00:00Bienvenidos de nuevo a From the South.
00:01Continuamos en Brasil con el Llandless Rural Workers Movement,
00:04líderes de todos los 26 estados,
00:07y en Recife, discutiendo estrategias
00:09de originaria de trabajo en el ciudadano y el país.
00:12La correspondencia, Brian Mir, con más.
00:16Seis años atrás, durante la edad de la pandemia de la COVID-19,
00:20el MST, o Llandless Rural Workers Movement,
00:23comenzó a desarrollar los alimentos producidos
00:25de los agricultores de familiares en sus agrarianos reformos
00:28y distribuying it for free
00:33as a way to help fight hunger.
00:36Now, they used that moment as an opportunity
00:38to begin political organizing,
00:40and through that process,
00:41a project called Solidary Hands was born.
00:44Today, the first national Solidary Hands conference
00:48is underway in Recife,
00:50and MST leadership from all 26 states
00:53have come across the country to take part in it.
00:56The Cuban ambassador is also here.
00:58National directors, including co-founder
01:01of the MST, Juan Pedro Estadio, is here.
01:03And they're talking about ways
01:05to unite the city and the countryside
01:07to fight the rise of fascism,
01:10which, according to the analysis of the MST,
01:13is a result of late-stage capitalism.
01:15Now, there's a lot of parallel conversations
01:17going on among leadership
01:19from different areas,
01:21and the hope is that the bonds
01:22that are formed during these two days here,
01:25during this conference,
01:26will continue,
01:27and the level of organization
01:29between the city and the countryside
01:31in Brazil will continue to increase
01:33in the fight against the rise of fascism.
Comentarios