreigner, notwithstanding that Simon Bolivar who helped liberate Bolivia from the Spanish in the 19th Century was also a foreigner from Venezuela.

The film follows the errors and disappointments of the Bolivian campaign, as Che and his Bolivian, Cuban and other Latin revolutionaries find their mission becoming increasingly compromised and unable to build a better world where children no longer have to work in mines and the average miner will live longer than 30 years.

The complicity of the USA in the fate of Che which feared another Revolution in Bolivia similar to Cuba, is well featured in the movie and includes a special appearance of Matt Damon as a negotiator.

The end of the movie is tense, dramatic and unpredictable though not the typical Hollywood fare notwithstanding that this is a Hollywood movie.

Though Che the revolutionary and freedom fighter died an ignoble end without seeing his dream of a revolution coming to Bolivia, ironically 40 years later, it would be a native from Bolivia, Evo Morales and the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) who would herald in a better world for the majority of Bolivians and they would remember Che at this time.

19th September 2009

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