Did Chavez give ‘Open Veins’ to the wrong president?
April 20th, 2009
So, Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez surprised Barack Obama with a copy of Eduardo Galeano’s 1971 book Open Veins of Latin America at the presidents’ meeting in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. The book is a left-wing polemic about the exploitation and suppression of Latin America by foreign powers over the last 500 years. The “gift” is part political stunt – the copy given to Obama is in a language he neither reads nor speaks – to make things a bit uncomfortable for the high-flying Obama and remind him of his country’s role in “Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent.”
The gift is good timing for me, though. I finished Open Veins a few weeks ago and was planning to post some thoughts on it anyhow. As I read the book, I didn’t often think of Obama and the US as much as I thought of China, which stands to be the next country to seriously impact Latin America with its hunger for natural resources. China may have played zero role in the last 500 years of pillage in Latin America, but it may well be the leader in the next 500.
Written in the early 70s, Open Veins is Galeano’s account of how the Spanish, then English and finally Americans arrived in Latin America, stole the regions’ resources, exported its wealth, and drove its people to poverty and backwardness through their greed. Since Columbus’s arrival, Latin America’s natural resources have been a continual curse, a major reason for its stunted growth.
Galaeno doesn’t much distinguish between the Spanish conquistadors who once outright stole and enslaved from 20th-century US companies in Latin America that exploited the land and exported profits back home under the guise of free trade. The pillage has taken new forms, to be sure, but the pillage is still going on.
The US comes out looking terrible in Open Veins – a paternalistic superpower openly exploiting Latin American countries and meddling in their political affairs. Corporations like US Steel and Standard Fruit Company “invested” millions in smelting plants and banana plantations, which polluted the earth, condemned locals to dangerous and low-wage jobs, and exported a lion’s share of profits north of the Rio Grande. Development banks like the IMF and IADB are mostly US pawns used to force Latin American countries to re-structure their economies for greater US manipulation. America’s only interest in a growing middle class in Latin America is that it provides a market for US exports.
Galeano is a great writer, which comes through even in translation. There are memorable anecdotes and powerful passages, but, on the whole, I found the book dogmatic and shrill as he forced his agenda into the pages. This is not objective journalism (nor does it claim to be), but rather a kind of blood-boiling invective that tears down straw-men counter-arguments. Still, there is plenty to get incensed about; it’s a moving book. I can see why Hugo Chavez likes it so much.
But I also think he gave Open Veins to the wrong president; the book should have been in his suitcase for his trip to Beijing earlier this month. There were no awkward book exchanges on Chavez’s trip to Beijing, of course, only zesty Xinhua headlines, multi-billion dollar oil investment deals and smiling photos.
For one thing, Open Veins would simply be a great read for any stalwart Communist cadre, at least in theory. There’s anti-imperialism rhetoric, scathing criticisms of the US’s political meddling, a dash of revolutionary fervor and pleas for better labor conditions. But more importantly, if any foreign country needs a cautionary tale about the fine line between “pillage” and “commodities investment” of Latin America in the 21st century, it is China. You never know how long your welcome will last.
Times are good now because China’s buying helps shore up the region’s battered economies, and its investments come without preconditions. China also provides another major trading alternative to doing business with the US. But, everything’s not perfect. Latin America’s trade deficit with China is growing, new free trade agreements have yet to reveal how much (or little) they will benefit Latin economies, and some Chinese mining companies are already getting bad reputations for their labor and environmental policies.
While none of this yet put the country in the same league with the villians in Open Veins, Spain, England and the US’s legacy in Latin America are clearly ones that China must keep in the back of its mind. If China turns out to be as greedy and exploitative as its foreign predecessors, you can be sure it will become the subject of a similarly themed book in the coming years.