
Celia Hart Santamaría, 45, and her brother Abel Hart Santamaría, 48, have both been killed in car crash whilst traveling in the Miramar district of Havana. Their parents Armando Hart Dávalos and his late wife Haydée Santamaría, having played a prominent role in the Cuban revolution became part of Cuba's revolutionary elite, as did their children. Armando Hart served as Cuban Minister of Culture for twenty years. During the revolution Hart helped the 26th of July Movement organize the Cities, whilst his wife fought with Castro in the Sierra Maestra mountains. There son was named after her brother Abel Santamaria, who was murdered after being imprisoned for his role in the Castroite assault on the Moncada Barracks in 1952, and their daughter Celia after her mothers close revolutionary comrade Celia Sánchez Manduley.
In 1985, after Celia Hart had told her father that she had become disillusioned with the Cuban revolution and international communism, he gave her the trilogy of Isaac Deutscher Life of Trotsky, plus Trotsky's The Revolution Betrayed. After reading these books Hart said,
"Everything began to fall into place like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. I understood how the Russian Revolution, and not only the Russian Revolution, had been betrayed and millions of comrades had been deceived."
From that time on she became Cuba's foremost advocate of Trotsky's works and spoke at numerous international conferences staged around the world, at which the numerous Trotskyists 'internationals' attempted to claim her as their own, as I’m sure they will now do in death. Below is an obituary written by Alan Woods and first published on the In Defense of Marxism web site. Whilst readers should be mindful that the writer is a leading member of the International Marxist Tendency, I feel it is as good as any one is likely to read.
Mick Hall
Celia Hart Santamaría (1962 – 2008) By Alan Woods. We have just heard the tragic news of the death in a traffic accident, of Celia Hart Santamaría, 45, and Abel Hart Santamaría, 48, the daughter and son of Armando Hart Dávalos and Haydée Santamaría. The accident occurred on the afternoon of Sunday, 7 September in the Miramar district of Havana. We do not know the details, but it appears that the car hit a tree. It may be that the bad conditions caused by the recent hurricane had something to do with this. The bodies of Celia and Abel were taken to the Funeral Rivero, Calzada and K, from where the funeral procession set out for the Columbus Necropolis, where they were buried today at 10:00 am local time. Celia Hart came from a family of veteran Cuban revolutionaries who fought against the Batista dictatorship together with Fidel Castro. Celia Hart has been an outspoken defender of the political and revolutionary heritage of Leon Trotsky. Her articles on this subject, which have been published by the Spanish Marxist website El Militante and also on Marxist.com provoked an intense debate on the question of Trotsky both in Cuba and internationally. Celia Hart was born in January 1962, just a few months after the Cuban missile crisis. Her mother, Haydée Santamaría, ("the most extraordinary person I have ever known") was a revolutionary from the very early days, and participated together with Fidel Castro in the famous storming of the Moncada barracks, where she lost both her brother and her boyfriend. Armando Hart, her father, began his political activities by a different route: In the dark days of the Batista dictatorship, when, as a young lawyer, he commenced his political agitation and became a student leader in the University. He was a member of the National Revolutionary Movement (Movimiento Nacional Revolucionario) led by García Barcena, a university professor who opposed Batista and was imprisoned even before the assault on the Moncada barracks. Armando Hart and Haydée Santamaría were dedicated to the revolutionary cause and fought together with Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. When Batista was finally overthrown, Armando was made the first Minister of Education of the Revolution and Haydée Santamaría was made President of the Casa de las Américas (the House of the Americas), which she in effect founded. Haydée was always opposed to ‘sovietization' - that is to the attempt to impose rigid Stalinist bureaucracy and dogmatic thought and methodology on Cuba. In Casa de las Américas there was no room for either dogmatism or so-called socialist realism. She ran it together with a real galaxy of talent: Benedetti, Galich, Mariano Rodríguez and others. Tragically, she committed suicide in 1980. For his part, Armando Hart had a brilliant intellectual career, and at the present time, after more than twenty years as Cuban Minister of Culture, is in charge of the Oficina del Programa Martiano. In Celia's own words: "I therefore grew up in the eye of the hurricane, between the tremendous passion of my mother and the intelligence and devotion to study of my father - both of them firmly inserted in the political life of Cuba." In 1980, one month before her mother's suicide, Celia decided to study physics in Havana University. Two years later she was sent to finish her studies in the University of Dresden in the German Democratic Republic. Celia continued her studies until graduating in 1987 - the first foreign female to graduate in this Faculty. She then returned to Havana, where she worked until one year ago in the University, publishing approximately 15 specialist works on magnetism and superconductivity. She also participated in about half a dozen congresses in Italy, Brazil and Argentina. Talking about this period in her life, Celia told me:
She continued:
In this way, slowly but surely, the ground was being prepared for Celia's transition to Trotskyism, which she described in the following words:
However, none of Celia's works were published in Cuba, except a prologue to a book written by her mother entitled Haydée Speaks about the Moncada (Haydée habla del Moncada). Her writings were first published in the website of El Militante and Marxist.com (see The Flag over Coyoacán) and the Spanish magazine Marxismo Hoy. Later we published a book of her writings in Spanish with the title Apuntos Revolucionarios (Revolutionary Notes), which was introduced to the public in Spain and Cuba by the Frederick Engels Foundation. It was the comrades of the IMT who first contacted Celia Hart and gave her the opportunity to enter into contact with international Trotskyism. She attended our world congress in 2004 and had intensive discussions with the leading comrades. Shortly afterwards she wrote:
Since then Celia has been in regular contact with the IMT and has spoken at our meetings in various countries. In February of this year she spoke at the first public book launch in Cuba of Trotsky's Revolution Betrayed, organized by the Frederick Engels Foundation with more than 100 people present at the Havana Book Fair. Celia Hart was always very passionate about her ideas and the struggle for socialism. We had many discussions with her, often ending in agreement, sometimes not, but in all our dealings with her, there was always a warm sense of comradeship and friendship and she always spoke very warmly about El Militante and the IMT. Most recently she spoke at a very successful meeting of 200 people in Montreal on 28 May this year, which we jointly organized. The next day there was a meeting on the Permanent Revolution organized by the IMT at which she also spoke. As far as I know this was the last public meeting she ever spoke at, although we had planned to invite her to speak at the launch of my new book Reformism or Revolution at the Havana Book fair next February. Unfortunately, this was not to be. A cruel accident has robbed us of a valuable and much-loved friend and comrade. But her memory lives on in the hearts and minds of those of us who knew her. And above all, the ideas we defended together live on and grow stronger by the day. That is the best memorial Celia Hart would have desired. Farewell, comrade Celia! We shall continue the struggle! Hasta la Victoria Siempre! Alan Woods, London, September 8th |









2 comments:
Thanks for your message. One sentence in your obituary is particularly timely:
"From that time on she became Cuba's foremost advocate of Trotsky's works and spoke at numerous international conferences staged around the world, at which the numerous Trotskyists 'internationals' attempted to claim her as their own, as I'm sure they will now do in death. "
Dozens of writings by Celia Hart have been posted online in Spanish already.
Further, you can find the largest collection of English translations of the works of Celia Hart, going back to 2003 and continuing through her final commentary about the recent hurricanes which attacked Cuba here:
http://www.walterlippmann.com/celiahart.html
An anthology of her writings are assembled in a book IT'S NEVER TOO LATE TO LOVE OR REBEL which can be purchased online.
Thanks,
Walter Lippmann
Los Angeles, California
Walter
Thanks for the information, very useful.
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