Juan
Carrero
Speech Delivered by Juan Carrero Upon Receiving
the Courage of Conscience Award
Sherborn, Massachusetts
February 2, 1999
Ladies and gentlemen,
When the Argentinean military triad composed by generals Videla,
Masera and Agosti, made their coup and began their tortures, crimes,
kidnappings and disappearances, I was living with my wife, Susana,
exactly at the foothills of the Argentinean Andes, at the border
between Chile and Argentina. At an altitude of almost 12.000 feet
we were the teachers at a small school attended by more than 50
quechuas indigenous children. Together with our dear Argentinean
friend, Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Pérez Esquivel and
many other less well known companions, my wife and I claim to be
part of the third generation of the non violent movement that Mahatma
Gandhi created.
I met my wife 25 years ago at L'Arch Community, founded by Lanza
del Vasto, the European disciple of Mahatma Gandhi whom he named
Shantidas, Servant of the Peace, whom he commissioned to spread
the non violence movement in the West. My wife lived close to Lanza
del Vasto for more than a year. At that time I was the third conscientious
objector in Spain apart from the Jehova's Witness. The first two
had been condemned to 8 years in prison. I tried to force the legal
acceptance of a Social Service position instead of the mandatory
military service by working and living with the quechuas. Because
I was a conscientious objector I was a fugitive from the Spanish
military Justice. My goal was to return to Spain after several years,
supported by the delegation of Missions in my diocese. Because of
our work Adolfo, my wife and I were about to loose our lives. Our
school was only a few miles from Mina Aguilar, a huge mine from
which an American corporation extracted tons of various and valuable
gems daily.
A few weeks ago, Madeleine Albright, admitted that the American
government made a big mistake by supporting the Latin America dictatorships.
The same day that the Secretary of State made these declarations
I accompanied Adolfo in Spain. Him and Mr. Almada, president of
the American Jurist Association in Paraguay, had just the day before
provided the Spanish judge Baltazar Garzon with abundant documentation
about the support that Madeleine Albright referred to, the Condor
Plan. So I was there when Adolfo was questioned about the words
pronounced by the Secretary of State and he answered: "I don't
know about any error of the US government. I know that they made
a detailed plan and it was carried out without any error".
Perhaps the greatest crimes committed by these dictatorships were
excesses and out of the control of the US government. But still,
their responsibility is serious.
Twenty five years later history repeats itself. During the last
five years the Foundation S'Olivar of which I am the president,
has felt moved to act in favor of the defenseless civilians in Rwanda,
Burundi and now also in the D.R. of Congo. We know well what is
happening in this region. In the last five years we have gathered
enough stories about the terrible massacres and other acts of extreme
cruelty. We have walked more than 2.000 km for peace. We reached
our limit when we fasted for 42 days. We have received the support
of 19 Nobel Prize winners and of practically all of the European
Parliament headed by its Spanish president Mr. José María
Gil Robles. We have supported the European Commissary for the Humanitarian
Aid, Ms. Emma Bonino, who met with the Rwandan Hutu refugees in
Zaire in February of 97 accompanied by the TV cameras, while the
sophisticated North American satellites did not want to see this
reality and they denied their existence. She found 300.000 people
only in Tingui Tingui! When she arrived to Brussels she declared:
"We have returned from hell". Thanks to all these actions
we believe that for now we have saved thousands of lives. However,
the majority were massacred by the armed extremist Tutsis by firearms,
hunger, illnesses and wounds in their feet.
The massacres performed by the Hutu extremist in 94 cannot be used
ever again as alibi that justifies the massacres that are now being
conducted by the extremist Tutsi lobbies that are in control of
the region. You can believe me when I tell you that since 1990 only
the armed extremist Tutsi's (and specially the Rwandan Patriotic
Front that today tyrannize the Rwandan people) have killed many
more human beings than those extremists Hutus whom they accuse of
genocide. When the propaganda that the FPR has spread makes believe
that the Tutsi ethnic group is the great and only victim in this
conflict, in reality they use their own ethnic group as a shield.
I cannot talk more clearly for security reasons. Shortly after I
left Burundi the last time, the three people from Burundi who we
had left as representatives of an NGOs connected to our Foundation
in different provinces, were assassinated (the Governor of a province,
the Major of a town, the nurse in charge of a health care center).
Also two years ago, in the middle of our 42 days fast in front of
the European Parliament in Brussels and in front of the American
Embassy in Spain, three Spanish collaborators were killed in Rwanda
by the FPR pretending to be Hutu rebels. The live of the fourth
collaborator was spared because he was an American citizen.
I could go on and on. Soon we will be horrified when all these
cruelties come to light of what the Tutsi extremists have been doing
for years, but once more it will be to late. More likely this genocide
will not only be much worse than those produced by the Latin American
dictatorships, it may even surpass the genocide of Pol Pot.
In the same way that the so called genocide of 1994 cannot be used
as the alibi to eliminate in a selective and massive way the Hutus
ethnicity, nor can the grave responsibilities of some European governments
in the past in this region excuse the responsibility of the US now.
For this reason I denounce here today the Government of the US for
giving military training to these armies guilty of genocide. I denounce
the participation of the North American Administration in the planning
of the projects on invasion of Rwanda in 1990 and Zaire in 1996
and I denounce that they supported the execution of these invasions.
I also dare to beg to each one of you here in the name of truth
and of the most holy and sacred in this life, in the name of your
ancestors that made this big and wonderful country that today honors
me with this award, in the name of the heroes that I admire so much
who throughout the history of this nation fought for justice and
for solidarity; some of whom received before me this same award
that I receive today; in the name of the enormous suffering of millions
of African brothers ans sisters; finally, in the name of God whom
I love and try to serve in spite of my limitations and weaknesses;
in the name of all of them I beg you to help me and my companions
in our ambitious effort to make the government of this country to
change its policy in the Great Lakes African region. I beg you to
help us in our intend that your government will not support for
one more day allies that are responsible of huge crimes against
humanity, even responsible for a genocide. I beg you to help us
so that our small voice reaches the North American society through
the media.
The sooner the debate opens up here about the implications and
responsibilities of the American administration in regard to this
genocide, the sooner we will be able to stop it. In Belgium and
France a similar debate has already begun. There are many of us,
not only here but also in Europe, that would like to see that the
moral prestige of this nation will not be squandered. The great
causes of peace and justice need the great strength of the US. On
the contrary as a Mahatma Gandhi used to say, all that is built
upon injustice and falsehood, even the greatest empires, is destroyed.
As earlier Bishop Romero in El Salvador, also the Jesuit bishop
Munzihirwa 3 days before his assassination in 1996 in the Kivu region
of Zaire, protested: "We ask the Tutsi lobbies leading Rwanda
and Burundi to stop organizing the misinformation given to deceive
the international opinion". Today his beloved Kivu suffers
a cruel invasion inflicted by the extremist dictatorships of Rwanda,
Uganda and Burundi. The situation in this region caused by the lobbies
lead by Museveni, Kagame, Buyoya or Bagaza is morally and politically
untenable. With such excluding extremists it will be impossible
to achieve the necessary stability to be able to have the commercial
interchange with this African region that the American administration,
the World Bank and some big corporations seek to have. To achieve
the necessary and fare stability that the suffering civilians of
these countries deserve, more than anything, is a process, similar
to the one in South Africa, to start again without delay in this
region. The ethnic apartheid is even more cruel than the racial
one and the international community cannot accept it. The great
Hutu majority of this region should not be excluded. I wish we finally
would be able to work together to find ways of a just and stable
peace.
As a step further towards this noble goal I accept today this award
even though I do not see myself as worthy as the previous awarded
but, I will accept in the name of the victims whose voice I represent.
Thank you very much to everyone for listening to me. Thank you to
The Peace Abbey for they extremely valuable support for such a right,
urgent and important cause.
|