Fidel Castro’s son commits suicide
He was a symbol of the complexities of the Cuban experience after the revolution
They called him “Fidelito” — little Fidel — partly because he was the spitting image of his father, Fidel Castro, the late Cuban revolutionary. But that’s where the similarities ended.
Fidel Castro Diaz-Balart, the late Cuban leader’s eldest son, took his own life after a struggle with depression, Cuba’s state media reported on Thursday. His death at age 68 came after the bittersweet life of a bookish, Russian-educated scientist who maintained a complicated relationship with his father — who once publicly fired him.
The product of his father’s first marriage, to Mirta DiazBalart, Fidelito was a symbol of the complexities of the Cuban experience after the revolution. After an acrimonious divorce from Fidelito’s mother, his famous father kidnapped his young son while he was visiting him in Mexico, and after the boy’s mother had taken him to the United States.
“I refuse even to think that my son may sleep a single night under the same roof sheltering my most repulsive enemies and receive on his innocent cheeks the kisses of those miserable Judases,” the late Cuban leader wrote in a letter to his sister.
Later, after Castro remarried, Fidelito became but one more in a large brood of Castro children — who number at least seven, and as many as 11.
Fidelito was also the cousin of the fiercely anti-communist Florida politicians, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, and former Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart. Fidelito’s most public moment was also perhaps his worst.
Unceremoniously fired
Inthe1980s,theelderCastro, who died in 2016, had tapped his son to spearhead Cuba’s nuclear power programme. His brainchild: the Juragua Nuclear Power Plant, a Russian-backed complex meant to proudly power the communist island and provide a boost during hard economic times.
Those dreams came crashing down along with the Berlin Wall. The Soviet Union’s implosion robbed Cuba, for a time, of its greatest benefactor. At the same time, insurmountable technical and financial problems doomed the plant- which became an abandoned Cold War relic. The elder Castro publicly blamed on his son, who he unceremoniously fired in 1992.