Tau My Relatives
We are probably all familiar with the fact that President Obama attended the O.A.S. (Organization of American States) sponsored
Summit of The Americas gathering of leaders of countries from all over this continent last week in Trinidad. The most attention-grabbing news surfacing from this event seems to have been 1.)the fact that President Obama announced a loosening in the restrictions on travel by Cuban-Americans back to my homeland of Cuba for visits to relatives, and 2.)the now much photographed warm
greeting betweent President Obama and the progressive leader of the nation of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez . What most of you don't know is the role that our own Taino leadership played in that international phenomenon.
The fact that President Obama is pledging a change of attitude toward the nations of Latin America, many of whom have huge Indigenous populations and many of whom have been, over the years, victims of the most rapacious type of imperialism originating in the U.S. is a remarkable step forward for this country. Our Indigenous brothers and sisters stand to gain much from this important change of attitude. And yet this new attitude is not just a change in the U.S. It represents a much broader process of evolution of attitude among people all over the Americas. The change in attitude is only possible because of the hard work of self- determination carried out mostly behind the scenes within the last several decades by Indigenous peoples such as the communities that comprise Mr. Chavez's large Native constituency in Venezuela, and the Indigenous constituency of other progressive new Latin American leaders such as President
Evo Morales of Bolivia (who is himself a full-blooded Aymara), and
President Alvaro Colom of Guatemala (who trained to be a traditional Maya Calendar oracle reader from a Quiche Maya spiritual teacher).
It is the untiring labor of these long-disenfranchised Native people that is now finally bearing fruit in tangible terms in spite of prodigious opposition. That work is the work led by determined leaders of these Native communities in the last couple of decades through international bodies such as the Indigenous NGO's of the United Nations and similar organizations associated to the Organization of American States.
The Taino people have long had a voice in these proceedings. Sometimes that voice has featured very prominently. This past week the O.A.S. was furnished with a document outlining the important demands that Indigenous peoples of the Americas expected to be seriously dealt with by the national leaders at the Summit of the Americas conference. This document had been formulated in a special previous summit of Indigenous leaders held in Panama City, and our own Roberto Mukaro Borrero of the United Confederation of Taino Peoples, along with several other Indigenous Caribbean leaders participated in that conference and were instrumental in the formulation of that document. See attachments for a copy of the document and the accompanying Plan of Action.
More recently Kasike Mukaro was given the honor of playing the guamo shell trumpet at the opening of another important conference that he participated in right here in New York. In the United Nations General Assembley, Bolivia's current Indigenous president, Evo Morales instituted a move to designate April 22 (commonly celebrated in many countries as Earth Day) as a specially dedicated official UN observance day to be called
"Mother Earth Day" . The formulation of this proclamation is a concensus process that took time and effort and that Kasike Mukaro participated in fully. This proclamation establishes a set of requirements before national leaders of member nations of the UN which make very clear what we the Indigenous peoples of the world demand for them to do to correct the terrible environmental pressures that have been imposed on our global environment. Without the hard work of Indigenous leaders such as our own Taino Kasike these important initiatives would not be possible and we would have no voice in these global developments.
Whether at the O.A.S. or at the U.N. the voice of the Taino is becoming more and more prominent, and we owe a dept of gratitude to our Taino leaders for making that possible.
Taino Ti
Miguel