Monday, 5 June 2017

The Death of Che Guevara

On October 9, 1967, controversial Marxist revolutionary Ernesto “Che” Guevara was executed by members of the Bolivian army. Although he was active as a revolutionary for only a relatively short time, Guevara has become one of the most recognizable figures of the 20th century.

Ernesto R. Guevara de la Serna was born in Rosario, Argentina, on June 14, 1928 (though some claim it was really May 14th). After studying medicine in Buenos Aires, he traveled extensively around South America. The injustices he witnessed along the way were the catalyst for what he’d do with the rest of his life.
Guevara was working as a doctor in Mexico City when he met Fidel and Raul Castro. All three went to Cuba to overthrow Fulgencio Batista, whose rule President John F. Kennedy described as, “one of the most bloody and repressive dictatorships in the long history of Latin American repression…”
By 1959, Guevara and the Castro brothers formed a triumvirate of the most powerful men in the Cuban Revolution. Guevara’s first official assignment was at the infamous prison, La CabaƱa. His job was to oversee executions and between the years of 1959-1963, hundreds of prisoners met their deaths under his watch. Cuban human rights activist Armando Valladares, who was arrested in 1960 for protesting communism and spent the next 22 years in prison for this, said of Guevara, “He [Guevara] was a man full of hatred … [He] executed dozens and dozens of people who never once stood trial and were never declared guilty … In his own words, he said the following: ‘At the smallest of doubt we must execute.’ And that’s what he did at the Sierra Maestra and the prison of Las Cabanas.”

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