NICARAGUAN REVOLUTION A FAMILIAR TUNE TO PETE SEEGER

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000605700034-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 27, 2010
Sequence Number: 
34
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 3, 1983
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000605700034-8.pdf96.8 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/27: CIA-RDP90-00552R000605700034-8 ARTICLE UPEARED Dar PAI Il " CHICAGO TRIBUNE 3 May 1983 Nicaraguan :revolution a farm tune to Pete Seeger who live in Berkeley, Calif. Chicago Tribune was also a rorum, with ti?htiv schodulsyi riicn?ccinn fighter of wrongs,a singer of hopeful songs, IS standing up to be counted in yet another corner of confrontation. "Too many rectangles in the world," said Pete Seeger, admiring the stark revolutionary murals that adorn some of the crumbling walls of bombed-out build- ings here. r t we need is more mg t ~ g this trusty banjo beside one large and eolori il depiction of mum- _phaM gawrnllas leading women and chil-. dren into liberation, he smiled =broadly. "Yes, sir, that's a nice one; " he said. "If I hadn't become a musician, I often think I would have been a muralist. Yep, ..a muralist." Seeger. Of course, became a folk star and a prince of protest. Civil rights, Vietnam, Nixon, Watergate. His has sung his songs. lent his presence, taken a stand on all of them. LAST WEEK he found himself in an unfamiliar place but a familiar setting, joining more than 80 Latin American musicians from 16 countries here to lend their support to the leftist Sandinista government and to denounce a guerrilla war armed and directed by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. If the issue sounds familiar, to Seeger it is. He recalls the CIA-sponsored coup that deposed President Salvador Allende in Chile in 1573, and he often has opposed U.S. hostility to leftist regimes in his ballads. Latin American politics, howev- er, is something new, said Seeger, who will be 64 next week. "I'm really learn- ing, most of all." Seeger was the most prominent North American musician to answer the San- diniste's invitation to the International Festival of New Latin American Song, a musical extravaganza that is billed here as.a cultural and political rebuke .to -. "Yanquis and imperialism." "We know so many others who would have come if they could have but didn't have-the money," said Seeger, graying .but tall and trim and still lighthearted enough to break into song in a hotel lobby at 8 a.m., to the delight of onlookers. JOAN BAEZ was supposed to come, according to some posters advertising the event in costa Rica, but the only other U.S.-based musicians to attend were those of Grupo Rica, a jazz and salsa group mostly made up of Chilean exiles sessions anti a firm political stance. To him, "la nueva cancion" ["the new song") being promoted here is a throwback to the days of black music during the freedom movement in the South. There are differences, though. In today's Nicaragua, ' the stage for musician.' performances is draped with a banner reading "The [armed) struggle is the highest of all songs." Armed -revolutionary movements, not the nonviolence preached by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights activists, are being championed here. Seeger sees Nicaragua-and all of Latin America-was the Sandinista government does: As a small, poor place under attack from a hostile, overbearing United States. HE HAS a daughter, Mika, 35, and a grandson, 10, who have lived here more than two years. [Asked how -old Mika is, Seeger's wife, Toshi, replied: "Let's see, she -was born during the [Henry) Wallace campaign, in 1948. We do everything br .campaigns back home.' ) "When I was my grandson's age, I remember growing up in Connecticut and seeing a picture of a stoop- shouldered peasant with a big sombrero who .had fought- U.S. marines in Nicaragua " said Seeger. "Later I found out he was Sandino and that he was a poet who became a freedom fighter, like so many poets." Agusto Sandino is the Nicaraguan peasant for whom the revolution that overthrew dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979 is named. "I consider it an honor to be invited here," Seeger said. "We welcome the chance to express our solidarity with this heroic people at a time, when criminals of the CIA are trying to organize an invasion. One wonders how the heck you keep the CIA from doing things like this, Do we have to abolish the agency?" ; FOR ALL his commitment and solidarity, Seeger admits he doesn't know much about what is happening around here. "I'm really sorry I don't know Spanish," he said. "I feel like I'm missing half of it." But as be watches and learns, be said, the feeling that comes over is an old one. "This is nothing new. to us," said Toshi. "We feel right Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/27: CIA-RDP90-00552R000605700034-8