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The last days of the patriarch (Trudeau on Castro, hilarious)
The Star ^ | Aug. 13, 2006. 07:38 AM | ALEXANDRE TRUDEAU

Posted on 08/16/2006 4:03:22 AM PDT by alnitak

Pierre Trudeau had a friendship with Fidel Castro that went beyond politics. It was a mutual admiration between two men who put their unmatched intellects at the service of their country. On Castro's 80th birthday, an essay by Alexandre Trudeau Aug. 13, 2006. 07:38 AM ALEXANDRE TRUDEAU SPECIAL TO THE STAR

I grew up knowing that Fidel Castro had a special place among my family's friends. We had a picture of him at home: a great big man with a beard who wore military fatigues and held my baby brother Michel in his arms. When he met my little brother in 1976, he even gave him a nickname that would stick with him his whole life: "Micha-Miche."

A few years later, when Michel was around 8 years old, I remember him complaining to my mother that my older brother and I both had more friends than he did. My mother told him that, unlike us, he had the greatest friend of all: he had Fidel.

For many years, Cuba remained Michel's exclusive realm; whenever someone would accompany my father there, it would naturally be Michel. It wasn't until after both my father's and brother's deaths that I got a chance to visit Fidel and his country, Cuba.

Fidel may have been at first a political contact of my father's but their relationship was much more than that. It was extra-political.

Indeed, like my father, in private, Fidel is not a politician. He is more in the vein of a great adventurer or a great scientific mind. Fidel doesn't really do politics. He is a revolutionary.

He lives to learn and to put his knowledge in the service of the revolution. For Fidel, revolution is really a work of reason. In his view, revolution, when rigorously adopted, cannot fail to lead humanity towards ever greater justice, towards an ever more perfect social order.

Fidel is also the most curious man that I have ever met. He wants to know all there is to be known. He is famous for not sleeping, instead spending the night studying and learning.

He also knows what he doesn't know, and when he meets you he immediately seeks to identify what he might learn from you. Once he has ascertained an area of expertise that might be of interest, he begins with his questions. One after the other. He synthesizes information quickly and gets back to you with ever deeper and more complex questions, getting more and more excited as he illuminates, through his Socratic interrogation, new parcels of knowledge and understanding he might add to his own mental library.

His intellect is one of the most broad and complete that can be found. He is an expert on genetics, on automobile combustion engines, on stock markets. On everything.

Combined with a Herculean physique and extraordinary personal courage, this monumental intellect makes Fidel the giant that he is.

He is something of a superman. My father once told us how he had expressed to Fidel his desire to do some diving in Cuba. Fidel took him to the most enchanting spot on the island and set him up with equipment and a tank. He stood back as my father geared up and began to dive alone.

When my father had reached a depth of around 60 feet, he realized that Fidel was down there with him, that he had descended without a tank and that there he was with a knife in hand prying sea urchins off the ocean floor, grinning.

Back on the surface, they feasted on the raw sea urchins, seasoned with lime juice.

Fidel turns 80 years old today. A couple of weeks ago, he shocked the world by turning power over to his brother Raul after holding it without interruption since the 1959 revolution. In newspapers across the world, pundits solemnly declared that even giants are mortal and that no revolution is eternal. Historians even began to prepare the space that will be granted Fidel in history books.

Fidel may seem an anachronism: a visionary statesman in a world where his kind have long since been replaced by mere managers, a 20th-century icon still present in the 21st century.

There is also wild speculation about what fate awaits Cuba after Castro. It is important to note, however, that while the whole world works itself up about the matter, Cubans themselves play it cool. Some of my shrewder Cuban friends even say that this temporary withdrawal from power is another one of Castro's clever strategies; that it is something of a test and that he will soon be back at the helm. They say that, on one hand, Castro is allowing the Cuban people, and more specifically the Cuban state apparatus, to become accustomed to the leadership of his brother Raul. On the other hand, Castro is carefully watching for hints as to how the world ? and, more importantly, the United States ? will react to his final departure.

Cubans remain very proud of Castro, even those who don't share his vision. They know that, among the world's many peoples, they have the most audacious and brilliant of leaders. They respect his intellectual machismo and rigour.

But Castro's leadership can be something of a burden, too. They do occasionally complain, often as an adolescent might complain about a too strict and demanding father. The Jefe (chief) sees all and knows all, they might say. In particular, young Cubans have told me that an outsider cannot ever really imagine what it is like to live in such a hermetic society, where everyone has an assigned spot and is watched and judged carefully. You can never really learn on your own, they might say. The Jefe always knows what is best for you. It can be suffocating, they say.

I met a young man in the small provincial town of Remedios who worked there as a cigar roller. We shared a great love for the works of Dostoyevsky. When I expressed to him my excitement at meeting a fellow aficionado of Russian literature, he flatly told me: "Yes, Fidel has taught me to read and to think, but look what work he sets me out to do with this education: I roll cigars!"

Cuba under Castro is a remarkably literate and healthy country, but it is undeniably poor. Historians will note, however, that never in modern times has a small, peaceful country been more subjected to unfair and malicious treatment by a superpower than Cuba has by the United States.

From the very start, the United States never gave Castro's Cuba a choice. Either Castro had to submit himself and his people to America's will or he had to hold his ground against them.

Which is what he did, in the process drawing the Cuban people into this taxing dialectic that continues to this day. Cubans pay the price and may occasionally complain of their fate, but they rarely blame Castro. The United States never fails to make the Cuban people well aware of its spite for this small neighbouring country that dares to be independent.

With the possible exception of Nelson Mandela, already well into retirement, Fidel is the last of the global patriarchs. Reason, revolution and virtue are becoming more and more distant and abstract concepts. We will perhaps never see another patriarch.

We thus have to conceive of the departure of the last patriarch in psychoanalytical terms. The death of the father doesn't signal our liberation from him ? quite the contrary. The death of a father so grand and present as Castro will, rather, immortalize him in the minds of his children.

It is true that Cubans may eventually cast away the communist orthodoxy of the revolution. They will become tempted by American capital and values as soon as the embargo against them is lifted, something that will surely follow in the not so distant future. They will have new opportunities for individual fulfilment and downfall. Without a doubt, Cuba without Castro will not remain unchanged.

But Cubans will continue to be subjected to Castro's influence. Whether they like it or not, they will continue to be called out by his voice, by his questions, by his inescapable rationality, which, whether they heed its call or not, demands they defend the integrity of Cuba and urges them to seek justice and excellence in all things.

For a generation to come, they will be haunted by the vision of a society that never existed and probably never will exist, but which their once-leader, the most brilliant and obsessed of all, never stopped believing could exist and should exist.

Cubans will always feel privileged that they, and they alone, had Fidel.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Cuba; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: canada; castro; cuba; deathwatch; trudeau
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To: alnitak

Why doesn't Trudeau just fly down and give the old murderer a BJ and get it over with?


41 posted on 08/16/2006 7:42:50 AM PDT by LexBaird (Another member of the Bush/Halliburton/Zionist/CIA/NWO/Illuminati conspiracy for global domination!)
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To: Petronski

In which position, both men became more spotted over the years.


42 posted on 08/16/2006 8:21:58 AM PDT by Erasmus (<This page left intentionally vague>)
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To: alnitak
Is "Patriarch" something like "Don" or "Godfather??????

Nawww.......

Leni

43 posted on 08/16/2006 8:29:20 AM PDT by MinuteGal (Israel Hold Firm !................No Retreat means No Repeat !)
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To: alnitak
I think Kinky Friedman had a better tribute:

The moment Castro arrives at his townhouse in hell, my humidor and I will be arriving in Cuba.
44 posted on 08/16/2006 8:38:47 AM PDT by af_vet_rr
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To: alnitak
Posted earlier as Sacha's love letter along with Jonathan Kay's full & appropriate critique from yesterday's National Post.
45 posted on 08/16/2006 8:45:49 AM PDT by GMMAC (Discover Canada governed by Conservatives: www.CanadianAlly.com)
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To: alnitak

BTW, if you'd bothered to do a FR search by date simply using the word "Castro", the above post would have been the first to come up.


46 posted on 08/16/2006 8:57:34 AM PDT by GMMAC (Discover Canada governed by Conservatives: www.CanadianAlly.com)
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To: alnitak

Pierre was the most remarkable man since Leonard Zelig.


47 posted on 08/16/2006 9:00:02 AM PDT by doctor noe
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To: alnitak

Unfrigginbelievable.


48 posted on 08/16/2006 7:41:12 PM PDT by Yardstick
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To: Petronski

On the ceiling above it...or in it? ;-)


49 posted on 08/21/2006 9:49:49 PM PDT by Miss Behave (You can't negotiate with people who want to kill you more than they want to live. ~Caller to Hannity)
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To: Miss Behave

That article demonstrates the fallacy of relativism and the
type of logical conclusion to which it would lead.

Jim.

.


50 posted on 08/01/2007 6:51:45 AM PDT by Jim J. McCrea
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To: llevrok
Trudeau (and his successors) biased the Canadian political process so that essentially Quebec would run it, with Montreal as its capital, although this bias is subtle and hard to detect, that rule is defacto *real.*

And why do we have such high federal taxes, yet the government always claims it cannot afford things, as essential services are always being cut back?

Just visit Montreal, and you will see - a city built from the ground up, by social engineers, with *our* tax money (the same applies all over Quebec, but to a lesser degree - it is certainly not the free market from where the wealth comes and which determines what is what there in an economic and cultural sense)|

And you know how influential Canada is in determining world affairs - guess what the capital of the world is|




-

51 posted on 11/08/2007 9:34:10 AM PST by Jim J. McCrea
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To: alnitak
I had to hold back a mouthful of chunder while reading this garbage.

What a steaming pantload!
52 posted on 11/08/2007 9:42:43 AM PST by reagan_fanatic (Ron Paul put the cuckoo in my Cocoa Puffs)
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To: alnitak

LOL — I’ll bet this guy lit up a post-coital cigarette after writing this mash note.


53 posted on 11/08/2007 9:56:18 AM PST by steve-b (It's hard to be religious when certain people don't get struck by lightning.)
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To: alnitak
I've always wanted to count heathens and mass-murderers among my friends too. Such a lucky duck this idiot is.

{after Castro's death} ...Cubans will continue to be subjected to Castro's influence. Whether they like it or not, they will continue to be called out by his voice, by his questions, by his inescapable rationality, which, whether they heed its call or not, demands they defend the integrity of Cuba and urges them to seek justice and excellence in all things.

Um, I hate to tell Herr Trudeau this but I think Cuba will undergo the statue toppling days of Lenin, Beria and Hussein.

54 posted on 11/08/2007 11:42:29 AM PST by VeniVidiVici (No buy China!!)
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To: alnitak

Speaking of Logical Disconnects

1. “He is something of a superman.”
2. “We shared a great love for the works of Dostoyevsky.”

Ummmm.....better reread Crime and Punishment there Pierre.

Also reminds me of the old story of “Do they call me Pierre the BridgeBuilder...No!”


55 posted on 11/08/2007 11:47:09 AM PST by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: alnitak

Fidel and Alexandre: Gay lovers?


56 posted on 11/08/2007 12:00:09 PM PST by RJL
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To: alnitak
Pierre Trudeau had a friendship with Fidel Castro that went beyond politics. It was a mutual admiration between two men who put their unmatched intellects at the service of their country.

His intellect is one of the most broad and complete that can be found. He is an expert on genetics, on automobile combustion engines, on stock markets. On everything.

Combined with a Herculean physique and extraordinary personal courage, this monumental intellect makes Fidel the giant that he is. He is something of a superman.

They know that, among the world's many peoples, they have the most audacious and brilliant of leaders. They respect his intellectual machismo and rigour.

Cuba under Castro is a remarkably literate and healthy country, but it is undeniably poor. Historians will note, however, that never in modern times has a small, peaceful country been more subjected to unfair and malicious treatment by a superpower than Cuba has by the United States.

Castro is all this, yet he can’t bring Cuba to prosperity because one country, the United States, won’t trade with him?

I’d guess that one could pick any name out of a phone book and that person could and would do better than Fidel Castro has done for Cuba.

57 posted on 11/08/2007 12:14:36 PM PST by RJL
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