Saturday, September 26, 2015

Farewell Letter from El Sexto

Farewell Letter from El Sexto / Danilo Maldonado
Posted on September 24, 2015
Valle Grande Prison

From the "cell" (of punishment)

September 16, 2015…

Where I am there is little light and I am in my underwear because I do
not want to wear the prison uniform. They give me a mattress for 5 or 6
hours at night. I only drink water and there will be no ability to
respond (from you to this letter) because they don't allow contacts.

Thanks to Lia, Gorki, Antonio and everyone for helping my mother manage
things. Thanks to Aylín for the beautiful and encouraging letters. I
read them as many times as I could, I would like to write you a thousand
letters like you deserve but now I do not think I will have the light,
the paper, nor the energy to do it.

This may be my last letter from here in the punishment cell and if I
survive you will hear more from my lips. So I want to tell everyone that
I waited too long for this moment to do a hunger strike, we Cubans have
wanted too long to expel these scoundrels.

Now that I have started, I feel my faith, determination and self-esteem
go through the roof for having decided. I feel proud of being the artist
that I am and of doing the art that I do for the Cuba I represent. So I
am willing to give my life a hundred times if necessary.

He who lives without finding out what to die for, has not found the
essence of life. A man with ideals of peace, love and one who does not
carry a weapon to assert his opinions is the man of the future. Because
with his faith, his hope, he builds an Eden here on earth.

Thank you all for trusting me and know that if I die I will die happy to
carry with me a tattoo of my time like Laura Pollan, Oswaldo Paya, who
left traces of their existence, of their generation, of their
responsibility to leave behind then a legacy for their loved ones, one
lesson: love what you do and devote your life to it.

I was born in a poor neighborhood, Nuevitas, Camagüey. My family is very
humble: I lived in Arroyo Arenas from age 4; in Chafarinas, Guira de
Melena; in Covadonga, Las Tunas: a village still without electricity;
Guáimaro, Camagüey and Arroyo Arenas, La Lisa. And I was lucky to live
in Vedado often, there I have my daughter Renata María, who was born in
England.

I am a wanderer and I have gone here and there getting to know my
country, my culture, that I love and so I raise my voice to denounce
what seems wrong to me. I visited Holland for three months, I lived in
The Hague, 45 minutes by train from the fabulous Amsterdam. I studied
and lived at Miami Dade College in the United States for three months as
well. All these places taught to me relate quickly to my surroundings,
that the most important thing is to have friends, to love, to respect
and not to do to anyone what we do not want them to do to us. I learned
how to stand up to the powerful.

My art is respected today, more than anything because I believe in it. I
respected it and gave it—and give it—all my strength, perseverance,
affection and love. Although I was misunderstood and perhaps by others I
still am, when those around you see so much love and how much you are
able to give and how much you respect your art, then they begin to value
it. But first we must build an altar of consecration in our chest and
others, little by little, will begin to respect you for what you do:
this knowledge is my legacy.

Someone said that all of humanity will part when we see a man who knows
where he is going. This might be my last work and I have named it
"Drawing Attention" or "The Awakening of the Inner Magician." Each one
of us has an inner magician. May my Gothic existence touch your hearts
and light your flame and awaken your internal leader, being conscious of
this gift of life and standing up against evil. Someone said, "The world
is not this way because of those who do evil but because of those who
allow it."

This work is dedicated to my mother, my little daughter Renata María, to
all those who support me, all those who added a grain of sand to achieve
freedom for Cuba. To all the Ladies in White in the world and especially
in Cuba: no more beating of women! To the memory of Laura, Oswaldo, Zapata.

This work is dedicated to my mother, my little daughter Renata María, to
all those who support me, all who put in a grain of sand to achieve the
freedom of Cuba. To all the Ladies in White of the world especially
those in Cuba: no more beating of women! In memory of Laura, Oswaldo,
Zapata.

The day I grabbed a spray can in my hand I decided what to do with my life.

So be it.

I am with faith and conviction: Liberty or death, to die for art is to live.

Hugs,

Danilo Maldonado, El Sexto.

Please sign for his freedom at Causes.com. < click there

El Sexto has been on a hunger strike since September 8th. He is
demanding his freedom because he has been imprisoned since December 25th
(of last year) for thinking to release some pigs with the names of Fidel
and Raul, which he never released because he was imprisoned. He is in
prison without trial or sentence or justice.

Source: Farewell Letter from El Sexto / Danilo Maldonado | Translating
Cuba -
http://translatingcuba.com/farewell-letter-from-el-sexto-danilo-maldonado/

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