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Bill Ayers Venezuelan Speech
World Education Forum ^ | 11/06 | Bill Ayers

Posted on 10/09/2008 7:22:12 AM PDT by GOPbabe

Speech give at World Education Forum in Venezuela by Bill Ayers

Centro Interncional Miranda Caracas, Venezuela November , 2006

President Hugo Chavez, Vice-President Vicente Rangel, Ministers Moncada and Isturiz, invited guests,comrades. I’m honored and humbled to be here with you this morning. I bring greetings and support from your brothers and sisters throughout Northamerica. Welcome to the World Education Forum! Amamos la revolucion Bolivariana! This is my fourth visit to Venezuela, each time at the invitation of my comrade and friend Luis Bonilla, a brilliant educator and inspiring fighter for justice. Luis has taught me a great deal about the Bolivarian Revolution and about the profound educational reforms underway here in Venezuela under the leadership of President Chavez. We share the belief that education is the motor-force of revolution, and I’ve come to appreciate Luis as a major asset in both the Venezuelan and the international struggle—I look forward to seeing how he and all of you continue to overcome the failings of capitalist education as you seek to create something truly new and deeply humane. Thank you, Luis, for everything you’ve done.

I also thank my youngest son, Chesa Boudin, who is interpreting my talk this morning and whose book on the Bolivarian revolution has played an important part in countering the barrage of lies spread by the U.S. State Department and the corrupted Northamerican media. On my last trip to Caracas I spoke of traveling to a literacy class—Mission Robinson— in the hills above the city along a long and winding road. As we made our way higher and higher, the talk turned to politics as it inevitably does here, and someone noted that the wealthy—here and everywhere, here and in the US surely—have certain received opinions, a kind of absolute judgment about poor and working people, and yet they have never traveled this road, nor any road like it. They have never boarded this bus up into these hills, and not just the oligarchy or the wealthy—this lack of first-hand knowledge, of open investigation, of generous regard is also a condition of the everyday liberals, and even many of the radicals and armchair intellectuals whose formulations sit lifeless and stifling in a crypt of mythology about poor people. Everyone should come and travel these roads into the hills, we agreed then—and not just once, but again and again and again – if they will ever learn anything of the real conditions of life here, surely, but more important than that, if they will ever encounter the wisdom and experience and insight that lives here as well.

We arrived at eight o’clock to a literacy circle already underway being conducted in a small, poorly-lit classroom. And here in an odd and dark space, a sun was shining: ten people had pulled their chairs close together—a young woman maybe 19, a grandmother maybe 65, two men in their 40s—each struggling to read. And I thought of a poem called A Poor Woman Learns to Write by Margaret Atwood about a woman working laboriously to print her name in the dirt. She never thought she could do it, the poet notes, not her– this writing business was for others. But she does it, prints her name, her first word so far, and she looks up and smiles— for she did it right.

The woman in the poem—just like the students in Mission Robinson—is living out a universal dialectic that embodies education at its very best: she wrote her name, she changed herself, and she altered the conditions of her life. As she wrote the word, she changed the world, and another world became—suddenly and surprisingly—possible.

I began teaching when I was 20 years old in a small freedom school affiliated with the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. The year was 1965, and I’d been arrested in a demonstration. Jailed for ten days, I met several activists who were finding ways to link teaching and education with deep and fundamental social change. They were following Dewey and DuBois, King and Helen Keller who wrote: “We can’t have education without revolution. We have tried peace education for 1,900 years and it has failed. Let us try revolution and see what it will do now.”

I walked out of jail and into my first teaching position—and from that day until this I’ve thought of myself as a teacher, but I’ve also understood teaching as a project intimately connected with social justice. After all, the fundamental message of the teacher is this: you can change your life—whoever you are, wherever you’ve been, whatever you’ve done, another world is possible. As students and teachers begin to see themselves as linked to one another, as tied to history and capable of collective action, the fundamental message of teaching shifts slightly, and becomes broader, more generous: we must change ourselves as we come together to change the world. Teaching invites transformations, it urges revolutions small and large. La educacion es revolucion! I taught at first in something like a Simoncito—called Head Start—and eventually taught at every level in barrios and prisons and insurgent projects across the United States. I learned then that education is never neutral. It always has a value, a position, a politics. Education either reinforces or challenges the existing social order, and school is always a contested space – what should be taught? In what way? Toward what end? By and for whom? At bottom, it involves a struggle over the essential questions: what does it mean to be a human being living in a human society?

Totalitarianism demands obedience and conformity, hierarchy, command and control. Royalty requires allegiance. Capitalism promotes racism and militarism – turning people into consumers, not citizens. Participatory democracy, by contrast, requires free people coming together voluntarily as equals who are capable of both self-realization and, at the same time, full participation in a shared political and economic life.

Education contributes to human liberation to the extent that people reflect on their lives, and, becoming more conscious, insert themselves as subjects in history. To be a good teacher means above all to have faith in the people, to believe in the possibility that people can create and change things. Education is not preparation for life, but rather education is life itself ,an active process in which everyone— students and teachers– participates as co-learners.

Despite being under constant attack from within and from abroad, the Bolivarian revolution has made astonishing strides in a brief period: from the Mission Simoncito to the Mission Robinson to the Mission Ribas to the Mission Sucre, to the Bolivarian schools and the UBV, Venezuelans have shown the world that with full participation, full inclusion, and popular empowerment, the failings of capitalist schooling can be resisted and overcome.

Venezuela is a beacon to the world in its accomplishment of eliminating illiteracy in record time, and engaging virtually the entire population in the ongoing project of education.

The great Chilean poet Pablo Neruda wrote a poem to his fellow writers called “The Poet’s Obligation” in which he instructed them in their core responsibility: you must, he said, become aware of your sisters and brothers who are trapped in subjugation and meaninglessness, imprisoned in ignorance and despair. You must move in and out of windows carrying a vision of the vast oceans just beyond the bars of the prison– a message of hope and possibility. Neruda ends with this: it is through me that freedom and the sea will call in answer to the shrouded heart.

Let those of us who are gathered here today read this poem as “The Teacher’s Obligation.” We, too, must move in and out of windows, we, too, must build a project of radical imagination and fundamental change. Venezuela is poised to offer the world a new model of education– a humanizing and revolutionary model whose twin missions are enlightenment and liberation. This World Education Forum provides us a unique opportunity to develop and share the lessons and challenges of this profound educational project that is the Bolivarian Revolution.

Viva Mission Sucre! Viva Presidente Chavez! Viva La Revolucion Bolivariana! Hasta La Victoria Siempre!


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; academia; ayers; chavez; democrats; education; election; elections; nobama08; obama; williamayers

1 posted on 10/09/2008 7:22:12 AM PDT by GOPbabe
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To: GOPbabe

Click on the source to give hits/visability to this story!


2 posted on 10/09/2008 7:23:42 AM PDT by fightinJAG (Rush was right: You never win by losing!)
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To: GOPbabe
Capitalism promotes racism and militarism

?!?

3 posted on 10/09/2008 7:24:52 AM PDT by Yo-Yo
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To: GOPbabe

Thanks for posting.


4 posted on 10/09/2008 7:26:01 AM PDT by FreedomProtector
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To: fightinJAG

http://billayers.wordpress.com/2006/11/07/world-education-forum/

source url


5 posted on 10/09/2008 7:27:07 AM PDT by GOPbabe
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To: GOPbabe

[We have tried peace education for 1,900 years and it has failed. Let us try revolution and see what it will do now.”]

Ayers apparently ignores the successful example of Gandhi’s Free and Independent India - and also ignores the failure of the utter failure of the “revolutions” in Russia.

Ayers is a Quisling POS with a taste for Milk and Apples - and he probably sleeps in beds (wif sheets!), too.


6 posted on 10/09/2008 7:36:52 AM PDT by LomanBill (A bird flies because the right wing opposes the left.)
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To: GOPbabe

This traitor should have been hung long ago.


7 posted on 10/09/2008 7:43:21 AM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan (Wakka-ding-hoy - battle cry of the Plexus Rangers!)
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To: GOPbabe

And we elect Obama we will get our own Hugo Chavez


8 posted on 10/09/2008 7:43:59 AM PDT by Nextrush (Sarah Palin is the new Ronald Reagan.)
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To: GOPbabe

That IS the William Ayers I know!

Time to pin 0bamalamadingdong on this; either he knew what Ayers is and always has been, and is both lying to the American people AND shares Ayers’ views, OR
0bama is a clueless idiot. In 0bama’s case, it is even possible to achieve the trifecta.


9 posted on 10/09/2008 7:44:30 AM PDT by henkster ($700 billion debt swap with foreign banks to finance government borrowing)
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To: GOPbabe

This aging Marxist lunatic is educating your kids. If that doesn’t make you mad, I don’t know what will.


10 posted on 10/09/2008 7:54:07 AM PDT by popdonnelly (Does Obama know ANYONE who likes America, capitalism, or white people?)
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To: GOPbabe

Was Kathy Boudin the mother of his son? If so, Wow! Murderers on both sides. Should fetch a pretty penny at the Commie bloodstock auction.


11 posted on 10/09/2008 8:11:15 AM PDT by Inwoodian
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To: GOPbabe
If Obama wins the election I fully expect that Venezuela will attack Colombia ASAP.

Obama must not be allowed to become president, vote McCain.

12 posted on 10/09/2008 8:13:40 AM PDT by OKIEDOC (The Difference Between Palin and Obama is Common Sense, She's GOT IT, He DOESN'T)
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To: Inwoodian

Yes, Chesa was the spawn of Kathy Boudin, who copped a plea in the Brinks robbery/cop killing. Willy became legal guardian when she went up the river.

While they say “Chesa” is a swahili name, it most likely is a homage to another cop-killer (and current resident of Fidel’s worker’s paradise), Joanne Chesimard.


13 posted on 10/09/2008 8:22:04 AM PDT by pineybill (`)
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To: GOPbabe

Bump for later


14 posted on 10/09/2008 10:27:25 AM PDT by Inyokern
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To: Inwoodian

http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/entertainment/2003/10/14/2003-10-14_a_boudin_bio_rethinks_what_m.html

the little boudin bio (down near the end of artcle)


15 posted on 10/09/2008 10:32:27 AM PDT by GOPbabe
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To: GOPbabe

bump


16 posted on 10/09/2008 11:44:12 AM PDT by GOPbabe
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To: popdonnelly; All

You notice Obama and Biden say McCann hasn’t said anything about Ayers “to his face” and O’Reilly tonight echoed that school yard BS. What would Obama do? Punch McCain in the mouth?

No, but he’ll come up with some focus group tested BS., like “Your mama wears combat boots.”

I saw a clip of Hillary raising Ayers and the Weathermen at a Dem debate, and Obama came back with, “Well, your husband pardoned some members of the Weather Underground”. bada bing. end of story.


17 posted on 10/09/2008 6:00:25 PM PDT by shalom aleichem
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To: GOPbabe; PhilDragoo; devolve; y'all
Viva Mission Sucre! Viva Presidente Chavez! Viva La Revolucion Bolivariana! Hasta La Victoria Siempre!

- - - - - - - -

My response to Bill Ayers:

Kiss my GRITS !!

Well ... you KNOW what I mean! :)

18 posted on 10/09/2008 9:35:05 PM PDT by MeekOneGOP (Obama, WHO is Bill Ayers and WHY are you still friends with him? Please RSVP asap!)
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To: wafflehouse

bookmark


19 posted on 09/04/2009 10:10:15 PM PDT by wafflehouse (RE-ELECT NO ONE !)
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