Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Cuba allies join 2nd day of Castro homage

- By Fabiola Sanchez and Juan Zamorano

HAVANA — Schools and government offices were closed across Cuba on Tuesday for a second day of homage to Fidel Castro, with the day ending in a rally on the wide plaza where the Cuban leader delivered fiery speeches to mammoth crowds in the years after he seized power.

Hundreds of thousands of Cubans have been bidding farewell to Castro, pledging allegiance to his socialist ideology and paying tribute to the guerrilla leader who went on to rule the island nation for nearly a half century.

On Tuesday they were joined by two of Castro’s firmest ideologica­l allies, presidents Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela and Evo Morales of Bolivia, who spent several moments paying their respects before a picture of Castro as a young, bearded rebel.

“Cuba is going through a moment of profound shock,” Morales said when he arrived the previous evening. “I came to be present during a moment of pain from the loss of my brother, my friend.”

Cuban state media reported that an urn containing Castro’s ashes was being kept in a room at the Defense Ministry where his younger brother and successor, Raul Castro, and top Communist Party officials paid tribute the previous evening.

Lines stretched for hours outside Havana’s Plaza of the Revolution. In Havana and across the island, people signed condolence books and an oath of loyalty to Castro’s sweeping May 2000 proclamati­on of the Cuban revolution as an unending battle for socialism, nationalis­m and an outsize role for the island on the world stage.

“I feel a deep sadness, but immense pride in having had him near,” said Ana Beatriz Perez, a 50-year-old medical researcher who was advancing in the slowmoving line with the help of crutches. “His physical departure gives us strength to continue advancing in his ideology. This isn’t going away, because we are millions.”

“His death is another revolution,” said her husband, Fidel Diaz, who predicted that it will prompt many to “rediscover the ideas of the commander for the new generation­s.”

Tribute sites were set up in hundreds of places across the island as the government urged Cubans to reaffirm their belief in a socialist, single-party system that in recent years has struggled to maintain the fervor that was widespread at the triumph of the 1959 revolution.

Many mourners came of their own accord, but thousands were sent in groups by the communist government, which still employs about 80 percent of the working people in Cuba despite the growth of the private sector under Raul.

Inside the memorial, thousands walked through three rooms with nearidenti­cal displays featuring the 1962 Alberto Korda photograph of a young Castro in the Sierra Maestra mountains, bouquets of white flowers and an array of Castro’s medals against a black backdrop, framed by honor guards of soldiers and children in school uniforms.

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 ?? ALEJANDRO ERNESTO/EPA ?? Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro, left, talks with Bolivia’s Evo Morales at the Castro memorial.
ALEJANDRO ERNESTO/EPA Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro, left, talks with Bolivia’s Evo Morales at the Castro memorial.

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