Crossposted from https://lemmy.ml/post/41524807
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/41524738
[A video podcast about Cuba, hosted on PeerTube.wtf, from the podcast team Cuba Analysis Podcasts]
Historian and Executive Director of the Tricontinental Institute for Social Research, Vijay Prashad, joins Cuba Analysis to examine Cubaās revolutionary endurance, the legacy of the Tricontinental movement, and the ongoing global struggle against imperialism. With the 60th anniversary of the Tricontinental Conference taking place in January 2026 at the University of Havana (12ā14 January), Prashad calls for renewed debate on SouthāSouth solidarity and internationalism.
Prashad reflects on his first visit to Cuba during the Special Period of the 1990s, when the collapse of the Soviet Union plunged the island into severe economic crisis. He argues that Cubaās survival under extreme pressure revealed a central political truth: socialism, when confronted by empire, becomes an essential defence of sovereignty, dignity, and collective survival.
We discuss the historic 1966 Tricontinental Conference in Havana, which united revolutionary movements from Asia, Africa, and Latin America and laid the foundations for anti-imperialist internationalism. Prashad explains how the conference fused the Bandung Movementās demand for sovereignty with Marxismās commitment to human dignity, forging a tradition of national liberation socialism that continues to shape struggles across the Global South.
Prashad delivers a sharp analysis of ongoing U.S. aggression against Cuba, identifying the blockade as the central human rights violationāan illegal and permanent siege aimed at undermining the Cuban Revolution. He situates todayās economic crisis within a āpermanent Special Periodā driven by sanctions, financial warfare, and political isolation, and calls for stronger international solidarity, particularly from Latin America and the BRICS countries. He stresses that defending Venezuela is inseparable from defending Cuba.
The conversation also explores the continued relevance of Marxist analysis, critiques moralistic and idealist tendencies on the left, and highlights the importance of understanding historyās contradictions and reversals in the long struggle for social transformation.
This episode offers a rigorous political and historical analysis of Cubaās revolutionary project and its international significance, through the lens of one of the most influential critical thinkers of our time.
š Website: https://www.cubanalysis.org/


