I return to spend time on this blog, I apologize for the truth have you abandoned. But the important thing is that as good prodigal son, now back.
These days have been well motivated in our country. Deaths, recordings, fans, supplies, flooding and EARTHQUAKES and all kinds of account for a very busy environment.
With this big flow of information is very easy to forget the little things that usually do not record media.
Unfortunately, violence and war do not suffer from both leaders, but the victims. The notification of the death of 'Sureshot' has grabbed the headlines but in my opinion will not help to ease the pain of those hostages and their families.
is good to echo the victims, they are the protagonists of this absurd war. The country will not rescue this or that. Unfortunately, Colombia has a tragic fate that has allowed this war to end. It is therefore important to hold on to those little details that bring us closer to the much desired peace.
Yesterday, May 28, 2008, with three in the afternoon, a group of people organized a day of prayer in the Plaza de Bolívar. The event was organized by Fondelibertad-National Fund for the Protection of Individual Liberty, and supported by the Ministry of Defence.
Of course, few people were let alone the media. But in that event was focused on real-suffering people. The wives and children of mothers who are kidnapped or disappeared, even killed. Interestingly
these days has rained heavily the country's capital but yesterday was doing a brilliant sun at the time that the act happened. When released hundreds of balloons with the colors of the flag of my country asked me that nothing is worth all this. How long?
Now with the death of 'Sureshot' comes to mind a phrase of the Liberator, that true pro and has been badly treated in the speeches of some militant Latin American leader: "If my death contributes to cease to be parties, I will run quiet to the grave."
Will the death of Manuel Marulanda in something to help Colombia to change its position or at least have made it this quiet in his grave?