Fidel Castro, the fiery communist politician and Cuban revolutionary who led his country for almost half a century, has died. His health had been deteriorating since 2006, when he suffered from intestinal bleeding. He was 90 years old.
By 1959, Castro had established the first communist state in the Western hemisphere. He had been revered as a savior by many across the country, and yet Human Rights Watch listed Castro’s Cuba as a gross violator of basic and free standards of living. Regardless of how Castro was perceived in his life, he leaves behind a legacy of shaping the history of a small Latin American country in its fight for an identity, and its struggle in standing up against the greatest superpower on Earth.
Castro’s revolutionary spirit had beginnings from when he was a law student at the University of Havana. It was there that his interest in politics began.
In 1952, the young and enthusiastic lawyer ran for election to the Cuban House of Representatives. But the election never took place. Fulgencio Batista, the former president of the country, staged a coup with the backing of the army, and seized power that March. For Castro, this was the moment he realized an uprising was imminent.
But before Castro’s revolution was to take hold, there was another Latin American figure he’d befriend who would help shape rebellion in Cuba and across the region — the Argentine doctor, Ernesto “Che” Guevara.
With Che by his side and a small rebel army backing them, the revolutionaries descended from their stronghold in the Sierra Maestra Mountains, and took on Batista’s U.S.-backed forces. Castro was able to topple the right-wing dictator on Jan. 1, 1959, after Batista had ruled in and out of power for 25 years.
The scene on the streets of Havana just a week later was one of jubilation, as Castro and his brigade rolled into the capital atop tanks and trucks. Thousands of Cubans met them, cheering and waving flags from cars and from balconies.
For Castro, the revolution meant a distinct reordering of society. Through the Agrarian Reform Laws, he redistributed land to the peasants that worked them. He placed an emphasis on healthcare, education, housing and road-building in rural areas.
Then, in 1960, he ordered all U.S.-owned companies in Cuba to be nationalized without compensation. They included oil refineries, factories and casinos. Everywhere around the country, U.S. flags were taken down, and signs for corporations were replaced with the stamp of the Cuban government. Angered by this move, the United States government decided to retaliate, in the form of a trade embargo, which lasted more than five decades.
Castro’s stated goal was simple: to resist against the “imperial” world, and infuse a sense of nationalism across all aspects of Cuban life. But along the way, he compromised civil liberties, forcing many Cubans to flee the country, and head north, to Miami. The country has long been criticized for its human rights abuses of anyone opposing the government since Castro assumed power, including arbitrary imprisonment, unfair trials and extrajudicial execution. In addition to these abuses, civil liberties in the country were almost nonexistent during Castro’s tenure, with severe limitations on freedom of press, religion and general political dissent.
Castro admitted. “We do not have a press system like that of the United States. In the United States there is private property over the mass media. The mass media belongs to private enterprises. They are the ones who say the last word. Here there is no private property over the mass media. There is social property. And it has been, is and will be at the service of the revolution.”
But for all the distinctions from the United States Castro was sure to make, the U.S. blockade crippled Cuba’s economy. In order for the regime to stay afloat, Castro developed an alliance with America’s superpower rival, the Soviet Union – distancing his country even more from the U.S., and leading American President Dwight D. Eisenhower to sever all links with Cuba.
Still, Castro stood firm in his opposition of the States.
“We are a small country,” Castro said in 1985. “But we are also a country with a lot of dignity, and no one can suppose that we would beg the United States for an improvement of relations. We have never done so, and we shall never do it.”
That persistently defiant attitude, along with the deteriorating economy and continued repression of political dissidents, led to a mass exodus of Cubans following the 1959 revolution.
Meanwhile, America’s new president, John F. Kennedy, decided to carry on with his predecessor’s plans to take Castro out. He administered a covert CIA operation commonly known as “The Bay of Pigs” invasion — in which 1,200 Cuban exiles were trained as an army to invade Cuba and conduct an armed overthrow of Castro on April 17, 1961.
But the small, counter-revolutionary force was no match for Castro’s supporters, who rallied to counter the invasion. It turned out to be a disaster and an embarrassment for the new Kennedy administration, and Cuba’s revolutionary spirit was nourished yet again.
The U.S. and Cuba hit another contentious point the following year, after it was discovered that Castro had secretly allowed the Soviets to build sites for nuclear missiles, leading to the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. The crisis brought the world to the brink of nuclear war.
The CIA made several other attempts at Castro’s life, aside from the Bay of Pigs Invasion. But none were successful, and Castro’s revolutionary fervor remained strong throughout the years.
Castro was one of many international political figures who, following the global shifts of World War II, threw themselves into spurring movements for justice and an egalitarian society. And despite his adamantly enforced Marxist-Leninist ideals and dictatorial style of government that suppressed so many who opposed him, his popularity remained high throughout his reign.
But after the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of Soviet aid, the continued economic crisis in Cuba was hard on even those who supported Castro. It forced him to seek aid elsewhere, and forge alliances with other leaders in Latin America, namely with Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Bolivia’s Evo Morales.
In 2008, after almost 50 years as the head of his nation and amid deteriorating health, Castro passed the role of president onto his younger brother, Raul Castro, who remains in power today.
It was not until December 2014 that the US enforced restrictions on Cuba were finally lifted.
These 50 years have shown that isolation has not worked,” President Obama told the American people. “It’s time for a new approach.”
This momentous development included plans to open an embassy in Havana, expand economic ties with Cuba, and ease travel restrictions. The first step in easing tensions between the United States and Cuba included a prisoner swap between the two countries.
But the deal was reached between President Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro. Fidel Castro was still nowhere to be seen.
In his final years, Castro rarely appeared in public. He assumed the role of an elder statesman, completely removing himself from any official role in Cuba’s government. After President Barack Obama’s historic visit to Cuba in March 2016, Castro penned a letter publicly criticizing the U.S. president. Obama did not meet with the former Cuban leader during his three-day visit to the island nation.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesJust by the headline, proclaiming the shitty little dictator's death, I knew we'd be seeing comments from our resident communist (Reekie, for those who haven't recognized him), praising Castro.
Nov 26th, 2016 - 08:52 pm +6His opinion on the 'miracles' which occurred in Cuba, such as free health care and education for all , are grossly exaggerated. These things may have been free and extensive to all, but were not of a very high standard. Proof of this is the level of medical qualification of the several thousand Cuban doctors, that were temporarily imported to Brazil by our ex-idiotic President Dilma, to ostensibly make Brazil's public healthcare system the 'best' in the world....it was laughable....the so-called doctors are no more than glorified nurses, or paramedics.....they were sent to the remote areas of Brazil, where real doctors wouldn't go, due to the lousy pay and the complete absence of decent medical infrastructure ; Two other things which confirm their lack of qualification, was that Dilma refused to allow them to take the mandatory revalidation exams for 'imported' medical professionals, plus the fact that while Brazil paid Cuba US$ 10,000 per month per doctor, their salary was only US$ 400....there are very strong suspicions this programme was used by the PT to get hard currency out of the country, into their offshore stash. And what happened to Chavez when he went to Cuba to be treated ? he kicked the bucket ...just as well he didn't take Lula up on his offer to be treated - at the taxpayer's expense - in Brazil. He might still be alive. And Maduro will now be able to claim that besides getting messages from Chavez, through a little blue bird perched on his shoulder, he also gets messages from a buzzard perched on his other shoulder. Good riddance !
@Reekie
Nov 28th, 2016 - 07:44 pm +6I'm not saying Batista was good for Cuba, he was just another lousy little latin-american dictator, imbued with ideas of his own greatness.....that Castro got rid of him, might not have been such a bad idea, but why turn to Soviet-style communism ? shows Castro's ideals had little to do with people's well being...it was all about power ; if it was the paradise he proclaimed it to be, why did so many hundreds of thousands risk their lives to get the hell out (to Florida) ? Once he had control over everything, why not start to humanize Cuban government ? instead, to maintain his grip on power, he 'eliminated' 7,000 political adversaries....really democratic, just like Chavez and VZ's 'democracy'...
You say 'so sad the Cubans had to live under a dictatorship'...yet, you praise the dictator who subjugated them, took away their personal freedom, and made them 'sad'....you crazy ? only those born under his yoke would have thought he was great, because they knew nothing better...and Castro made sure it stayed that way.
“Fidel Castro...made significant improvements to the education and healthcare of his island nation....well considering that probably under Batista, education and healthcare were quite primitive, I suppose any improvement would be significant....but yet, despite how 'wonderful' some people might think they are, the fact remains they are still not a patch on what the first-world has to offer.
So Reekie, being a dyed-in-the-wool communist, you must be unhappy in Canada ....there's still time to make it to VZ before they turn the lights out...
Trying to justify Cuba's dictatorship by poking a finger at Haiti, Guatemala and Honduras, is quite senseless, as they've all paid the price (and still are) for their 'dictatorships', but with one big difference : if anyone in those 3 countries wanted to leave, they could....You Reekie, using EB's expression, must be a member of the 'champagne-socialist's group..
At some point in the future his body should be hauled out of where ever they stash him and thrown into the ocean for the misery his ideology has caused the people of Cuba.
Nov 26th, 2016 - 11:05 am +5Commenting for this story is now closed.
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