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In Venezuela, a profound social transformation identified as the Bolivarian process has been underway since Hugo Chávez's governmental takeover in 1998. It concerns a broad process of self organization, from which has developed a progressive constitution, a labor law, new educational possibilities, and a number of further reforms for the impoverished majority of the population of what is potentially a wealthy state. The government's politics, which take an open stance against neo-liberalism, have experienced vehement rejection from Venezuela's major private industries and from the U.S., expressed in two attempted coups and boycotts. Nonetheless, Chávez and his government enjoy the trust of the majority of the population. The society is heavily politicized; many people who had never before thought of what they wanted to change are now a part of a profound transformation taking place in the country. In the film "Venezuela from Below," the
true actors in the social process are able to speak: the grassroots. After
an introduction by philosopher Carlos Lazo, workers from the oil company
PDVSA in Puerto La Cruz report how in 2002/2003 they protected the refinery
from breaking down during the oil sabotage, which was pawned off as a
strike, and how they were able to reinstate oil production. Several farmers
from a newly founded cooperative in Aragua report on their process of
self organization, on the literacy campaign, and how things should continue.
A women's bank project in Miranda and several loan recipients from Caracas'
disadvantaged district, 23 de Enero, present their projects. Indígena
community members near the Orinoco river in Bolívar speak about
how their demands and struggles are reflected in the constitution and
what has changed for them. Workers from the occupied National Valve Company
in Los Teques and the paper production company Venepal in Carabobo - which
was occupied by 350 workers after the owners drove it to bankruptcy, and
which now, after a partial agreement, is running production again - speak
about corrupt unions, labor control, and their struggles. Protagonists
in the revolutionary movement Tupamaro, the cultural foundation Simón
Bolívar, the leftist website www.23.net, and the Bolivarian Circle
Abrebrecha from 23 de Enero report on their work and what has changed
for them through the social revolutions.
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