Talkin’ bout the revolution
Venezuelan activists visit
Glasgow to talk wages for housework and why
communities lie at the heart of grassroots resistance |

http://www.scottishsocialistvoice.net/
19 Oct 06 page twelve |
Juanita Romero
and Gastón Murat, grassroots activists from
Venezuela, came to
Scotland as part of a
European tour to share the achievements of the revolution that has been
unfolding in
Venezuela.
Co-ordinated by
the Global Women’s Strike (GWS), with the support in Scotland of Postive
Action in Housing and the Scottish Socialist Party, the tour includes
England,
Ireland,
Italy and
Spain.
Housing is an
acute problem in
Venezuela. At a lively
meeting in
Glasgow on Participatory Democracy, Juanita Romero
explained how the land committee is winning land titles for people who were
previously unprotected.
The new
anti-sexist, anti-racist constitution recognizes caring work in the home as
an economic activity which produces wealth and social welfare.
This has not been
implemented yet, but President Chavez has introduced an interim measure
whereby 500,000 mothers in extreme poverty get a wage equating to 80 per
cent of the minimum wage.
Juanita spoke
about the co-operatives and the military reserve being run mainly by women.
Gastón Murat
discussed with a firefighter how trade unionists had to stop thinking that
they are the vanguard and take leadership from the community, especially
from women.
A mother from a
Scottish housing scheme spoke of terrible poverty where people die on
average at the age of just 54, and the high rates of suicides, especially of
young men.
She thought
the idea of payment for housewives was great.
Two young women
students from
Stirling
University left the meeting planning to organise a
video showing.
At St Stephen’s
Church, in
Glasgow, the new film produced by the GWS - Journey
with the Revolution - was shown to great acclaim.
A Sudanese woman
from Unity, the union of asylum-seekers which have been stopping dawn raids
and deportations, said we need their experience in self-organising in order
to organise better here.
Other discussions
included positive working relations between
Cuba and
Venezuela, how grassroots
religious people are working in the revolution and how rural farmers are now
starting to return to the countryside after having been forced off the land
by previous governments.
Ms Romero and Mr
Murat also spoke briefly at the Radical Book Fair about the ring-fencing of
media lies about the revolution and the high level of support and
mobilisation in
Venezuela to re-elect
President Chavez at the 3 December elections.
For more info, contact:
womenstrike8m@server101.com
All Change for
Women
JUANITA ROMERO and GASTON
MURAT explain how Venezuelan women have benefited from the Bolivarian
revolution
Morning
Star Interview October 2006
Two organisers from Venezuela on tour in
Europe during October 2006
As the
revolutionary movement seeks re-election for President Hugo Chávez
in December, US dollars flow into Venezuela to try and get him out.
Find out why he is so popular from two activists at the grassroots
who have been organising to change our world.
more on Venezuela
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