STEVE JOHNSON recommends a beautiful album of songs that celebrate summer, from May Day onwards
ROQUE DALTON (1935–1975) was one of the best-loved poets of the Latin American liberation struggles of the last century.
He was a guerilla-poet who stared death in the face many times, but his life was a triumph of revolutionary optimism: “I believe the world is beautiful,/that poetry, like bread, is there/for everyone./And that my veins don’t end in me/but in the common blood/of those battling for life,/love, things,/the landscape and bread,/poetry for everyone.”
A member of the Salvadorean Communist Party, Roque Dalton was first sentenced to death in 1960 for organising students and peasants against the local landowners. On the day of the execution his life was saved when the military dictatorship was overthrown in a coup. Incredibly, Dalton escaped death a second time in 1965 when the prison he was in was hit by an earthquake.
Newly revealed documents reveal that MI5 taught Brazilian secret police the techniques deployed by the 1964-85 military dictatorship in horrific prisons like Rio de Janeiro’s House of Death. SARA VIVACQUA reports
NICK MATTHEWS recalls how the ideals of socialism and the holding of goods in common have an older provenance than you might think
ANDY CROFT rallies poets to the impossible task of speaking truth to a tin-eared politician
The Labour Party proposal to scrap benefits for those unable to work will be debated in Parliament next Tuesday, and threatens the most vulnerable in our society. ALAN MORRISON presents some responses in poetry


