| Victor
Jara - An UnfinishedSong 
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Song
is like the water that washes the stones,the wind
that cleans us,like the fire which joins us
together and it lives within us to make us better
peopleVictor
Jara
Click Here to hear Victor Jara
sing
The life of Victor Jara became a symbol of one of the most
important experiences of the twentieth century.
This was the creation of a movement to achieve
the possibility of a new kind of democracy, in
which the poor could participate fully to change
their lives for the better. Victor Jaras
music brought out the beauty of that experience
for Chiles workers and peasants. He is
celebrated still with great fervour in his home
country.
Across the
world there are people who have found that he
symbolises the vision that they share with his
compatriots, arising from quite different
national and cultural experiences. That is the
origin of this festival on 22nd-24th
July 2005 in Machynlleth at the heart of the Dyfi
Valley in Wales.
We have no
doubt that people will enjoy the music, dance,
poetry and theatre of the festival. Here we want
to describe what we think lies at the heart of
the vision that inspired us to organise it, so
that we can share that too.
Why should a
great theatre director, songwriter, singer and
musician be tortured and cruelly executed by a
military dictatorship immediately on taking
power? What kind of terrorist was this? Why
should the government be supported in its actions
by the most powerful nation in the world, which
has always claimed to promote freedom and
democracy? It is because these questions are
still relevant today that the life and work of
Victor Jara should continue to be celebrated
He was born
in a remote village, where his father had a tied
cottage as an inquelino, a labourer on a
latifundia or semi- feudal landed estate. It was
a life of poverty and marginality. As so often in
peasant families, only the efforts of his mother,
after his embittered father became drunkenly
violent and useless to the family, opened up a
different future for Victor. She took her
children to the slums of Santiago where her sheer
hard work enabled him to start an education,
whilst her own love of singing traditional music
inspired his interest. Among the leading figures
of the Chilean democratic movement he was one who
shared the origins of the poor who supported it.
Victors
artistic talents were first recognised when he
joined a semi-voluntary theatre mime group. This
led to training as an actor and director in the
theatre and his innovative work in this field led
to national and international recognition.
However from an early stage in this period he
became involved with others who were collecting
and learning peasant folk music and
re-interpreting it with increasing popularity.
Although his theatre work was similarly informed
it was as a singer and musician that he developed
his role as a voice of the democratic movement,
along with groups like Inti Illimani and
Quilapayun
In the late
1960s the same poverty, injustices and
aspirations that led to the Cuban revolution were
apparent in other parts of Latin America. Workers
and peasants in Chile had a history of political
organisation and the Chilean Popular Unity
Movement chose the democratic road to socialism.
When Salvador Allende, leader of the Socialist
Party was elected by its people Chile became a
beacon of freedom for the poor and dispossessed
elsewhere. Chile was showing the world that
people might choose socialism by a democratic
process and not just by military success against
foreign rule or dictatorship
Because this
was a new culture of democracy people combined
political participation with involvement in
music, dance, theatre, and the visual arts. The
New Chilean Song movement of Victor Jara and
others, incorporating traditional instruments and
forms along with new music that expressed
peoples contemporary lives and aspirations,
replaced the products and promotions of
international record companies in the popular
charts. Popular culture lived up to the label
September 11th
1973 saw the end of all this. A military coup led
by General Pinochet removed the democratically
elected government. The President Salvador
Allende was killed in the bombing of the
Presidential palace. Thousands of active
supporters of the Popular Unity government were
arrested, imprisoned in the National Stadium and
in many cases tortured and murdered. Among these
was Victor Jara.We have direct evidence of how he
was cruelly beaten, his hands mutilated as his
tormenters mocked that his days as a
peoples musician were over, and finally
murdered. His death silenced his voice but the
manner of his death also spoke eloquently for
thousands of other democrats tortured, killed and
disappeared under Pinochet
The role of
the United States in this other September 11th
is one of the reasons for keeping the memory
alive. Declassified material published and
analysed by Peter Kornbluh in 2004 has put US
complicity beyond any questioning. He concludes:
Beginning in the early 1960s, U.S.
policy makers initiated more than a decade of
efforts to control Chiles political life,
culminating in a massive covert effort to
bring down, as Richard Nixon and
members of his cabinet candidly discussed, the
duly elected Popular Unity government of Salvador
Allende. Within hours of realising that goal on
September 11th 1973, the White House
began transmitting secret messages welcoming
General Pinochet to power and expressing a
desire to cooperate with the military Junta
and to assist in any appropriate way.
It is also
clear that the U.S. was standing by to contribute
directly if the coup had not succeeded. This
episode was indeed a classic example of the US
doctrineWe support democracy if it agrees
with us which increasingly dominates world
affairs.Henry Kissinger actually said we
wont let Chile go communist because of the
stupidity of its own people.
In Britain
Margaret Thatcher was a close friend of General
Pinochet and leading politicians supported him
when he was awaiting extradition to Spain for a
proper trial. On the other hand Chilean democrats
applauded a British Home Secretary who agreed to
his extradition.Others responsible for the
regimes atrocities have recently been
indicted including the officer accused of Victor
Jaras torture and murder.
It is to be
hoped that the divisions and suspicions in Chile
can now be healed somewhat by similar processes
of reconciliation as in South Africa after
apartheid. Victors music and songs are full
of the generosity and warmth that could bring
about such reconciliation. But South Africa
created a Commission for Truth as well as
Reconciliation. There has to be a proper
understanding of the forces against democracy,
within Chile and outside, that killed Victor Jara
and his compatriots.
Today we see
the same arguments for interference in the
affairs of other countries, democratic or
otherwise, by the US, its corporate elites and
its allies. The press highlights what is
happening in the Middle East but not in Venezuela
and Brazil where international corporate
interests backed by the USA make it very
difficult for democratic mandates on behalf of
the poor to be fulfilled.The life and work of
Victor Jara can inspire us to follow his lead and
not allow the language of freedom and democracy
to be taken over by the same kind of interests
that tried to silence him. He helps us to
remember the meaning of the other 9/11.
Keith Jackson
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