The proposed Galway monument to Che |
First, to refresh your memory as to Che’s vile nature, an excerpt from an article, The Killing Machine: Che Guevara, from Communist Firebrand to Capitalist Brand, by Álvaro Vargas Llosa I linked to a while ago,
Guevara might have been enamored of his own death, but
he was much more enamored of other people’s deaths. In April 1967,
speaking from experience, he summed up his homicidal idea of justice in
his “Message to the Tricontinental”: “hatred as an element of
struggle; unbending hatred for the enemy, which pushes a human being
beyond his natural limitations, making him into an effective, violent,
selective, and cold-blooded killing machine.” His earlier
writings are also peppered with this rhetorical and ideological
violence. Although his former girlfriend Chichina Ferreyra doubts that
the original version of the diaries of his motorcycle trip contains the
observation that “I feel my nostrils dilate savoring the acrid smell of gunpowder and blood of the enemy,” Guevara did share with Granado at that very young age this exclamation: “Revolution without firing a shot? You’re crazy.”
At other times the young bohemian seemed unable to distinguish between
the levity of death as a spectacle and the tragedy of a revolution’s
victims. In a letter to his mother in 1954, written in Guatemala, where
he witnessed the overthrow of the revolutionary government of Jacobo
Arbenz, he wrote: “It was all a lot of fun, what with the bombs, speeches, and other distractions to break the monotony I was living in.”
Guevara’s disposition when he traveled with Castro from Mexico to
Cuba aboard the Granma is captured in a phrase in a letter to his wife
that he penned on January 28, 1957, not long after disembarking, which
was published in her book Ernesto: A Memoir of Che Guevara in Sierra
Maestra: “Here in the Cuban jungle, alive and bloodthirsty.”
This mentality had been reinforced by his conviction that Arbenz had
lost power because he had failed to execute his potential enemies. An
earlier letter to his former girlfriend Tita Infante had observed that “if there had been some executions, the government would have maintained the capacity to return the blows.”
It is hardly a surprise that during the armed struggle against Batista,
and then after the triumphant entry into Havana, Guevara murdered or
oversaw the executions in summary trials of scores of people—proven
enemies, suspected enemies, and those who happened to be in the wrong
place at the wrong time. More >>
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