Solidarity in Madrid with the Venezuelan film series after extremist censorship
MPPRE Press
Published at: 21/03/2025 01:40 PM
The
Venezuelan film Operation Orion was screened this Thursday in the auditorium of the Ateneo 1st of May
Foundation of the Workers' Comisions union (CCOO), in Madrid,
Spain, amid high expectations, after having been
forcibly rescheduled due to attempts to boycott its dissemination by extremist sectors.
Among those
attending the screening, the first vice-president of the Congressional Foreign
Affairs Committee and general secretary of the Communist Party of
Spain (PCE), deputy Enrique Santiago, who expressed all his affection for
the Venezuelan people and recorded the reasons why he came to see the film.
“We wanted to
come to make it clear that there are many sectors of Spanish society
committed to defending freedom of expression and supporting all the just
causes of peoples,” he said, according to a press release from the Venezuelan
Embassy in Spain.
The film by
director Rubén Hernández Remón, which is part of the Venezuelan proposal
on Cinema and Memory: The Voice of the People and the Struggle for Sovereignty, had
the support of the public who came to the place to confirm their support for the
work, which tells the case of the 153 paramilitaries captured during 2004, in
the vicinity of Caracas, Venezuela, while they were preparing to commit an assassination against President Hugo Chávez Frías.
In this regard,
Santiago assured that the current situation is marked by “times when the truth
is permanently hidden or distorted. That's why I think the reaction is
due to the fact that the counterrevolutionary sectors are very afraid of the story of
a film that narrates events that occurred in Venezuela, that are historical and that are
constantly distorted, distorted and hidden.”
For his part,
Daniel Gismero, Secretary of Studies and Culture of CCOO Madrid and representative
of the hosts of the audiovisual exhibition, considered that all spaces
should always be open to culture in all its expressions.
“We don't understand
that there is censorship in culture, we don't understand what harm there can be in wanting to
screen some films and, therefore, for us (CCOO) it is an obligation to
be able to provide our spaces so that these exhibitions can be seen,
” he emphasized.
Meanwhile, Pilar
Alcolea, from the October Social Center in Guadalajara, expressed her solidarity and affection with Venezuela during the prelude
to the screening. “What has happened is
barbaric, it is curtailing the right to culture, to freedom of expression
of peoples,” he repudiated.
The film series
will continue on Monday, March 24, with the screening, starting at 6:30
p.m., of “The Battle of the Bridges”, a documentary by renowned director
Carlos Azpúrua, current president of the National Autonomous
Cinematography Center (CNAC).
Mazo News Team