Canada: Tour builds Venezuelan solidarity

March 21, 2010
Issue 

Federico Fuentes and Kiraz Janicke concluded their ten-day tour of Canada on March 7, with a rally in Vancouver entitled "Change the System, Not the Climate." Fuentes shared the platform with Pablo Solon, Bolivia's UN ambassador and chief spokesperson on climate change.

Fuentes described the leading role played by Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, together with Bolivia's Evo Morales, in rallying forces to oppose the climate sell-out by Canada and other rich countries at the recent UN conference in Copenhagen.

Fuentes and Janicke are Australian-based activists who live in Venezuela and write for Venezuelanalysis.com. They are also are part of the 91̳ Weekly Caracas bureau. Fuentes is also editor of the Bolivia Rising blog and an associate of the Centro Internacional Miranda, a government-funded research institute in Caracas.

The tour included almost two dozen presentations, attended by audiences totalling 800 persons. Meetings were held in Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Toronto, Waterloo, Vancouver, and Victoria.

The tour provided a vivid picture of the state of Venezuela solidarity across the country. "Meetings were sponsored by a wide spectrum of groups, including every Venezuela solidarity current in the cities where we spoke," says Fuentes. "I was repeatedly told that the audiences were not the same old faces. Many new people came, asking probing questions about Venezuelan reality."

Yet almost all those present agreed in supporting the Bolivarian movement in Venezuela, he adds.

"Typically, people hung around after the meetings, full of questions," Fuentes says.

"Take Montreal, for example," says Janicke. "Meetings were sponsored by all three local groups: the Bolivarian Society, Hands Off Venezuela, and the Peace Base, with strong presence and moral support from the local Venezuelan consulate.

"Federico and I had fruitful discussions with consular and embassy representatives in Ottawa, Montreal, and Toronto, and we distributed many copies of the embassy's excellent publication, .

The nature of events varied widely. "There were graduate seminars and open campus meetings; union gatherings and city-wide events," says tour organiser Suzanne Weiss.

"Federico and Kiraz related the Bolivarian process to Venezuela's support for world struggles: Haiti and Bolivia (in Vancouver), Palestine (in Waterloo), Indigenous nations (in Kingston)."

In Vancouver, Fuentes spoke at a luncheon of the Vancouver & District Labour Council as well as at a regional meeting of the Public Service Alliance of Canada. "They wanted to know more about the labour movement in Venezuela," Fuentes says.

"They were interested in the labour tours of Venezuela organized by the . They wanted to help Bolivarian unions in Venezuela win support in the International Labour Organization."

In Toronto, the main tour events formed part of a "Three Days for Venezuela" event co-sponsored by eleven solidarity and progressive organizations. Fuentes and Janicke were among more than 25 presenters at an all-day Venezuela teach-in.

"About 100 participants took part in the twelve different workshops and plenaries," Weiss reports.

"After a long day of discussion, a good majority of participants stayed for the final session, on organizing solidarity in Canada."

Participants in the teach-in represented a wide range of opinion on Venezuela, Weiss notes. "There was a frank exchange among different viewpoints. But all were agreed that Venezuela faces grave dangers today.

"Everyone stood firm with Venezuela against threats from imperialism and rightist forces within the country."

"The most frequently asked question," Fuentes says, "was what would happen to Venezuela if Chavez were removed from the scene — or, another variant — whether the Venezuelan process was too much of a top-down process. I tried to explain Chavez's indispensable role in linking together a Bolivarian movement that is both socially and ideologically very diverse.

"I talked of the movement's great strength at the grass roots, and of how it has progressed through an interplay between initiatives at the base and at the presidential level."

There was much interest in questions concerning oil and the environment as well as the community councils, Fuentes says.

"Almost all questions were sympathetic to the Venezuelan process," Janicke recalls. "I was asked about the character of nationalizations, popular education, what the changes mean for people's lives, and whether socialism in Venezuela is possible.

"Others asked what Canada's role is in Venezuela and why [foreign affairs minister] Peter Kent is making such sharp attacks on Venezuela's government."

According to Weiss, the tour highlights the great potential to expand support for the Venezuelan people in their quest for sovereignty and twenty-first century socialism.

"There is an urgent need today to broaden the active solidarity movement beyond the ideologically committed, to a broader spectrum of progressive opinion in Canada," says Weiss. "The tour shows that this can be done. The Venezuela solidarity movement is still small. But its participants come from many backgrounds, many milieus; they can be catalysts for action on a broader stage.

"The solidarity movement can become more inclusive and more diverse in point of view — yet remain firmly united in defending the revolutionary process in Venezuela."

[For further information on the tour and to contact sponsoring organizations, email vzteachin@hotmail.com. Socialist Project has posted a of the tour meeting in Toronto. A video of the Vancouver meeting can be seen . This article is reprinted from

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