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Fidel Castro: "The Iranian government should understand the consequences of theological anti-Semitism"

by: Maximiliano Borchers (From Buenos Aires)


The leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, gave an interview to the Israeli-American journalist Jeffrey Goldberg, editor of the magazine "The Atlantic". Among other things, the Cuban leader, criticized the Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for denying the Holocaust and promote anti-Semitic positions. Here, we present an analysis of the interview.

On 7 September, the Israeli-American journalist Jeffrey Goldberg, a member of staff of the magazine "The Atlantic", interviewed Fidel Castro, leader of the Cuban Revolution, a center convention in Havana, a city which the journalist was invited by Fidel himself, after reading his article on a hypothetical confrontation between Israel and Iran. In the interview, the Cuban leader, asked the Iranian president to "stop defaming the Jews."


While Commander Fidel Castro, nobody can foist the nickname of "antisemitic" (except those sectors tend to think so fast, that positions "Zionist" might be unrelated to any action "antisemitic" or standing as the "new face" of anti-Semitism - Would an ultra-Orthodox Jew, who openly declared anti-Zionist , is anti-Semitic?, "or people of Jewish origin, freethinkers or dialectical materialists are also anti-Semitic?), made it clear what his position on Jews, their history and drama as well, and above all - left branded deep differences with the president of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whom he criticized for its systematic Holocaust denial.

"The Iranian government should understand the consequences of theological anti-Semitism," said the Cuban leader, according to the article.

"I do not think anyone has been more maligned than the Jews. I would say much more than Muslims," \u200b\u200bthe former Cuban president in another part of the interview to the Iranian government should understand that the Jews were expelled from their land, persecuted and mistreated by the world as those who killed God. "

"The Jews have lived a lot tougher than ours. There is nothing that compares to the Holocaust." At another point

interview, the former Cuban president said the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying that "Israel will have more security by renouncing its nuclear program." Since

demonstrated an incredible improvement in his health, the Cuban leader has continued to publish his "Reflections" on the site: www.cubadebate.cu, warning of the dire consequences of a hypothetical nuclear war, a situation that , from their point of view, is still time to avoid, but not for many years.

In this sense, the former Cuban president says: "Men think they can control, but (U.S. President, Barack) Obama may overreact and a gradual escalation could become a nuclear war. "

The vision of a statesman

In all honesty, regardless of ideological sympathies and antipathies, it is undeniable that Fidel Castro is the Finally living statesman of the few, but forceful, which gave the last century. It is a clear mind to serve the human condition through, with the sharpness of his thinking, the siren songs of awkward intellectuals and political leaders who tried to convince the world that "ideologies were dead, after the fall of the Berlin Wall."

aware of the finiteness of life, this old fighter, who knew so many times to escape death, to which only faced with the urgency shown by those who truly want to live a few years ago was the only thinker who warned about the risks of devoting millions of acres food production to create biodiesel, as this "directly" affect the human consumption of food. For this reason, and for many others, would have to pay attention to repeated complaints of a hypothetical nuclear conflict, which no doubt would end, or put at serious risk of extinction, human presence on this planet.

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