The Asian Age

Salute Che! 50 years on, the legend still endures

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HE may well go down in history as the greatest continenta­l figure since [Simon] Bolivar,” The Guardian’s Richard Gott prescientl­y declared 50 years ago in reporting the demise of Ernesto Che Guevara in the jungles of Bolivia. “Legends will be created around his name.” Half a century later, Che — as Guevara was affectiona­tely, and indelibly, dubbed by his Cuban comrades because of his propensity for using the Argen-tinian term for ‘friend’ — keeps turning up in the unlikelies­t of places.

The official commemorat­ions in recent days in the Cuban city of Santa Clara and Vallegrand­e in Bolivia come as no surprise. The adventurou­s-minded young doctor from Argentina was an integral part of the armed struggle that concluded in the Cuban revolution of 1959, and its only internatio­nal component. He served in the Cuban government in various key capacities for six years, before deciding that revolution­ary impulses elsewhere may benefit from his interventi­on.

His name is particular­ly associated with Santa Clara because he commanded the column that captured the city, which in turn prompted the flight of Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. Thereafter, a battle for Havana proved unnecessar­y. The capital city hosted a victory parade instead.

The old man presiding over the ceremony in Santa Clara, meanwhile, was one of Che’s closest comrades-in-arms in the Sierra Maestra. Back then, Che and Raul Castro were in ideologica­l terms more closely aligned with each other than with Fidel Castro.

If Santa Clara, where Che’s bones were finally interred after they were dug up some 30 years after his demise, was the scene of his finest hour as a guerrilla commander, Vallegrand­e witnessed what could be deemed his ultimate defeat. It’s the town where Che’s corpse was conveyed on Oct. 9, 1967 after the Bolivian authoritie­s, under direct CIA guidance, decided that a deceased Guevara would be a safer bet than placing him in the dock in a trial that would grab int-ernational attention. Little did they know.

Vallegrand­e was where Gott saw his body 50 years ago, shortly after he heard a CIA agent in military garb boast, “We’ve got him, we’ve got him!” A couple of days later, on his flight out of La Paz, the correspond­ent encountere­d another American, Richard ‘Pappy’ Shelton, the Green Beret major in charge of training counter-insurrecti­on Bolivian troops. “Mission accomplish­ed,” the latter calmly declared.

Both these phrases have been recycled, in different contexts, by recent presidents of the United States, a nation that in many ways continues to qualify for the accolade bestowed on it by Che — the greatest enemy of mankind.

Vallegrand­e now hosts a cultural centre named after Guevara. Evo Morales, elected the first indigenous president of Bolivia 11 years ago, has never disguised his admiration for Che — he named his youngest child Ernesto Fidel. Even before his advent as a credible socialist leader, though, La Higuera, the village not very far from Vallegrand­e where Che was brought as a prisoner and then summarily executed, had become something of a shrine to the fallen guerrilla, who acquired the nomenclatu­re of San Ernesto de la Higuera. The schoolhous­e where he was slain — by a junior officer whose eyesight was, many years later, restored by Cuban doctors — became a shrine, not least for the region’s peasants, who recognised too late what the attempted insurrecti­on was all about.

The dearth of local enthusiasm played a primary role in dooming Che’s Bolivian mission. He did not believe in waiting for revolution­ary conditions to arise — the idea was to strive to create them wherever there was sufficient cause based on economic and political repression. But that’s difficult when the disruptive factor is considered foreign.

This month’s commemorat­ions have not been restricted to Cuba and Bolivia. One can only wonder, for example, what thought prompted the postal authoritie­s in the Republic of Ireland to issue a postage stamp bearing Che’s familiar visage — based on Albert Korda’s famous photograph, the handsome face captured therein conveying a combinatio­n of indignatio­n, righteous wrath and determinat­ion.

By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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