Thanks to Jay Woolrich for this report of a meeting last night in Bristol.
Last night over seventy people packed into a small lecture theatre at Bristol University to see Pablo Navarrete’s new film on Venezuela, ‘Inside the Revolution’, and to take part in a lively question and answer session with the film’s director and Derek Wall of the Green Party. The film combines an overview of events in Venezuela from the street fighting of 1989 through the election of Hugo Chavez in December 1998, and covers the achievements and frustrations of the first ten years of the Chavez administration. While there are interviews with political analysts, it is the voices of the ordinary people that are most striking. As one young activist says of his support for the Bolivarian revolution, “we have chosen not to be a colony – it’s as simple as that”.
Navarrete’s film ranges from the revolutionary rappers of down-town Caracas to the attempted coup in 2002, from discussions about the meaning of Chavez’s “socialism for the 21st century” to analysis of the lies and distortions peddled by Fox News and Venezuela’s right-wing private TV stations. It outlines the shortcomings as well as the successes of the past ten years, and paints a fascinating portrait of Chavez’s own journey from radical army officer to outspoken critic of capitalism and imperialism. Navarrete reveals Venezuela as a country in transition, rejecting top-down models of socialism in favour of communal councils and cooperatives, working out its own destiny and exploring a new model of socialism in a process that is still fragile, fragmentary and of uncertain outcome. If the film has a core message, it’s that the Venezuelan people cannot and should not rely on Chavez or any other leader to make the revolution for them. In the past ten years the consciousness of the Venezuelan masses has been profoundly transformed. It is for them to take the struggle forward; it is for them to shape their own future.





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