US Sponsors Organize Painting Exhibition of one of the Cuban Five
The American Federation of Teachers (ATF) in Seattle, Washington, on Wednesday announced it will host an exhibition of paintings by Antonio Guerrero, one of the Cuban Five unjustly held in U.S. prisons.
The opening of the exhibition, entitled "Desde mi altura" (From My Height), will be on Thursday afternoon at the M. Rosetta Hunter Gallery located in the main field of the Seattle Community College, announced the ATF-Seattle website.
The exhibition will run until February 10.
According to an ATF communique, the event has been accompanied by a widely publicized campaign in four areas of the university, and various programs will be held in the gallery.
The local National Committee to Free the Cuban Five will provide reading materials at the reception and during the exhibition, while the M. L. King County Labor Council, representing 130 local unions, invited its approximately 75,000 members.
The so-called Cuban Five are René González, Gerardo Hernández, Antonio Guerrero, Ramon Labanino and Fernando Gonzalez, who are serving unjust sentences.
René, the first to complete his sentence, must remain in the U.S. territory for three years on probation.
The opening of the exhibition, entitled "Desde mi altura" (From My Height), will be on Thursday afternoon at the M. Rosetta Hunter Gallery located in the main field of the Seattle Community College, announced the ATF-Seattle website.
The exhibition will run until February 10.
According to an ATF communique, the event has been accompanied by a widely publicized campaign in four areas of the university, and various programs will be held in the gallery.
The local National Committee to Free the Cuban Five will provide reading materials at the reception and during the exhibition, while the M. L. King County Labor Council, representing 130 local unions, invited its approximately 75,000 members.
The so-called Cuban Five are René González, Gerardo Hernández, Antonio Guerrero, Ramon Labanino and Fernando Gonzalez, who are serving unjust sentences.
René, the first to complete his sentence, must remain in the U.S. territory for three years on probation.
Source:
Prensa Latina
Date:
12/01/2012