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Mahatma Gandhi used to say, ā€œWhat is obtained with violence can only be maintained with violenceā€. It is with violence that the power elite successfully kidnapped democracy in our country. As much as they have wanted to disguise the truth by repeatedly lying in order to convince us that ā€œnational reconciliationā€ is underway, we are aware that this dictatorship that began with a coup dā€™Ć©tat continues to destroy our lives and condemn many of us to death. Yet, poetry is always with us and in our hearts we know that they can cut all the flowers but they can never halt the advance of spring. For this reason, I write from an intimate space where sharing is through words, in order to outline a bit of the spring and the dreams that our people have been deprived of. Iā€™d like to give myself the opportunity of dreaming of a country that Iā€™d like to build, and not the country that Iā€™m told I should want. I want to silence the voicesā€”the ones we all hearā€”the voices of those who carry weapons and restrict my rights and yours.

Some years before 1821, a soldier had the luxury of imagining a country. One October 3rd, Francisco MorazĆ”n was born and became a man who fought, with the support of thousands of women, to bring freedom, not only to Honduras, but to all countries of Central America. Now, as we commemorate his birth, it is fitting speak of what it means to be a soldier, an army, and what we mean by that abstract entity we call Peace. We honor the courage of a person who, like many others, decided to disobey the power eliteā€™s mandate, and who, in spite of being a soldier trained by Spanish oligarchs, decided to challenge them and to struggle on behalf of not only the Honduras of his dreams, but also the Central America of his dreams.

The dreamers of that era saw many tasks go unfulfilled, but now it is our opportunity: What kind of Honduras and Central America do we dream about? Is it where everythingā€”power, ā€œsecurityā€, agreements, public goodsā€”is obtained by weapons or armed men? I hope not. Therefore, today I would like everyone to think of this day not as just another holiday or as a day for soldiers, but rather as a time to receive inspiration from men and women who, like MorazĆ”n, continue to struggle. People like Lempira, who stand shoulder to shoulder with VisitaciĆ³n Padilla, Clementina Suares, Karla Lara, Suyapa MartĆ­nez, Berta CĆ”ceres, VĆ­ctor FernĆ”ndez, Karen MejĆ­a, Aureliano Molina, Magdalena Morales, TomĆ”s GĆ³mez, Lilian LĆ³pez, Miriam Miranda, Mirna DurĆ³n, and all the Honduran people who continue to RESIST, even when their hands are bound while a weapon points at their chestā€”the weapon of the police, the military, the ā€œtigersā€, and the attorney generalā€™s office. The weapon is a symbol of all the ongoing manifestations of violence created to crush our dignity. Soldiers! I want to invite you to leave aside your uniforms, and to quit that institution of death. I invite you to join your people, to stop pointing your weapon at us and to dare to dream so that, between the whisper of our mountains and the roar of our rivers, only the Sun can cast its luminance, brought by love, respect and care, so that, at long last, the Spring of Democracy may shed its light on our people.    

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