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Norberto Gonzalez Claudio Piece
Who is Norberto González Claudio? Born
in Vega Baja on May 27, 1945, the second youngest of 6 siblings: 2 women, Mercedes and María Magdalena, and 3 men, Avelino,
Orlando and Wilfredo. He lived in the neighborhood of Almirante Sur with his mother Cristina Claudio Narváez and his father
Antonio González Vega until he was 7 years old. The family then moved to the neighborhood of Rio Abajo to “the González
farm” (his family), where he stayed until he married Elda Santiago Pérez in 1979. Together they had 3 children: Elda
Cristina, Susana and Carlos, and they also raised Elda’s sons Pedro and Ramón as their own. During his
childhood, he played and ran around like every child does. His father called him Captain. He always had fond memories of his
father, but his mother was someone very special for him. Her serenity, firmness, strength, wisdom, the strength of a working
woman that his mother embodied have been his inheritance and his pride. With her he learned love, sensitivity, and simplicity,
as well as to not give in to the powerful. He joined the struggle for social justice and the independence of
Puerto Rico in the decade of the 60's while he was a university student. He was a member of the Federation of Pro Independence
Students (FUPI), the Pro Independence Movement (MPI) and the Puerto Rican Socialist Party (PSP). He got his political training
in the Arecibo region. He was known in his town for selling the newspaper Claridad. He had a post on a corner
of Betances Street in the center of his town, and put on activities of protest music in the plaza. He actively participated
in the Vega Baja’s Garbage Collectors strike in 1970, in the student strikes of 1970 and 1971 at the University of Puerto
Rico, and in the protests against the mines in Adjuntas, where he camped out for several months. He was
in clandestinity since 1985 for defending his people, his homeland, his nation, and fighting for socialism because he thinks
it is the just economic model for all peoples. He is in solidarity with Latin American countries in their
restorative struggles and with all countries that struggle for their freedom and for socialism. He fervently believes and
struggles for patriotic unity. “We must unite on everything we can agree on. Our differences should be left for internal
discussions within each organization,” he insists.
He is a poet. He writes of his family,
life, the homeland, youth, and his eternal love: his wife, to whom, as if a premonition of his future, he dedicated since
the very moment they got married Don Pablo Neruda’s The Letter on the Road. Now, he is captured
by the repressive forces of the northamerican government who seek to criminalize the struggle for the independence of our
people and those who defend our Puerto Rican nation.
Before you write
the prisoners:
It is important to know
that it takes time for your letter to reach a prisoner and to receive a response from him or her. If you do not receive a
quick response, do not give up!! Continue to write to him or her until you receive a response.
If you are going to send
a prisoner money for his or her commissary, it must be in the form of a money order (Postal or Western Union) with their name
and prisoner number. Do not send cash and avoid sending them personal checks.
If you are going to send
them reading materials (Books or magazines); you must make sure that it is a paperback edition. If you are sending a magazine
you must remove all the staples and metal clips. The envelope you send it in must have the staples and metal clips removed
as well.
Norberto Gonzalez Claudio
#09864-000
Unit G Room 15 DWWDF 950
High Street Central Fall, RI 02863
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