This story originally appeared in Black Agenda Report on May 3, 2022. It is shared here with permission.

From April 11-13, 2022, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela hosted the “International Summit Against Fascism ” in Caracas. Two hundred journalists and activists from five continents attended the summit, where the 20th anniversary of the short-lived coup d’état against Hugo Chávez  was commemorated. The summit served as an occasion to highlight the importance of media in revolutionary movements and as a milestone in the continued fight against the global consolidation of right-wing political forces and rising fascism.

The three-day event featured panel discussions about the right-wing forces the people of Venezuela defeated in 2002 and how they compare to the fascist elements operating in countries across the Global South, and now in Ukraine, as well as the relevant emergence of fascism in the United States that emanates from both political parties in their support of dictators and police states.

Popular communication and the role of media were extensively discussed, and the complicity of the Venezuelan media in the attempted coup was recalled in several panel discussions. The coordination of all major Venezuelan media outlets to disseminate the lie that former President Hugo Chávez had relinquished his presidency in 2002 was not only recounted as part of the timeline of events of the overturned coup, but it was also compared to the present consolidation of media within the US and among its allies, the effects of which have been made apparent in the media coverage of the proxy war in Ukraine. The willingness of media CEOs and news anchors to lie to the people of Venezuela in 2002 seemed to be an omen for what was described as the media dictatorship that is spinning an equally false narrative about Ukraine right now.

Kidnapped by the fascist plotters in the government, whose coup was in part facilitated by and through the media, Chávez was secreted away and held captive for two days while the Venezuelan people were told that there was a new president in town. But if that were the end of the story, there would have been no need for this conference.

The Venezuelan media was not the sole topic to be examined regarding the 2002 coup attempt. The United States government’s support of the violent and undemocratic right wing in the country was also a common theme raised by many presenters, as well as the roles played by members of the US foreign policy team such as then-Secretary of State Colin Powell and CIA Director George Tenet, whose demonization of Chávez in hearings before Congress set the stage for US intervention in Venezuela. Chávez—who had been president for just two years at the time of the coup—had committed two unforgivable offenses:

  1. He held meetings with the leaders of the sworn enemies of the US: Cuba, Iran, and Libya;
  2. He criticized the US response to 9/11 in Afghanistan.

Kidnapped by the fascist plotters in the government, whose coup was in part facilitated by and through the media, Chávez was secreted away and held captive for two days while the Venezuelan people were told that there was a new president in town. But if that were the end of the story, there would have been no need for this conference.

The play-by-play of the coup revealed details that most Americans have surely never heard before—like, for instance, how all the media outlets declared there was a new government in place on the morning of the coup, but then those same outlets proceeded to play nothing but cartoons on every station for the rest of the day while the coup government was hastily being legitimized. The most fascinating and important aspects of this important historical event was the role of communication among the people in returning Chávez to power and restoring the constitutional democracy that the people shaped under him. 

During the panel on Popular Resistance and Response, Yesenia Fuentes , president of the Association of Victims of April 11, recounted how she—a poor single mother—heard from neighbors that the media had lied, that Chávez had not resigned and was still president. Having not been particularly political before Chávez, Fuentes said she joined her neighbors and countrymen who took to the streets and marched toward Miraflores, the presidential palace, to demand answers regarding the whereabouts of the president they elected in a landslide just two years earlier.

It is important that Fuentes survived being shot in the face by Venezuelan soldiers ordered to open fire on the people. But what might be more important, in a purely political sense, is that Fuentes and tens of thousands of Venezuelans took to the streets in defiance of the intense media propaganda, in defiance of deadly fascist violence, to demand that the constitution the people helped shape after the landslide election of Hugo Chávez be restored. Yes, the people wanted their president back, but they were fighting for the democracy they shaped even more.

This was the context in which the people appealed to the military to join them in demanding the release of President Chávez two days after he was kidnapped. Images began to circulate of the people flooding the streets, pressing against the gates of Miraflores, with signs demanding to know, “Dónde está Chávez? Qué hablas! [Where is Chavez? What do you say?]”

These details and others about how popular resistance among the people overturned the first-ever media-led, US-backed fascist coup in 2002 were shared during the panel, which also connected that history to the need to commit to and expand popular communication today.

The coup in 2002 was an example of how media consolidation was used to subvert the will of the people then, and how media consolidation does the same thing today.

The challenges facing popular communication were raised in panels involving current Venezuelan journalists, who talked about World War 2.0: Digital Political Communication In Globalization. They focused on the power of social media and independent media in the struggle against global fascism and its rapid consolidation. The coup in 2002 was an example of how media consolidation was used to subvert the will of the people then, and how media consolidation does the same thing today.

To accentuate that point, Ukrainian journalist Liubov Alexandriana Korsakov presented details about the 8-year civil war that has been raging in the Donbas region. She spoke of media silence on that war, as well as the media’s complicity in crafting a false narrative about the Russian military action in Ukraine. At the end of her presentation, she held up a flag of the Donbas militia, emblazoned with the letter “Z,” and she urged continued support for and journalistic attention to the fight against fascists in the Kiev army who were armed and legitimized by the US. (That flag and a letter, incidentally, have been banned in Kiev by the so-called democratic government of Volodymyr Zelensky.)

Attending Militia Day celebrations was a disconcerting experience since, in the US, citizens’ relationship with the police and military is not an amicable one, even though many of their ranks come from the working-class and poor masses. However, the legacy of April 11-13 as well as the Bolivarian Revolution reshaped the relationship between the people and the military. Carlos Ron, Venezuela’s Vice Minister of North America, shared the story of how the famous letter from President Chávez was delivered to the people. A young soldier heard from the media that Chávez had resigned. Tasked with guarding the kidnapped president, the soldier asked Chávez if it was true, if he had really resigned. Chávez answered that he had not and he never would do such a thing. The soldier convinced Chávez to write a letter, sign it, and put it in a nearby trashcan because no one would look for anything there. He would retrieve the letter and get it to whomever Chávez told him to. Letter in hand, the soldier delivered it to the former Attorney General, then he went on to tell his fellow servicemen that the news about Chávez resigning was a lie and that he had proof.

Meanwhile, the Attorney General took the letter to the media and uttered one sentence, “President Chávez has not renounced.” That was enough to send the people into the streets to defend their constitution and demand the return of Chávez. On the way, though, they were met by soldiers and pleaded with them to adhere to the constitution they also participated in shaping, and many did.

Therefore, Militia Day does not present the contradictions of the military being agents of the state who are against the people, as they operate in the US. Despite whatever internal struggles and contradictions they experience, the military largely supported and continues to support the Bolivarian Revolution that they were pivotal in restoring on April 13.

President Nicolas Maduro commemorated April 11 with a press conference to honor the people’s popular resistance to the coup, with the attendees of the summit as his special guests. President Maduro sat behind a remarkably simple long desk with a portrait of Simon Bolivar and the Venezuelan flags adorning the podium as he recounted the deep history of April 11-13, showing relevant newsreels and providing several well-timed and sharply pointed jabs at the coup-plotters and their backers in the US. But even as he recounted the steps leading up to the coup and how it was overturned by popular resistance and communication, he took the opportunity to not just focus on Venezuela’s struggle, but to offer solidarity to Chilean victims of fascist police violence in the city of Renato, and offered assistance to Colombians suffering the same fate. 

The current struggles in Venezuela against ongoing US repression are not disconnected from Hugo Chávez. Chávez is not in the past; he is very present in the consciousness of the people he focused on the most—the Indigenous, Afro-Venezuelans, the peasants in the mountains, and the poor in the barrios in the hills above Caracas and throughout the country.

The Cuartel de la Montaña 4F (also known as the Military Historical Museum)—the final resting place and museum for President Chávez—is located among the people in the mostly poor barrio of the Monte Piedad sector, where Chávez tried to wage his armed struggle against the fascist government of Carlos Andrés Pérez in 1992. After being pardoned from prison in 1994, Chávez started the Fifth Republic Movement, which was more centrist than revolutionary, but was focused on lifting up those Venezuelans who had been left out of the political process and society, bringing them into participating in a new kind of government. 

The current struggles in Venezuela against ongoing US repression are not disconnected from Hugo Chávez. Chávez is not in the past; he is very present in the consciousness of the people he focused on the most—the Indigenous, Afro-Venezuelans, the peasants in the mountains, and the poor in the barrios in the hills above Caracas and throughout the country.

Visiting the museum at the Cuartel de 4F, where his body lies in a marble-encased tomb surrounded by ceremonial guards and reflective pools of water, Chávez’s grassroots political education efforts—the speeches he gave in those neighborhoods on flatbed trucks, speaking to people in forgotten villages in the mountains, and in the middle of the most impoverished barrios in the cities—is showcased. Inspired by his desire to free all Venezuelans from poverty, inequality, oppression, and political isolation, the people voted in record numbers to put Chávez in the presidential office in 2000. As a result, one of his first acts was to immediately begin the process of including the people who voted for him in rewriting the country’s constitution. This was the beginning of the Bolivarian Revolution, and the coup in 2002 was designed to stop a true people-powered and people-focused state from taking shape.

Walking through the new exhibit commemorating April 11-13, the sights, sounds, and lessons of that time illuminate how Chávez’s revolution spurred the people to defend their new democracy against the most powerful fascist state in the world. The inspiration he drew upon—from his own upbringing as one of the forgotten poor in a small village, to his faith in Jesus Christ as a force for social equality and liberation, to his commitment to protecting the people and environment they live in—was on full display, erasing any confusion about the capacity for those concepts of faith and revolution to co-exist successfully. They did in Chávez, and they still do in the hearts of many Venezuelans who will openly weep if asked how they feel about their Comandante.

At the end of the summit, the word “democracy” had a legitimate meaning, and the phrase “The people, united, will never be defeated” took on a whole new and relevant life.

Because Venezuela continues to prove that statement to be true.

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Jacqueline Luqman is a host and producer for TRNN. With more than 20 years as an activist in Washington, DC, Jacqueline focuses on examining the impact of current events and politics on Black, POC, and other marginalized communities in the US and around the world, providing a specific race and class analysis at the root of these issues. She is Editor-In-Chief and a co-host of the social media program Coffee, Current Events & Politics in Luqman Nation with her husband, and is active in the faith-focused progressive/left activist community.