Showing posts with label fidel castro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fidel castro. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2016

Fidel Castro obituary bibliography

A friend of mine pointed out a long time ago that obituaries are one of the most informative parts of a newspaper. For lesser known people, they often offer interesting insights into the times in which the deceased lived.

When internationally famous people like Fidel Castro pass away, there are a flood of obituaries, commentaries and historical reflections that appear in the days following. And since news services typically keep draft obituaries in the can for the most famous figures, many of them contain detailed information and more thorough preparation than the typical daily news article.

I usually don't do biliographic posts like this. But I'm making an exception this time. This is far from comprehensive. I'm grouping these by the source country, prefaced by these three video reports.

NewsGrid: The world reacts to the death of Cuba's Fidel Castro Al Jazeera English 11/27/2016 (mostly on Fidel but other resports are interspersed):



Fidel Castro, who led Cuba for a half-century, dies at 90 11/26/2016:



Fidel Castro, Cuba's leader of revolution, dies at 90 - BBC News 11/26/2016:



Argentina

Página/12 carried this cover image for its 27.11.2016 edition:


Jorge Altamira (Político FIT-PO), El legado revolucionario que queda Tiempo 26.11.2016

Javier Borelli, Entre el amor del pueblo y los vaivenes de la dirigencia Tiempo 26.11.2016

Gustavo Cirelli (Director de Tiempo), Fidel: un faro Tiempo 26.11.2016

Patricio Echegaray (presidente del Partido Communista Argentino), Admiraba la agricultura argentina Tiempo 26.11.2016

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, Dos 25. Un solo Fidel Página/12 27.11.2016

Alberto López Girondo y Manuel Alfieri, Fidel: historia y legado Tiempo 26.11.2016

Martin Granovsky, La muerte del padre nuestro Página/12 27.11.2016

Julia Izumi, Encuentro en La Habana Tiempo 27.11.2016

Juan Manuel Karg, Un futuro con entereza, pero plagado de dudas Tiempo 26.11.2016

Nicolás Lantos, Fidel marca la agenda de Estados Unidos Página/12 27.11.2016

Telma Luzzani, En todas partes Tiempo 26.11.2016

Juliana Marino, Un vino con historia Tiempo 26.11.2016

Víctor Hugo Morales, La prueba de los sueños justos Tiempo 26.11.2016

“No se va, se queda en el pueblo” Página/12 27.11.2016

José "Pepe" Mujica, Mujica a Fidel: "A vos te queda Cuba, que seguirá ahí" Página/12 27.11.2016

Pacho O'Donnell (author of a biography of Che Guevara emphasizing his Argentine background), Fidel y el Che Página/12 28.11.2016

Mariano Pedrosa, "Si no sobrevivimos culturalmente, tampoco lo haremos ni económica ni políticamente" Tiempo 26.11.2016

Postales para la historia Tiempo 26.11.2016

Gabriel Puricelli, Pupilo jesuita y socialista inesperado Tiempo 26.11.2016

Ricardo Romero, Una isla de dignidad Tiempo 26.11.2016

Emir Sader, Fidel, sinónimo de Revolución Página/12 27.11.2016

Eduardo Vior, Dos caminos, un destino Tiempo 26.11.2016

Mario Wainfeld, El hombre de dos siglos Página/12 27.11.2016

Alejandro Wall, El deporte, su pasión y su legado revolucionario Tiempo 26.11.2016

Austria

Frank Hermann, Tod Castros: Hauch des Kalten Krieges holt Kuba ein Standard 276.11.2016

Kubanischer Revolutionsführer Fidel Castro tot
Profil 26.11.2016

Clemens Schuhmann und Klaus Buttinger, In Kuba wird geweint, in Florida gejubelt Oberösterreichische Nachrichten 28.11.2016

Brazil

Frei Betto, Meu amigo Fidel, que gostava de cosmologia e de boa conversa O Globo 27.11.2016

Ex-presidente de Cuba, Fidel Castro morre aos 90 anos O Globo 26.11.2016

Fernando Gabeira, A realidade e os românticos de Cuba ‘libre’ O Globo 27.11.2016

Mauricio Vicent, Fidel, o mito revolucionário e o tirano em uma só pessoa O Globo 27.11.2016

Britain

Duncan Campbell, Close but no cigar: how America failed to kill Fidel Castro Guardian 11/26/2016

Colombia

Cuba en duelo se prepara para una semana de honras a Fidel Castro AFP/El Espectador 27.11.2016

Gustavo Páez Escobar, Fidel Castro, en prisión El Espectador 26.11.2016

Gabriel García Márquez, Gabriel García Márquez recuerda a su amigo Fidel Castro El Espectador 26.11.2016

William Ospina, La aventura de la Revolución cubana El Espectador 26.11.2016

Cuba

Fidel Castro Ruz Granma 27.11.2016

Sergio Alejandro Gómez, Un revolucionario de talla mundial Granma 27.11.2016

Lauren Céspedes Hernández, Un adiós para el Comandante Granma 26.11.2016

Marta Rojas Rodríguez, Martí en Fidel, más que un símbolo Granma 27.11.2016

Germany

Zwischen Held und Tyrann Frankfurter Rundschau 26.11.2016

Trauer um Fidel Castro Neues Deutschland 26.11.2016

Benedikt Peters, Was Fidel Castros Tod für Kuba bedeutet Süddeutsche Zeitung 26.11.2016

Die wichtigsten Texte zum Tod von Fidel Castro Spiegel 27.11.2016

Mexico

Fidel, una “persona sobresaliente de la historia mundial” PL/Notamex La Journada 27.11/2016

Teresa Moreno, Rezan en la Catedral por "eterno descanso" de Fidel Castro El Universal 27.11.2016

Vargas Llosa: régimen cubano no sobrevivirá sin Fidel Melenio 27.11.2016

Spain

Diez canciones de la Revolución Cubana Público 26.11.2016

España sopesa enviar al rey Juan Carlos a la despedida de Fidel El País 27.11/2016

En directo: líderes políticos de todo el mundo reaccionan a la muerte del histórico líder cubano Público 26.11.2016

Miguel Gonzálex, Las querellas España-Cuba, un “asunto de familia” El País 26.11/2016

United States


Así reacciona el mundo ante la muerte de Fidel Castro
CNN Español 26.11.2016

Glenn Garvin, Fidel Castro is dead Miami Herald 11/26/2016.

Mike Gonzalez, Fidel Castro (1926–2016) Jacobin 11/27/2016

Patricia Grogg, The Cuban Revolution Has Lost Its Founder and Leader Inter Press Service 11/26/2016

Fred Kaplan, When Castro Met Nixon Slate 03/21/2016

Jonathan Levin and Michael Smith, In Miami’s Little Havana, Castro’s Death Sparks Celebration Bloomberg News 11/26/2016

Jorge Luis Macías, En Los Ángeles, los cubanos dan gracias “por la muerte del dictador” La Opinión 26.11.2016

Greg Mitchell, How Castro Drove JFK’s Anti-Media Bias and Press Censorship Huffington Post 11/26/2016

Venezuela

Especial | Fidel Castro: 1926-2016 Últimas Noticias 27.11.2016

Heilet Morales, Fidel Castro: El último revolucionario Panorama 27.11.2016

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Pope Francis Tuesday

The Pope has been visiting Cuba over the weekend. That visit called to mind this song by Kate Campbell that references an earlier papal visit to the island.

Rosa's Coronas 11/30/2014



Joshua McElwee reports on Pope Francis' major speech in La Habana at the Plaza de la Revolución in Under image of Che Guevara, Francis says Christian service 'never ideological' National Catholic Reporter 09/20/2015

This combination of images of two of the most famous Argentines is surely more jarring for an American audience than for Argentines. When I visited the Presidential Palace Casa Rosada) in Buenos Aires in 2012, the entry hall had two portraits prominently displayed together: Che Guevara and the Salvadoran Archbishop Óscar Romero, murdered by a death squad while presiding over Mass in a hospital. Pope Francis formally declared Romero a martyr this year and he's on the road to sainthood. I doubt any Pope will canonize Ernesto Guevara. Although there was and maybe still is a folk shrine to "St. Che" near the place in Bolivia where he was assassinated in 1967. I think a few miraculous cures have been reported there. Go figure.

The staunchly anti-Communist and theologically conservative Pope Juan Paul II also celebrated mass in Plaza de la Revolución on his visit to Cuba in 1998.

This was also an interesting part of the Pope's message: "At the end of the Mass, the pope appealed to Colombia's government and Marxist FARC guerrillas to ensure that nearly three years of peace talks in Cuba are successful in order to end their 'long night' of war." (Pope meets Fidel Castro, warns against ideology on Cuba trip Buenos Aires Herald 09/20/2015) Cuba has hosted peace talks to end that long-running conflict.

Darío Pignotti notes in Página/12 (Cuba se viste de blanco y amarillo por el Papa 19.09.2015) that the chatter in Cuba he heard before Francis' arrival included many mentions of the "Argentine Pope." (Pignotti goes a bit Tommy Friedman in this piece and reports on an interview with a taxi driver.)

How much of the Pontiff's worldview is actually consistent with that of a government like Cuba's?

Eric Bugyis in a post which,so far as I can tell, is supportive of Pope Francis, argues that there is a great deal of philosophical/ideological agreement It Is Marxism! Commonweal 09/22/2015:

In Bolivia, Francis called for "the just distribution of the fruits of the earth and human labor" saying that this is "about giving to the poor and to peoples what is theirs by right." Linking the fruits of labor to rights in this way suggests the "labor theory of value" that one finds in Thomas Aquinas and in the social encyclicals beginning with Rerum Novarum, but it is also the theory of value that one finds in Marx. It is the theory that says that those who work to produce goods and services, through agriculture or manufacture, ought to have a share in the ownership of those goods. It is a rejection of the wage slavery whereby workers are shackled by policies that seek to interrupt the worker's relationship with the fruits of his or her labor by turning this labor into a commodity itself. The price of this commodity, then, must be weighed against the expected profits to be gained through the sale of commodities owed by stockholders. On this account, it should be made clear, the stockholder owns both the workers (now often more honestly referred to as "human resources") and the commodities that these workers produce and profit to the extent that the stockholder (and the market) values the former less than the latter. Thus, when Francis talks about a "formal market" in which people are "exploited like slaves," what else could he be talking about but the alienation of workers from the means of production? And when he calls for governments to promote "the strengthening, improvement, coordination and expansion of forms of popular economy and communitarian production," what could he be referring to other than supporting the formation of unions (another thing endorsed by the social encyclicals) and empowering local commerce by limiting the monopolistic practices of transnational corporations? All of which, I assume, Mr. Langone would rightly identify as "Marxism." [my emphasis]
Now, I'm hardly allergic to Marxist perspectives, as any of my numerous posts about the Frankfurt School thinkers can illustrate. And I'm definitely in sympathy with the perspectives of the Pope described here.

But this just gets some history wrong. No St. Thomas Aquinas (1224/25-1274) did not invent the "labor theory of value." Marx' version built on those of the distinctly modern philosophers and political economists Adam Smith (1723-1790) and David Ricardo (1772-1823). Marx also made a clear distinction between chattel slavery, where the workers actually are owned, and wage labor, which Marxists also call wage slavery, in which it is not the case that "the stockholder owns ... the workers," as Bugyis puts it.

A great undergraduate professor of mine, the late Howard Bavender, was my adviser on this now long-ago paper ("Just War Concept and American Churches in the American Antiwar Movement" 1974). As I was trying to sort through the relationship of Catholic theology to dissenting movements, he stressed that while the Church took strong positions on issues of social justice and the just war that at times were in accord with left political positions, the Church had never abandoned its criticism of Marxism on matters where it contradicted the Church's view of the nature of humanity.

In fact, what I wrote where I took his advice on that wasn't bad:

The Roman Catholic Church, in the United States and around the world, had been staunchly opposed to "atheistic Communism" before and after World War II. The American hierarchy continued to speak strongly against Communism even during the wartime alliance with Soviet Russia. Many Roman Catholic churchmen really believed that the United States was threatened by Communism, but they were also interested in acquiring American aid in their world-wide battle with Communist governments, particularly in Eastern Europe where the Soviet Urion attempted to break the political power of the church. ...

However, around the time of Pope John XXIII's ascendancy, Catholic attitudes toward international relations began to change. Pope John issued his encyclical Pacem in Terris, which many Catholics took to be "a clear call for total pacifism in a nuclear age." [1970 quote from Francine du Plessix Gray] Pope John stated in that famous document, as quoted above, that war was unacceptable in the nuclear era. The support of the Catholic Church for such projects as the Cold War against Communism was clearly decreasing, although the Church has never abandoned its opposition to those elements of Communism which challenge the Christian conception of man. This notable decrease in support nevertheless was to be an element in the future Catholic opposition to Vietnam policies in the United States.
It's also important to remember that when the Church has criticized capitalism or aspects of it, that also comes from centuries of theoretical development that has some of its roots in pre-capitalist concepts and economic arrangements, i.e., European feudalism. "Corporate state" arrangements like those in Mussolini's Italy or the Austrian Standestaat of Engelbert Dollfuß and Kurt von Schuschnigg were forms of government with which the Catholic Church of that time were generally comfortable.

The Catholic Church is a worldwide institution that has congregations within the entire spectrum of contemporary forms of government: secular ones and ones with established religions (Christian and otherwise); military and civilian; democracies and dictatorships, and varying degrees of both. The Catholic Church doesn't take the position of American neocons that they shouldn't even have formal conversations with governments they finding displeasing. On the contrary, they are interested in negotiating the best possible arrangements for the Church and its members even in countries hostile to the Catholic Church.

Eduardo Valdés, the Argentine Ambassador to the Vatican, notes that Cardinal Jaime Ortega, Archbishop of La Habana, has played a key role in the current process of rapprochement between the US and Cuba which the Holy See has helped to mediate. (Premonición Página/12 19.09.2015)

The Catholic News Service provides this description of Fidel Castro's view of Christianity as expressed in a 1985 book of interviews with Fidel in which he positioned himself as supportive of the views of liberation theology: Cathy Lynn Grossman, Christ, Marx and Che: Fidel Castro offers pope his religious views National Catholic Reporter 09/21/2015. Pope Francis has views more friendly to liberation theology than his two immediate predecessors. John Paul II was a bitter opponent of it. Benedict XVI was known before and during his Papacy as generally reactionary on theological and political issues. However, both of them also took positions based on Catholic social teaching (feudal roots and all) that challenged politically conservative positions. They also took pacifist positions at odds with the normal power politics on which the world runs far too much.

Vatican Radio reports on the meeting between Francis and Fidel in Pope Francis meets former Cuban president Fidel Castro 09/20/2015:

Pope Francis gave Castro several books, including one by Italian priest Alessandro Pronzato and another by Spanish Jesuit Segundo Llorentea. The Holy Father also gave him a book and two CDs of his homilies, as well as his two encyclical letters, Lumen Fidei and Laudato si'.

In return, Castro gave Pope Francis an interview book entitled, "Fidel and Religion," written in 1985 by Brazilian priest Frei Betto. The dedication reads: "For Pope Francis, on occasion of his visit to Cuba, with the admiration and respect of the Cuban people."

The head of the Vatican Press Office, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, said the meeting was "familiar and informal," and the two men spoke about "protecting the environment and the great problems of the contemporary world."

Father Lombardi compared the private encounter to that which took place with Pope Benedict XVI in 2012, saying Fidel Castro asked Pope Benedict many questions, while Sunday's meeting with Pope Francis was "more of a conversation."
Emphasizing some of the differences between the Church and the Cuban regime, Martín Granovsky reports (Ortega, el cardenal de las negociaciones secretas Página/12 19.09.2015):

¿Piensa el cardenal Ortega que el proceso de normalización ya es irreversible? Está en camino a serlo, pero según él “Obama y Raúl tienen enemigos y hay que protegerlos a ambos porque los dos saben que antes de irse todavía tienen mucho que hacer”. Cuando habla de los retos a Raúl, Ortega describe el peso de lo que él llama “ideología”, o sea el resabio del modelo soviético y de la rigidez. Para el cardenal el efecto se nota aún en sectores del Partido Comunista Cubano, en los medios controlados por él, en la TV, la radio y la prensa escrita.

Contó un ejemplo. El periodista Amaury Pérez lo entrevistó para la tele cubana y en vez de la media hora habitual le dio una hora. Era el primer reportaje televisivo en 60 años. El director de TV se opuso. Quería revisar y cortar partes. “La entrevista se pasa sin tocar una coma”, le dijeron a Ortega que fue la frase de Castro. El diálogo se puede ver haciendo click en http://bit.ly/1JCqhe7.

[Does Cardinal think that the process of normalization is now irreversible? It's on the way to being so, according to him: "Obama and Raúl {Castro} have enemies, and we have to protect both of them because the two know that before they leave {the political scene}, there is still a lot to do." When he speaks of Raúl's challenges, Ortega describes the weight of what he calls "ideology," that is, the bad taste of the Soviet model and the rigidity. For the cardinal, the effect can be observed even in sectors of the Cuban Communist Party, in the media controlled by them, in TV, radio and the written press.

He gave an example. The journalist Amaury Pérez interviewed him for Cuban television and gave him an hour instead of the usual half hour. It was the first television report {featuring Ortega?} in 60 years. The TV director opposed it. He wanted to edit it and cut parts. "The interview will air with touching a comma," Ortega was told was the phrase {Raúl} Castro used.]
It's reasonable to assume that when Francis spoke about the problem of "ideology" in Cuba, his meaning was the same or similar to that in which Cardinal Ortega is using it.

In the TV interview referenced, Ortega recounts a conversation he had with Pope Benedict XVI, in which Benedict said that the Church is not in the world to change governments. It's in the world to spread the Gospel. Ortega says it in a context that makes it clear he agrees with that perspective. And he also says that is the perspective of Pope Francis.

Granovsky continues to report on Church-related consequence of the long-standing embargo:

El desafío para la Iglesia es ganar feligreses, sobre todo entre la juventud, y conseguir fondos propios para ayuda humanitaria. Por el bloqueo la Iglesia no puede recibir dólares porque los aportes de afuera son interferidos en algún punto de su curso por Estados Unidos. Ocurrió con fondos regalados por Los Caballeros de Colón, por la Isla de Malta y por grupos irlandeses. Llegaron a Cuba tras operaciones clandestinas e incluso algún obispo debió recorrer el mundo con 200 mil dólares ocultos en una valija. En La Habana no hubo problemas.

[The challenge for the Church is to win parishioners, above all among youth, and obtain its own funds for humanitarian support. Because of the {US} blockade, the Church is not able to receive dollars because donations from outside are intercepted at some point in their course from the United States. That has occurred with funds donated by the Knights of Columbus, from the island of Malta and from Irish groups. They arrived in Cuba after {via} clandestine operations, including one bishop who has said to have traversed the world with $200,000 hidden in a valise. In Havana, he had no problems.]
Meanwhile, columnist George Will prior to the Pope's arrival in the US is griping about the Jesuit Francis defending science on the topic of climate change. (Anthony Annett, On Fact-Free Flamboyance: George Will vs. Pope Francis Commonweal 09/21/2015) Awesome.

Thursday, August 06, 2015

Ernesto Guevara and la Patria Grande: Two, three, many Vietnams

This is the final of four posts discussing Pacho O’Donnell’s Che: El argentino que quiso cambiar el mundo (Che: The Argentine Who Wanted to Change the World)(2003). All references are to the Sudamericana edition of 2012. All translations from the Spanish are mine unless otherwise indicated.

While O’Donnell repeatedly stresses the importance of Guevara’s theoretical work, his focus is on the action of his life. Of which there was plenty. In this sense, his public image as an itinerant international revolutionary adventurer was firmly based in the reality of his life.

His early adherence to Marxism before Fidel’s public adoption of that outlook in connection with Cuba’s alliance with the Soviet Union is an important example of his theoretical influence.

But the theory for which he is best known is that associated with his famous call for “two, three, many Vietnams” against US domination and repression in developing countries (Message to the Tricontinental Marxists.org 04/16/1967):

Let us sum up our hopes for victory: total destruction of imperialism by eliminating its firmest bulwark: the oppression exercized [sic]by the United States of America. To carry out, as a tactical method, the peoples gradual liberation, one by one or in groups: driving the enemy into a difficult fight away from its own territory; dismantling all its sustenance bases, that is, its dependent territories.

This means a long war. And, once more we repeat it, a cruel war. Let no one fool himself at the outstart and let no one hesitate to start out for fear of the consequences it may bring to his people. It is almost our sole hope for victory. We cannot elude the call of this hour. Vietnam is pointing it out with its endless lesson of heroism, its tragic and everyday lesson of struggle and death for the attainment of final victory.

There, the imperialist soldiers endure the discomforts [sic] of those who, used to enjoying the U.S. standard of living, have to live in a hostile land with the insecurity of being unable to move without being aware of walking on enemy territory: death to those who dare take a step out of their fortified encampment. The permanent hostility of the entire population. All this has internal repercussion in the United States; propitiates the resurgence of an element which is being minimized in spite of its vigor by all imperialist forces: class struggle even within its own territory.

How close we could look into a bright future should two, three or many Vietnams flourish throughout the world with their share of deaths and their immense tragedies, their everyday heroism and their repeated blows against imperialism, impelled to disperse its forces under the sudden attack and the increasing hatred of all peoples of the world! [my emphasis]
On October 9 of that same year, Guevara was be murdered after being captured by Bolivian forces working closely with the CIA. Sgt. Mario Terán had the dubious honor of pulling the trigger. Terán will go down in history as an insignificant trigger-man. O’Donnell writes that he spent much of the rest of his life in hiding using various disguises. (In a strange sequel, Cuban eye surgeons later treated Terán successfully for cataracts: Cubans treat man who killed Che BBC News 10/02/2007)

El Che as the Heroic Guerrilla, cropped from the famous 1960 photo by Taken by Alberto Korda
(Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Guevara’s theory of guerrilla warfare is known as the foco theory, or simply as Guevarism. The basic idea is a generalization from the experience of the Cuban Revolution and assumes that beginning a guerrilla war in a developing country will draw support as people see that someone is fighting seriously against the oppressive government and the rural oligarchs.

One of the most influential expositions of the Guevarist theory of revolution was Révolution dans la révolution? (Revolution in the Revolution?) (1967) by French philosopher Régis Debray, who joined Guevara’s guerrilla band in Bolivia and wound up giving the Bolivian army critical information on the guerrillas.

Although O’Donnell does not stress the point, his account brings out the risky nature of generalizing from the particular experiences of the Cuban Revolution in trying to apply those lessons to other underdeveloped countries.

Che himself, as an experienced guerilla leader in the fight against Batista, was presumably as well qualified as anyone to implement those lessons in other countries, the Congo and Bolivia being the actual applications. O’Donnell doesn’t address the theoretical lessons in detail. But his detailed accounts of the Congo and Bolivia adventures makes some of the real-world problems Guevara encountered very clear.

Both the Congolese and Bolivian efforts were failures, as O’Donnell relates in detail for both experiences. The Bolivian attempt was a disaster, a fatal one for Che.

In the Congo in 1965, Che was confronted with local cultures with which he had little familiarity. And the troops with whom he fought and tried to train were poorly motivated compared with those with whom he was familiar in Cuba. The local guerrillas were suspicious of him, and he didn’t speak their language. A local customs like the use of magical ceremonies said to confer invulnerability on the guerrillas struck Guevara as simply superstitious hokus-pokus. O’Donnell suggests that he failed to understand how the ceremonies fit into their worldview as psychological preparation for battle. As his critics have been happy to suggest, there was a “Tarzan” aspect to Che’s leadership in the Congo, a white man coming to organize a rebellion by the natives. He fled the Congo after a successful offensive by the Congolese army in the fall, recognizing the effort as having been a failure. (For an unsympathetic account of Guevara’s Congo experience, see Hector Ghiretti, "Las aventuras del Che en el Congo,” Todo es historia Diciembre 2007; the introductory editorial notes that Ghiretti’s account is “debatable and polemical.”)

Laurent Kabila (1939-2001), the principal leader of the Congolese guerrillas, was also wary of Guevara’s role. In any case, there seemed to be few visible positive results for Kabila’s forces resulting from the Cuban participation. Kabila did eventually take power, becoming President of the Democratic Republic in 1997 after the overthrow of Mobutu Sese Seko, the decidedly pro-American strongman who took power in November 1965, the same month Guevara left the country. “On Nov. 24, 1965, Mobutu, now a lieutenant general, seized power again, but this time, with no intention of relinquishing it. The coup, one of the first military takeovers in Africa, came after U.S. financed mercenaries and other covert assistance had largely succeeded in suppressing the regional rebellions.” (Howard French, Mobutu Sese Seko, 66, Longtime Dictator of Zaire New York Times 09/08/1997)

His final effort to generate a revolution was in Bolivia in 1966-67. The region in which Che established his force was Ňancahuazú, a region of dense jungle terrain that was sparsely populated. In addition, Bolivia had implemented land reform that was well received in rural areas. Not that it was the last word in land reform in that country! (See: Emily Achtenberg, Bolivia: The Unfinished Business of Land Reform NACLA 03/31/2013) But it meant in 1966 that the level of outrage among the rural population wasn’t as great as it had been in Cuba prior to the revolution.

Che Guevara in Bolivia, 1967 (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

One important factor O’Donnell points out that differentiates the Cuban experience from those Guevara encountered in the Congo and in Bolivia is the fact that the CIA didn’t see the guerrillas in the Sierra Maestra as a threat until relatively late in the game. Bastista was pro-US. But the CIA was hedging its bets, even providing some aid to Fidel’s guerrillas. The CIA then viewed his movement as nationalist and not inherently threatening to the US. But by 1965 when Che was in the Congo and 1966-67 in Bolivia, the CIA was anything but supportive or even semi-neutral about the conflicts in which he was participating. On the contrary, they were providing very active support to the governments trying to defeat the guerrillas. Not only the US but many governments of Latin America were moving to more and more a counterrevolutionary orientation.

The Bolivian Army, trained and assisted in the effort by US forces, wore down Guevara’s guerrilla band. He was captured. Then executed by Sgt. Terán.

Here also, Che’s presence didn’t have an immediately obvious political effect in promoting revolution in Bolivia.

But by executing him, the Bolivians transformed him into a martyr and a Sorelian myth.

In a recent article, O’Donnell writes of this contrast between the Cuban and Bolivian situations (Para denostar al Che Página/12 21.Mayo.2015):

Las campañas del Che, en cambio, tuvieron en su contra at poder norteamericano concentrado, Pentágono, CIA, Comando Sur y sus boinas verdes, además del colonizado, armado y entrenado ejército boliviano.

[Che’s campaigns, in contrast, had opposing him the concentrated power of America, the Pentagon, CIA, the Southern Command and its Green Berets, and in addition the colonized, armed and trained Bolivian Army.]

Another critical difference is that the Cuban Revolution didn’t unfold as the “Guevarist” theory assumed, at least in the best-known forms like Debray’s interpretation. There is no question that Castro’s guerrilla movement in the rural areas was the central factor. But there was also an active resistance movement to Batista in La Habana, including the active participation of the Cuban Communist Party. But in Bolivia, the Bolivian Communist Party was cool to the whole scheme, and provided very little support to Che’s guerrilla effort, support which quickly dwindled to basically none.

Fidel’s government had helped Guevara initially get into Bolivia. But there was little the Cuban government could do in the way of direct support for Che and the guerrillas there. Nor did he expect them to. As O’Donnell writes in the Página/12 article, “En el diario del Che en Bolivia no hay una sola acotación relacionada con la ayuda que Fidel podría prestarle. Ninguna.” (“In Che’s diary in Bolivia, there isn’t a single annotation related to the support that Fidel could give him. Not one.”)

Writing about Guevara’s practice of keeping detailed dairies and photographs of his guerrilla activities, a practice that contributed to his undoing in Bolivia, O’Donnell gives a glimpse of the romantic hero Che that has survived in his myth (p. 395):

El hábito, que también puede llamarse obsesión, del Che de llevar anotaciones de sus viajes, de sus reflexiones, de sus campañas, desde sus primeras experiencias juveniles, hacen que por momentos pareciera que su identidad esencial fuera la de escritor y que sus andanzas de aventurero y de revolucionario no fueran más que vivencias provocadas para ser volcadas en su autobiografia, en la que la apasionante realidad supera a la más frondosa imaginación literaria. Sus antecesores fueron Lord Byron o D. H. Lawrence quienes sólo vivían aquello que merecía ser escrito.

[Che’s habit, that could also be called an obsession, of taking notes of his travels, of his reflections, of his campaigns, since his first juvenile experiences, at moments makes it seem that his essential identity was that of a writer. And that his revolutionary deeds and adventures were nothing more than experiences provoked to be dumped into his autobiography, in which the fascinating reality would surpass the most luxuriant literary imagination. His antecedents were Lord Byron or D.H. Lawrence, who only lived that which deserved to be written.]
While that may be a reach, it captures the “romantic” dimension of Guevara’s mythical image. And it was an aspect of his image that Che himself encouraged.

But O’Donnell also describes Guevara’s guerrilla wars and his years in the leadership of Cuba’s revolutionary government without notable sentimental flourishes. Guerrilla warfare in the jungles of Cuba, the Congo and Bolivia was grim and extremely difficult. Not much romance in the process. The guerrillas were engaged in a fight in which the more likely outcome for them was defeat or death than victory.

O’Donnell’s biography tells the story of a man who became a myth. And tells it in an unsentimental way that nevertheless allows his readers to understand how he became a myth.

**********

Part 1: Che the Argentine
Part 2: Che Guevera and Peronism
Part 3: Arbenz and Guevara’s politicization
Part 4: Two, three, many Vietnams

Monday, August 03, 2015

Ernesto Guevara and la Patria Grande (1 of 4): Che the Argentine

This is the first of four posts discussing Pacho O’Donnell’s Che: El argentino que quiso cambiar el mundo (Che: The Argentine Who Wanted to Change the World)(2003). All references are to the Sudamericana edition of 2012. All translations from the Spanish are mine unless otherwise indicated.

Ernesto “Che” Guevara was a man who became a myth. A myth in the sense of the eclectic French philosopher Georges Sorel concept, an inspiring framework for understand the common political life of a given nation. But El Che became far more than a national myth, he became a myth of internationalism, of international solidarity in the fight for freedom, of Latin American solidarity in the pursuit of the unity of what advocates of Latin American unity like the Argentine writer Manuel Ugarte called la Patria Grande, the great homeland of a united Latin America.

His enemies, of course, view him in a much darker light, the embodiment of evil in the form of international Communism, an exporter of revolution in the most literal sense.


Pacho O’Donnell’s Che: El argentino que quiso cambiar el mundo (2003) focuses fairly strictly on the life of Ernesto Guevara de Serna (1928- 1967), which he sections into five periods: his early life prior to going to Cuba; the guerrilla war in the Sierra Maestra that brought Fidel Castro’s government to power; his time as an official in Cuba where he became world-famous as an advocate of anti-imperialist resistance against the United States; his period as a guerrilla leader in the Congo in support of Laurent Kabila’s resistance movement; and, the final leg of his life’s journey as a guerrilla leader in Bolivia, where he met his end, executed after being captured.

O’Donnell’s style is a readable combination of careful original research and good historical story-telling. His biography is interspersed with brief texts from interviews with various people involved in Che’s life that O’Donnell interviewed.

The main story of Ernesto Guevara’s life are well known, though O’Donnell’s research and filtering of secondary sources provides important clarifications. Including on key points of discussion such as Régis Debray’s role in Guevara’s capture in Bolivia.

Che the Argentine

O’Donnell deals briefly with Che’s private life in a mostly cursory fashion during and after his Sierra Maestra period. The most attention to it comes in his life as an Argentine young man, medical student, doctor, traveler and adventurer. A central theme in O’Donnell’s biography is Che’s Argentine identity and how it shaped his vision of a pan-Latin American revolutionary movement.

Ernesto Guevara in 1951 at age 22 (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
The predominant image of Che was set by his posthumous celebration by Cuba and, of course, by the demonizing of that image on the part of the United States and the oligarchs of Latin America. O’Donnell writes (pp. 503-4):

Esa insólita apatía de La Habana está en relación inversa con el entusiasmo que post mórtem demostrará el gobierno cubano en la explotación politica de un Che al que eleva a la categoría de mito, al que los biógrafos oficiales denominan «Guerrillero Heroico», con mayúsculas, con un propósito en apariencia exaltatorio pero que oculta la dimensión de pensador y teórico de Guevara, que es donde se registran sus conflictos con el partido y con el gobierno de la isla. Una consecuencia colateral de esa «apropiación» del Che es que su memoria queda cubanizada, lo que también reflejan la mayoría de sus biografos, que dedican a la etapa cubana las mayores y mejores investigaciones y las páginas más numerosas. No debería olvidarse que la de Cuba fue una de las tres campañas guerrilleras del Che, sin duda la mas exitosa y también la más estimulante en su producción teórica, pero que su actividad como combatiente y como funcionario en la isla ocupan poco más de ocho años de los treinta y nueve que vivió.

Fidel tuvo la suficiente astucia para hacerse de los restos del Che, recuperados en 1997, aprovechando que la Argentina, quizá como rémora de sus gobiernos dictatoriales anticomunistas y del predominio en lo económico y social de los sectores conservadores y liberales, no tuvo reflejos para reclamarlos para sí a pesar de que el Che nació y murió argentino, renunciando a la nacionalidad cubana en su carta de despedida. Por su parte también a Bolivia le asisten derechos «de propiedad» por cuanto fue en su suelo donde murió luchando por su libertad económica y politica, y por la justicia social para sus humildes.

[The incredible apathy of Havana is in inverse relation with the enthusiasm that the Cuban government demonstrated post mortem in the political exploitation of a Che who was elevated into the category of myth, who was denominated as “Heroic Guerrilla” in caps, with an apparent exalting intent but which obscured the dimension of Guevara as a thinker and theorist, which is where his conflicts with the Party and with the government of the island. A collateral consequence of the “appropriation” of Che is that his memory remains Cubanized, a view also reflected by the majority of his biographers, who dedicate the Cuban stage the best and most numerous investigations and the most numerous pages. It should not be forgotten that the Cuban campaign was one of one of the three guerrilla campaigns of Che’s, undoubtedly the most successful and also the most stimulating for his theoretical production. But that his activity as a combatant and as a functionary in the island occupied little more than eight years of the 39 he lived.

Fidel was sufficiently astute to claim Che’s remains, recuperated in 1997, taking advantage of the fact that Argentina, perhaps [because Che’s image was seen] as an obstacle to its dictatorial, anti-Communist governments and to the economic and social predominance of the conservative and liberal sectors, didn’t have the reflexes to reclaim them. Even though Che was born and died Argentine, renouncing his Cuban nationality in his farewell letter. For its part, Bolivia also assisted him with “property” rights since it was in their soil where he died fighting for their economic and political freedom, and for social justice for its poor.]
One can certainly argue that the Cubanization of Guevara’s image is valid in terms of his actual public role. His role as a guerrilla fighter in Cuba, as a senior Cuban official, and as a spokesman for the Cuban Revolution are primarily what made him world famous.

Che Guevara and Fidel Castro, 1961 (Photo by Alberto Kordo; source: Wikimedia Commons)
O’Donnell makes it clear in a more recent article that he does not adhere to the argument “que el Che fue enviado a morir y traicionado por Fidel Castro,” (“that el Che was sent {to Bolivia} to die, betrayed by Fidel Castro.”) There, he was specifically addressing an argument made by a Cuban-American biographer of Guevera, Alberto Müller. (Pacho O’Donnell, Para denostar al Che Página/12 21.mayo.2015)

But for his own biography, his Argentine identity was obviously central. His nickname of “Che” comes from a common introjection used in Argentina. And his famous call for “two, three, many Vietnams” to break the imperialist power of the United States was fundamentally based on his view that Argentina and the Latin American Patria Grande had to free themselves from that power.

His Argentine identity and perspective was just as central to his personal life as was his lifelong struggle with asthma, something else that scarcely belongs to his Heroic Guerrilla image. But it was a central fact in his own life and career, and presumably played a significant part in his own personality, including his sympathy for the weak and suffering. His asthma played an important role in the events leading to his death. As O’Donnell recounts, the Bolivian army had asthma medication removed from all the hospitals in the area where his guerrilla band was operating, even though it caused great hardship for the Bolivians in those areas that needed the medication. Their determination to deprive Guevara of access to it overrode any public health consideration.

O’Donnell scarcely ignores Guevara’s experiences in Cuba, central as they were to his life. It was an intense several years. Guerrilla war in the Sierra Maestra, eventually winning against dictator Fulgencio Batista’s much larger forces. He became a major leader in Castro’s government. One of his grimmer assignments was to pass final judgment on former Batista officials who had been found guilty in revolutionary courts of serious crimes. He signed off on dozens of executions in that role. O’Connell notes that Fidel may well have seen some advantage in having a non-Cuban playing that role in case there was a major backlash against the executions.

Guevara became a leading spokesman for the Cuban Revolution on the world stage. O’Donnell explains that in moments of relatively lesser tensions with the United States, Fidel Castro had Che keep a lower profile. When he wanted to turn up the heat against the US, he would send Che out to make anti-American speeches. He also played a major role in international relations with friendly countries.

He also called on Guevara to spearhead the defense against the Bay of Pigs invasion. He had shown his talents as a military leader in the Sierra Maestra. He was also a major player on the Cuban side of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

He also served in several high government posts: Minister of Industries, Finance Minister and President of the National Bank. O’Donnell discusses one of Guevara’s more famous notions, the idea that Cuban workers should be motivated by non-material incentives, i.e., revolutionary and patriotic fervor, rather than material incentives, i.e., better pay. This did not appear to be cynical on his part. He had a definite ascetic streak himself. But it proved to be unrealistic and the Cuban government soon moved away from that practice.

Part 1: Che the Argentine
Part 2: Che Guevera and Peronism
Part 3: Arbenz and Guevara’s politicization
Part 4: Two, three, many Vietnams

Thursday, July 23, 2015

A 1973 prediction from Fidel Castro

The Argentine paper Clarín recalls a cynical comment by Cuban leader Fidel Castro that turns out now to have been coincidentally prescient (Fidel Castro y una asombrosa predicción en 1973 23.07.2015:

"Estados Unidos vendrá a dialogar con nosotros cuando tenga un presidente negro y haya en el mundo un Papa latinoamericano".

("The United States will return to having a dialogue with us when they have a black President and there is an Latin American Pope in the world.")

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Transition in Cuba, no transition in American policy


Fidel Castro

One might hope that Fidel Castro's announcement that he is stepping down as Cuba's leader would inspire a little vision and maybe even a tiny bit of courage on the part of our Presidential candidates. But one would be wrong. Surely, you say, that bold Maverick McCain would take the opportunity to break with Republican orthodoxy? (Sorry, I couldn't resist.)

But, of course, one would be wrong on all counts, as Jim Lobe explains in U.S. Awaits Its Own Transition to Review Policy Inter Press Service 01/19/08:

Raúl Castro (r)


Most independent Cuba experts contend that Fidel’s formal departure will make a difference in Havana.

His resignation "is a signal that there will be more space for others," said Julia Sweig, a Cuba specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations who predicted that Raul is likely to promote reforms in agriculture and small business in ways designed to reduce the role of the state in the economy -- a process that, during Castro’s illness, he had already initiated.

Chancellor Felipe Pérez


Raul’s stewardship has also seen the recent release of four prominent political prisoners, as well as a number of members - for reasons of health - of the so-called Group of 75 dissidents rounded up in 2003.

To many Cuba specialists, Washington should use Castro’s resignation as an opportunity to reach out to the new regime, if for no other reason, according to Sweig, than it "would get an enormous boost globally and in Latin America especially."

National Assembly president Ricardo Alarcón


"Raul Castro has said now three times that he’s interested in talking with the United States unconditionally to try to resolve all outstanding issues between the two countries," noted William LeoGrande, a veteran Cuba specialist at American University and dean of its School of Government. "The Cuban leadership is in the process of considering some sign of economic changes, and it would make sense for the United States to be able to influence that in a positive way. You can’t have any influence if you don’t have any contact."
Fidel and Hugo Chávez

Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez, as we might expect, had his own take on matters: "¿Cuál renuncia?, Fidel no ha renunciado a nada. (What renuciation? Fidel hasn't renounced anything.)" Say what? Actually, he went on to acknowledge that Fidel's physical weakness made it impossible for him to continue as Cuban President. But, he said, Fidel will continue to be a leading figure "en la batalla de la revolución cubana y la revolución en América Latina (in the battle of the Cuban revolution and the Latin American revolution)". (Hugo Chávez dice que Fidel no ha renunciado a nada El País 19.02.08)

Vice President Carlos Lage

One of the effects of the ascent of Raúl Castro may dampen relations with Venezuela somewhat, as Raúl is thought to be more "pragmatic" and less ideological than his brother.

Rodrigo Pardo of Cambio suggests that leaders like Vice President Carlos Lage, National Assembly president Ricardo Alarcón, and Chancellor Felipe Pérez are likely to be prominent in the Cuban leadership for the immediate future along with Raúl.

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