Oscar López Rivera is a Puerto Rican political 
prisoner serving a 70 year sentence for seditious 
conspiracy. He was arrested on May 29, 1981 and 
as part of the campaign for his freedom, the 
National Boricua Human Rights Network, Batey 
Urbano and Latin@ Coalition have created "31 DAYS 
FOR 31 YEARS" - A Multimedia and Interactive 
Exhibit for the Release of Oscar López Rivera.
Oscar Lopez Rivera message for May 29, 2012
Greetings with Much Respect and Love
i want to express my heartfelt gratitude to the 
Puerto Rican people in PR and in the diaspora for 
the support you have given me during the past 31 
years.  i also want to express the same gratitude 
to the freedom and justice loving people in the 
u.s. and in different parts of the world for the 
solidarity they've shared with me. The support 
i've received has been a fountain of strength 
that has helped me face and deal with the 
difficult challenges i've experienced in prison 
during the past 31 years, and to remain morally 
and spiritually strong to continue struggling and resisting.
The 31 years seem to have passed fleetingly. Many 
radical changes have occurred all over the world 
during this period of time. In Latin America 
progressive presidents rule in Venezuela, 
Ecuador, Bolivia, Uruguay, El Salvador, 
Nicaragua, Brazil and Argentina. In the last two 
countries the presidents are progressive women. 
And in Puerto Rico the us navy is no longer 
present in Vieques. Unfortunately, the most 
important change Puerto Ricans need has not taken 
place. Because colonialism seems to be more entrenched now than ever.
It was Jose Marti who said that for a people to 
be free they needed to be cultured.  i believe 
Puerto Ricans are a cultured people. Yet we still 
are a colonized people.  We are also a morally, 
mentally, spiritually strong people. But we 
haven't been able to make Puerto Rico a free and sovereign nation.
It was Albert Einstein who said that by repeating 
the same experiment the results were always going 
to be the same. Doing that is nothing else than 
an exercise in futility. And Puerto Rican 
independentists have been repeating the same 
experiment for decades and obtaining the same 
results without being able to achieve their goal 
of an independent and sovereign nation. The 
celebration of plebiscites has been such an 
experiment. So why do we continue engaging in 
Sisyphean tasks?  What should we do? Let's pay 
heed to Einstein's wise warning.
My proposal is a simple one. Let's work on the 
problems we can resolve with the means and 
resources we have at our disposal.  For example, 
let's take one problem related to the health 
issue we are facing - obesity. To resolve this 
problem a simple change in lifestyle will 
do.  Eat a healthy diet, exercise and create a 
support network.  We can also start programs of 
urban gardening. There's space for such a program 
in the 78 municipalities in Puerto Rico.  And in 
those spaces we can grow healthy products that 
can help with a nutritional diet.  We can look 
for alternative sources of energy and of 
transportation.  Let's start thinking of changes 
we can make in our lifestyles and we can resolve 
some of the difficult problems we face. Problems 
shouldn't intimidate or scare us.  They should 
produce ideas in our heads and challenge us to 
find solutions.  Finding solutions to problems 
give us confidence, and help us transcend our 
colonized mentality.  And that transcendence gets 
us closer to our goal of achieving an independent 
and sovereign nation and a better and more just 
world. We are intelligent enough to know what 
needs to be done.  We can change lifestyles in 
Puerto Rico and in the Puerto Rican diaspora and 
by doing so we will grow stronger morally, 
physically, spiritually and mentally.  We can 
make Puerto Rico a free and sovereign nation.  
En resistencia y lucha, OLR.
WE CAN FREE OSCAR LÓPEZ RIVERA
Alejandro Luis Molina
alejandrom@boricuahumanrights.org
Skype: alejandromann
Coordinating Committee
National Boricua Human Rights Network
2739 W. Division Street
Chicago IL 60622
www.boricuahumanrights.org
 
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