This is one of the revolutionaries of our time, His images can be found almost all over the world. Read about him.
Ernesto (Che) Guevara was born in Rosario in Argentine in 1928. After studying medicine at the University of Buenos Aires he worked as a doctor. While in Guatemala in 1954 he witnessed the socialist government of President Jacobo Arbenz overthrown by an American backed military coup. Disgusted by what he saw, Guevara decided to join the Cuban revolutionary, Fidel Castro, in Mexico.
In 1956 Guevara, Castro and eighty other men and women arrived in Cuba in an attempt to overthrow the government of General Fulgencio Batista. This group became known as the July 26 Movement. The plan was to set up their base in the Sierra Maestra
mountains. On the way to the mountains they were attacked by government
troops. By the time they reached the Sierra Maestra there were only
sixteen men left with twelve weapons between them. For the next few
months Castro's guerrilla army raided isolated army garrisons and were
gradually able to build-up their stock of weapons.
When the guerrillas took control of territory they redistributed the
land amongst the peasants. In return, the peasants helped the guerrillas
against Batista's soldiers. In some cases the peasants also joined
Castro's army, as did students from the cities and occasionally Catholic
priests.
In an effort to find out information about the rebels people were
pulled in for questioning. Many innocent people were tortured. Suspects,
including children, were publicly executed and then left hanging in the
streets for several days as a warning to others who were considering
joining the revolutionaries. The behaviour of Batista's forces increased
support for the guerrillas. In 1958 forty-five organizations signed an
open letter supporting the July 26 Movement. National bodies
representing lawyers, architects, dentists, accountants and social
workers were amongst those who signed. Castro, who had originally relied
on the support of the poor, was now gaining the backing of the
influential middle classes.
General Fulgencio Batista
responded to this by sending more troops to the Sierra Maestra. He now
had 10,000 men hunting for Castro and his 300-strong army. Although
outnumbered, Castro's guerrillas were able to inflict defeat after
defeat on the government's troops. In the summer of 1958 over a thousand
of Batista's soldiers were killed or wounded and many more were
captured. Unlike Batista's soldiers, Castro's troops had developed a
reputation for behaving well towards prisoners. This encouraged
Batista's troops to surrender to Castro when things went badly in
battle. Complete military units began to join the guerrillas.
The United States
supplied Batista with planes, ships and tanks, but the advantage of
using the latest technology such as napalm failed to win them victory
against the guerrillas. In March 1958, President Dwight Eisenhower,
disillusioned with Batista's performance, suggested he held elections.
This he did, but the people showed their dissatisfaction with his
government by refusing to vote. Over 75 per cent of the voters in the
capital Havana boycotted the polls. In some areas, such as Santiago, it
was as high as 98 per cent.
Fidel Castro
was now confident he could beat Batista in a head-on battle. Leaving
the Sierra Maestra mountains, Castro's troops began to march on the main
towns. After consultations with the United States
government, Batista decided to flee the country. Senior Generals left
behind attempted to set up another military government. Castro's
reaction was to call for a general strike. The workers came out on
strike and the military were forced to accept the people's desire for
change. Castro marched into Havana on January 9,1959, and became Cuba's
new leader.
In
its first hundred days in office Castro's government passed several new
laws. Rents were cut by up to 50 per cent for low wage earners;
property owned by Fulgencio Batista
and his ministers was confiscated; the telephone company was
nationalized and the rates were reduced by 50 per cent; land was
redistributed amongst the peasants (including the land owned by the
Castro family); separate facilities for blacks and whites (swimming
pools, beaches, hotels, cemeteries etc.) were abolished.
In 1960 Guevara visited China and the Soviet Union. On his return he wrote two books Guerrilla Warfare and Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War.
In these books he argued that it was possible to export Cuba's
revolution to other South American countries. Guevara served as Minister
for Industries (1961-65) but in April 1965 he resigned and become a
guerrilla leader in Bolivia.
In 1967 David Morales recruited Félix Rodríguez to train and head a team that would attempt to catch Che Guevara.
Guevara was attempting to persuade the tin-miners living in poverty to
join his revolutionary army. When Guevara was captured, it was Rodriguez
who interrogated him before he ordered his execution in October, 1967.
Rodriguez still possesses Guevara’s Rolex watch that he took as a
trophy.
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