Insurgent History Movement approved plan for next six years

Pedro Calzadilla, president of the Rómulo Gallergos Center for Latin American Studies (CELARG)
Photo: VTV

Published at: 08/12/2024 10:25 PM

The Movement for Insurgent History approved an action plan for the next six years, with the lines of struggle to vindicate and make known the truth of the glorious episodes of Venezuelan and Venezuelan independence and heroes, said the president of the Center for Latin American Studies Rómulo Gallergos (CELARG), Pedro Calzadilla, during the closing of the Ayacucho International Colloquium 1824-2024, Unity, Sovereignty and Peace, which took place in Caracas.

With the presence of more than 20 national and international speakers, to speak on the different aspects of the Battle of Ayacucho, as part of its 200th anniversary this Monday, December 9, Calzadilla reported on the meeting held by the movement last Friday, which was the national meeting of a process of debate throughout the country “and which ended up consolidating our plan of action for the next six years of this movement of Insurgent History”.

Regarding the closing ceremony of the colloquium, as reported by Venezolana de Televisión (VTV), she thanked the speakers from all over the country and the international guests for their participation, who she said that it would be an honor to have them in the country one more year, for their contributions to the knowledge of that battle that took place in Peru to liberate those lands and finally defeat the brutal Spanish imperial conqueror.

“It is never enough to address the subject, it is never enough, we have approached it from different spheres, different spheres, a cultural, military, political and strategic approach, but I think there is no doubt about the relationships that this fact is interwoven with all the circumstances of the moment, with all areas of the continent, we listen to Mexican and Central American colleagues, from different regions of South America and the Caribbean, shedding light on this important issue,” Calzadilla acknowledged.

He concluded that the colloquium was an extraordinary opportunity to commemorate the Bicentennial of the Battle of Ayacucho, which, beyond a battle, represents a historic challenge that completed a fundamental historical stage.

Mazo News Team

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