This March 26, like every year, World Climate Day is celebrated, established by the United Nations (UN) in 2009, with the aim of generating awareness and sensitization in the world population to reverse the negative consequences of climate change.
The rulers of the United States of America have me sick and tired of their mistaken attributions of believing they are the owners of the world, I heard a man say when he recently learned of the news published by The Wall Street Journal.
By Marta Gómez Ferrals/ ACN. He was born in Havana on March 26, 1848 with the name Manuel Antonio Sanguily Garrite, this Cuban who achieved the rank of Colonel of the Liberation Army in the Ten Years' War against colonial rule (1868-1878) and also distinguished himself, as an intellectual and politician.
By Abel Prieto Jiménez/ Taken from Juventud Rebelde. It is very bitter to know that the new fascism feeds on poor people. But the most bitter thing is verifying that it feeds on adolescents and young people.
With their eyes fixed on the horizon and determination in their souls, they defied those who tried to silence them and became a beacon of hope.
Light of courage, commitment and passion in the history of Cuba; woman of sacrifice and determination in the fight for freedom and social justice; unbreakable heroine was Melba Hernández.
Wide, dark, terrifying, the column of heat and soot sought the sky; At the summit it topped its sinister crown with a hat of smoke, a deadly fungus that, at ten past three on that Friday afternoon, March 4, 1960, left Havana without sun for a few minutes, and Cuba wounded by a knife. that still hurts.
We Cubans face, in the field of ideas, a crusade that does not become less dangerous because it is old. If it was difficult to face it before, it is much more so now.
At such an early date for the Cuban revolution, like April 14, 1961, in the middle of the Literacy Campaign and three days after the Yankee invasion of Playa Girón began, Fidel inaugurated the first National School of Art Instructors of the country, with an enrollment of four thousand students.
When walking through the city these days, immersed in the bustle and merriment for the 510th anniversary of the founding of the former town of Santa María del Puerto del Príncipe, there is no escape from the need to record exalting images of the princely landscape, and so quite a few passersby do it.
The city grows every day with the hearts and work of its people; So much so, that in its streets, buildings and public spaces in general, locals have written a good part of their lives and profess infinite love for a place that, even thousands of kilometers away, occupies an indelible part of memories and passions.
The year was 1749 and the Jesuit Order raised a sum not much higher than 50 thousand pesos with the commitment to build a school in Camagüey, completed eight years later, while they finished another in Havana.