The living legacy of Che

26 October 2007

Cuba Si
The magazine of CSC
Forty years after his death Che’s ideals are very much alive in Latin America and especially in Cuba argues Francisco Dominguez
Spring 2012
Sport at the heart of revolution
Summer 2011
A socialist path to sustainability
A manufactured dissident
Breaking the Silence: Beyond the Frame- Contemporary Cuban Art
Restructuring the Revolution
Spring 2011
In Santiago it is always the 26th
50 years of solidarity
Revealing Che’s revolutionary roots
The Doctors’ Revolution
Winter 2011
Habana Hoy: The New Sound of Cuban Music
Gerardo remains positive
Playa Girón
Latin lessons: What can we learn from the world’s most ambitious literacy campaign?
Autumn 2010
Sustaining the revolution
Cuba and the number of “political prisoners”
Daughter of Cuba
La revolucion energetica: Cuba's energy revolution
Summer 2010
Noam Chomsky on Cuba-US relations - exclusive
Friends of Cuba Solidarity Campaign
Waste not, want not
Miami 5 updates
Spring 2010
Cubans in Haiti
Remedios y sus Parrandas
Concert for Haiti
The real war on terror
Auntumn 2009
Interview with families of the Five
Autumn 2009
Juan Almeida Bosque – hero of the revolution
Presidio Modelo, School of Revolutionaries
Summer 2009
From here to there - Interview with Omar Puente
Talking to Aleida Guevara
Pride in Cuba
Ken Gill ‘son of Cuba’
Cuba50 - 40,000 people join the celebrations
Spring 2009
Confronting rhetoric with reality
Talking about a Revolution
Pushing for a change in UK policy
A chance encounter with Operación Milagro
Winter 2008-9
Hasta La Victoria Siempre - Interview with Cuban poet who witnessed Revolution
The revolution that defies the laws of gravity
Feminising the Revolution
Autumn 2008
Families torn apart - Miami 5 interview
After the storm - Hurricane report
TUC Congress reports
Terror in Miami - Cuba's exile community
Summer 2008
Havana rights
AGM Report - CSC celebrates year’s successes
Miami Five – Ten years on
Changes in Cuba?
Spring 2008
Celebrating 50 years of progress
Fidel stands down
Libraries at the heart of the community
Lessons for a greener world
Cuba50 – Celebrating Cuban Culture
Winter 2007/08
“In every barrio, Revolution!” - CDR Museum opens
Fighting for the Five - Leonard Weinglass interview
The World of Work in a Changing Cuba
Campaign on Barclays and extraterritoriality continues…
Autumn 2007
21st century medicine
The living legacy of Che
Interviewing Fidel
Summer 2007
Farewell to Vilma:
From Pakistan to Rotherham:
Whose rules rule?
Spring 2007
Feeding the revolution
Stop the Hilton Hotels ban
Teaching citizenship the Cuban way
Winter 06/07
Exclusive: London's Mayor visits Cuba (inglés y espanol)
Rendezvous with lies
World Circuit Records celebrates 20 years
Autumn 2006
Life without Fidel
The landing of the Granma
America's favourite immigrants
Summer 2006
From Cuba with love: Cuban doctors in Pakistan
Teatro Miramar: a dream to be realised
Bush’s ‘secret’ plan for Cuba
Spring 2006
Exporting healthcare: Cuba and the real meaning of internationalism
Let there be Light
“Hombres not Nombres”
Winter 2005-6
Confessions of an “independent” trade unionist
We are stronger than ever
Europe partakes in a recipe for disaster cooked up in Washington
Autumn 2005
Brendan Barber pledges TUC support for Cuba
Five reasons why the people rule
Education from womb to tomb
Summer 2005
Bill and Joe’s Cuban cycle adventure
Poet of Guantanamo
Participation is key to Cuba’s democracy
Spring 2005
Is Venezuela next after Iraq?
Trip of a lifetime
Justice delayed, justice denied
Winter 2004/5
Cuba's Response to AIDS
Books: Bulwark against neo-liberalism
Guide to the `Report from the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba´
Autumn 2004
Book review: Cuba’s story
Autumn 2004
Heart strings
Speaking truth to power: Cuba at the UN
Summer 2004
Salud International to back Cuban internationalist doctors
Cuba saved my daughter
A revolution in culture
Spring 2004
Miami Five: Hopeful of justice
Biotech for all
US occupation of Guantanamo Bay is illegal, says top lawyer
Winter 2003/4
The truth about Reporters Sans Frontières
Solar-powered education
Charting women’s progress since 1959
Autumn 2003
Does the FCO website betray a political bias against Cuba?
Join the CSC bike ride to Cuba
How the US stole Guantanamo Bay
Summer 2003
Hands Off Cuba Campaign Launched
Monument to freedom
EU lines up with US
UK lawyer visits Havana
Ibrahim Ferrer: a lesson in greatness
My secret mission to meet Fidel
The Miami Five -an injustice too far
Spring 2003
Beyond the beach and sun:
CSC’s Father Geoff Bottoms visits one of the Five
Cuban student tours UK
Autumn 2002
British credit cards hit by US sanctions
Housing for the People
Moncada Day Cycle Challenge
Summer 2002
Evil Spirit
From May Day In Havana To The Cradle Of The Revolution
A dream for all times
How foreigners fuel US anti-Cuba policy
Spring 2002
African Roots
How the US planned to start a war with Cuba
Toys for Cuba
Welsh Education Minister meets Fidel
The living legacy of CheOctober 9 this year marked the 40th anniversary of the death of Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara.

As is well known, he was assassinated on October 9 1967 by his captors, the Bolivian military, following orders form the CIA. Ever since his image, especially Alberto Korda’s iconic photograph, has become an extraordinary symbol, easily identifiable everywhere on the planet.

More importantly, he is seen by millions the world over as the embodiment of the Cuban Revolution, as well as the epitome of the struggle of the oppressed.

Many a commentator will be racking their brains again on 9 October, looking for a credible anti-Cuban Revolution interpretation of the endurance of the powerful myth. Yet it is impossible to divorce the charged symbolism of the iconic figure from the aspirations for a better world that a large part of humanity longs for, nor is it true to suggest that it has become just another fashionable brand, as some detractors have suggested.

The reason for the longevity of the legend – Che died at 39 - is not so much that Che was prepared to give his life for his convictions, something which he did, but because of the values broadly associated with his objective of building a new society and its enduring legacy in the Cuban Revolution. This legacy, of course, refers to free universal education, free health, and the raft of social rights that all Cuban have enjoyed since 1959, but it goes well beyond that.

Was it not in the spirit of Che that Cuba made the highly risky undertaking to send tens thousands of their young to fight against the military invasion of Angola by the racist South African Defence Force in the 1980s?

Was it not in the spirit of Che to send hundreds of Cuban doctors to Pakistan to save thousands of lives following the devastating earthquake in 2005?

Is it not the ethos of what Che symbolises and represent that leads Cuba to have more health professionals deployed in the Third World than the World Health Organisation?

Is it not in the spirit of Che that Mission Miracle was established by Cuba (and Venezuela) and has restored the sight of 700,000 patients from poor backgrounds form all over Latin America and the US, totally free of charge in just four years?

Ernesto Guevara became Che precisely because he identified and took the side of the wretched of the earth. We can already see strong glimpses of this in his Motorcycle Diaries where he gives full vent to his sense of outrage at the racist oppression, exploitation and abject exclusion of the indigenous people in Peru and Bolivia during his by now famous journey of discovery through Latin America. In one famous note he writes: “I am no longer I, at least am not the one I was.” Guevara was becoming Che.

In that journey he saw the full brutality of underdeveloped capitalism: copper miners suffering from silicosis, the squalor of shanty town dwellers, the desperate plight of the peasant, the appalling state of health of the masses, the neglected colony of lepers in the Amazon, but also the arrogance and blissful indifference of the Latin American elites for the people and the ruthless arrogance of US imperialism in Guatemala in 1954.

His conclusion for these experiences would be summed up by him with his characteristic contained fury: “If you tremble with indignation at every injustice, then you are a comrade of mine.”

Actually Che did not live long enough to see the worse of the actions of US imperialism in alliance with the Latin American oligarchies. Was he not right in thundering against US imperialism and launching a world cry to battle against its crimes the world over: “Our every action is a battle cry against imperialism, and a battle hymn for the people's unity against the great enemy of mankind: the United States of America.”

History bears Che out. US imperialism is responsible of having endorsed, supported, financed, and trained the murderous regimes and their henchmen in the region in the last three decades. The figures are an eloquent confirmation of this: 5,000 murdered in Chile, 30,000 in Argentina, 50,000 in Nicaragua, 60,000 in Peru, 80,000 in El Salvador and over 120,000 in Guatemala.

The seeds he sowed are today bearing extraordinary fruit. Revolutionary tidings are sweeping the region from the Rio Bravo to Patagonia. Government and revolutionary processes have erupted in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador, ‘por ahora…’

Those indigenous wretches who Che saw in the 1950s, the officially despised ‘indians’ have now become the government in Bolivia. Che would have been delighted with these developments. Back in the 1900s this is what was said about the indigenous people: “Some of them give the impression that they go on living because it is a habit they cannot give up” “they are no longer the proud race of people who soared up against Inca domination”. How things have changed. Evo Morales, an aymara, is the president of Bolivia, the very country where Che wanted to plant the seeds of the continental revolution.

Likewise, the wretched of the earth have taken over the reins of power in Venezuela. The millions in the barrios have embraced the Bolivarian Revolution, and they are the driving force pushing it ever further towards a fairer society. It was they who defeated the US-orchestrated coup that briefly ousted Chavez in April 2002. It is them who have defeated every reactionary offensive against their government and their revolution organised by the Venezuelan oligarchy. Che’s political conclusion about the mass of the poor was that it is precisely among them that the highest forms of human solidarity and loyalty find expression.

In his message to the 1967 Tricontinental gathering in Havana in April 1967 – a few months before his tragic death - he famously called for the creation of one, two, many Vietnams, signifying the creation of as many concentrations of struggle against imperialism. Latin America is responding by creating one, two, many societies based on human solidarity as Che wanted. Cuba is no longer alone.

As for Cuba itself, mainstream commentators are fond of focusing on the contradictions and tribulations brought about by the unavoidable adjustments made to deal with the consequences of the collapse of the USSR in 1991.

However, a Cuban leader said once that it must be understood that the revolution that Fidel, Che and the barbudos wanted to make back in 1959 is not the revolution they ended up making because of the capitalist encirclement, the US blockade and the constant aggression faced by Cuba since its very inception. But, he went on “we still want to make the revolution that Che and Fidel dreamed up when they were in the mountains”. Yes, as young children are taught in Cuban schools: Cuba still wants to be like Che.
TOP
Bookmark and Share RSS