Sunday, February 25, 2007

Che




He is a hero of the political left in Europe and he sure is one of the most charismatic persons of the 20th century: Ernsesto "Che" Guevara - the Argentinian upper middle class doctor who got the Cuban Revolution under way in the late 1950's. With the other half of this "project" - Fidel Castro - being close to death, it is the right time (well, it is ALWAYS the right time) to recommend a book that does a good job in "separating the man from the myth", as the New York Times Book Review finds. JON LEE ANDERSON'S "CHE" is a classic by now. First published in 1997 this epic biography gives an insight into the weird struggle of the Cuban Revolution. It started with the journey of a group of men to the island south of Florida on what by today´s standards cannot be called a boat (the boat´s name was grandma - so is the title of a Cuban propaganda newspaper). It continued in the Cuban wilderness - with scarce supplies. Eventually, and I still don´t get how exactly that was possible, Che and his men managed to overthrow a corrupt and smugly self-confident system, a system, where nobody with a liberal-democratic mindset would want to live. But who would want to live in Che´s socialist Cuba either? There were plenty of downsides to this whole thing, you can still see them today. Other than the fact that Che´s beloved firing squads had a lot of work to do in the dawn of the revolution, life under his regiment reminds one of a George Orwell novel ("1984" or "Animal Farm" - choose your favourite). Free speech, free press, free choice of what to study? Non of these things existed, and mostly still don´t exist in 2007. That is particulary interesting since Che is extraordinarily popular among students. If you plan the economy, don´t plan on a prosperous future for your country (probably somone already put it like this, if not, I keep the credits).
Until his death, Che's vision was to enable a revolution that would hit the Americas like a huge wave. That didn´t exactly work out the way he imagined. Maybe one of his biggest problems was that his closest comrades - first and foremost Fidel - were not as idealistic about Socialism/Communism/Marxism/Leninism than Che himself. They paid lip service to Che´s ideas and real service to power and influence.

Let´s wait and see how long Cuba will be like we know it. Of course, oil money comes in handy these days - but I have already talked about that elsewhere.

Anderson, Jon Lee: "Che Guevara - A Revolutionary Life". Publisher: Grove/Atlantic. 1st Pbk. Ed edition, April 1998.

1 comment:

hint said...

Zitat:"But who would want to live in Che´s socialist Cuba either?"
Na ja, Che hat ja nicht zuletzt aus politichen Differenzen mit Fidel Castro sein Amt als Industrieminsister zurück gelegt und hat Kuba verlassen.
Ich will auf keinen Fall die schwarzen Seiten des kubanischen Sozialismus vergessen, doch muss auch gesagt werden, dass der Kommunismus in Kuba (Ausbidung, Gesundheit, etc.)im südamerikanischen Kontext gesehen werden muss: Und da steht Kuba besser da, als alle anderen rechten Militärjunta Drogen Staaten.

P.S. Die Zeitung in Kuba heisst nicht Grandma sondern Granma :)