Free pamphlet to download: `Cuba -- How the workers and peasants made the revolution'
On January 1, 1959, the hated US-backed Batista dictatorship in Cuba was overthrown by the workers, peasants and students. To mark that momentous occasion Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal is making freely available Resistance Books' Cuba: How the workers and peasants made the revolution, by Chris Slee (2008). Please click HERE to download the pamphlet in pdf format, or read it on screen below. If you would like to purchase a hard copy of the pamphlet, please visit Resistance Books.
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By Chris Slee
January 10, 2010 – Some left groups claim that the Cuban Revolution was made by a few hundred guerrilla fighters, and that the working class played no role.
For example Ruth Braham, writing in the Socialist Alternative magazine, claims that the Cuban Revolution “entailed a mere 800 armed guerrillas seizing power, again on behalf of the majority but without their active involvement”.
Similar views have been expressed by members of the International Socialist Organisation. For example, Jonathan Sherlock says: “If you believe that Cuba is somehow socialist, however distorted, then you believe that it is possible to bring about socialism via several hundred guerrilla fighters coming down from the mountains at the right moment and seizing power. You will believe ... that socialism can be brought about without working-class struggle”.
In reality, “working-class struggle” played an essential central role in the Cuban Revolution. The workers, peasants and students played an active role, before, during and after the insurrection which destroyed the Batista dictatorship in January 1959. The overthrow of the regime was not simply a matter of guerrilla fighters marching into the cities. Fidel Castro called a general strike which developed into a mass popular uprising during the first few days of January 1959. The subsequent transformation of property relations was the result of ongoing mass struggles by the workers and peasants ... Download HERE or read on screen below.
[Chris Slee is a long-time socialist activist and a member of the the Australian Socialist Alliance.]
Free pamphlet to download: ‘Cuba – How the workers and peasants made the revolution'
A comment on a statement in this pamflet
I don’t agree with some of the analyse of the book:
“Cuba is a society in transition between capitalism and socialism”
What is for you then socialism?
I consider socialism itself as a kind of transition: between capitalism with capitalist production-relations and communism with communist production-relations. The state is no more in hands of the bourgeoisie but in hands of the workingclass. But the expropriated capitalists assets are nationalised but it is (surely in the beginning) still commodity-production. And the highest form of commodity-production is ……capitalism. So by the start is socialism still state-capitalism (with a “dictatorship of the workers” in stead as a “dictatorship of the bourgeoisie” as STATE)
But directly on initiative of the workers-in-power new form of communist productionrelations ar beginning to develop and capitalist productionrelations are beginning to disappear.... Lees verder
At the same time commodity-production that is producing in function of a purchase powered demand is transforming in a production in function of NEEDS. (production is being PLANNED in function of needs and has not to be “paid” but is already been paid by the work delivered to the production by the workers involved in the production)
So socialism is a situation in which there are still remains of capitalism but already “new” results of communism.
This is how I think to understand Marx…. But we can discuss about it of course.