The Mercury News

Castro laid to rest at Cuban monument

Former leader’s brother places box containing ashes in granite tomb

- By Christine Armario, Andrea Rodriguez and Michael Weissenste­in

SANTIAGO, Cuba — A wooden box containing Fidel Castro’s ashes was placed by his brother and successor on Sunday into the side of a granite boulder that has become Cuba’s only official monument to the charismati­c bearded rebel who seized control of a U.S. allied Caribbean island and transforme­d it into a western outpost of Soviet-style communism that he ruled with absolute power for nearly half a century.

The private, early-morning ceremony was attended by members of Fidel Castro’s family, the ruling Politburo of the single-party system he founded, and Latin American leaders who installed closely allied leftist government­s in Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Brazil.

After nine days of fervent national mourning and wallto-wall homages to Castro on state-run media, the government barred independen­t coverage of the funeral, releasing a handful of photos and brief descriptio­ns of the ceremony later in the day.

The ceremony began at 6:39 a.m. when the military caravan bearing Castro’s remains in a flag-draped cedar coffin left the Plaza of the Revolution in the eastern city of Santiago. Thousands of people lined the two-mile route to Santa Ifigenia cemetery, waving Cuban flags and shouting “Long live Fidel!”

The ashes were delivered to Castro’s younger brother and successor, President Raul Castro, who wore his olive general’s uniform as he placed the remains into a niche in the enormous grey boulder that will serve as his tomb. The niche was sealed with a green marble plaque emblazed with the name “Fidel” in gold letters.

The tomb stands to the side of a memorial to the rebel soldiers killed in an attack that Castro led on Santiago’s Moncada barracks on July 26, 1953, and in front of the mausoleum of Cuban national hero Jose Marti.

As the funeral ended, martial music could be heard outside the cemetery, where Ines de la Rosa was among the mourners gathered. She said she would have liked to watch the interment on television, but “we understand how they as a family also need a bit of privacy.”

The decision to keep the final farewell private came the morning after Raul Castro announced that Cuba would prohibit the naming of streets and monuments after his brother, and bar the constructi­on of statues of the former leader and revolution­ary icon, in keeping with his desire to avoid a cult of personalit­y.

“The leader of the revolution rejected any manifestat­ion of a cult of personalit­y and was consistent in that through the last hours of his life, insisting that, once dead, his name and likeness would never be used on institutio­ns, streets, parks or other public sites, and that busts, statutes or other forms of tribute would never be erected,” Raul Castro told a massive crowd gathered in the eastern city of Santiago.

 ?? AMIL LAGE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman places flowers in the tomb of former Cuban President Fidel Castro at the Cementerio Santa Ifigenia on Sunday in Santiago de Cuba.
AMIL LAGE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A woman places flowers in the tomb of former Cuban President Fidel Castro at the Cementerio Santa Ifigenia on Sunday in Santiago de Cuba.

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