Short Biography Of Ernesto Che Guevara:
IntrO:
Ernesto Che Guevara…..
Why does a revolution begins….??? For Freedom?
History taught us many stories of many revolutions….. No
revolutions begins when the freedom is lost.
Revolution takes birth when the slavery begins.. when your
emotions are hurt and feelings are insulted, when you have lost your self-respect. Then your heart repents and the
soul roars. It is from the roaring of your soul the Revolution takes its birth
into the world. It is for your lost Self-Respect the revolution starts...
Revolution is the ‘roar’ of your paining soul.
___Majety
___Majety
BiO:
Che Guevara, byname of Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (born June 14, 1928, Rosario, Argentina—died October 1967, Bolivia), theoretician and tactician of guerrilla warfare, prominent communist figure in the Cuban Revolution
(1956–59), and later guerrilla leader in South America. After his
execution by the Bolivian army, he was regarded as a martyred hero by
generations of leftists worldwide, and his image became an icon of
leftist radicalism and anti-imperialism.
In 1953 Guevara went to Guatemala, where Jacobo Arbenz headed a progressive regime that was attempting to bring about a social revolution. (Around this time Guevara acquired his nickname, from a verbal mannerism of Argentines who punctuate their speech with the interjection che.) The overthrow of the Arbenz regime in 1954 in a coup supported by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency persuaded Guevara that the United States would always oppose progressive leftist governments. This conviction became the cornerstone of his plans to bring about socialism by means of a worldwide revolution.
He left Guatemala for Mexico, where he met the Cuban brothers Fidel and Raúl Castro, political exiles who were preparing an attempt to overthrow the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista in Cuba. Guevara joined Fidel Castro’s force, which landed in the Cuban province of Oriente late in November 1956. Immediately detected by Batista’s army, they were almost wiped out; the few survivors, including the wounded Guevara, reached the Sierra Maestra, where they became the nucleus of a guerrilla army. The rebels slowly gained in strength, seizing weapons from Batista’s forces and winning support and new recruits, and Guevara became one of Castro’s most-trusted aides. Guevara recorded the two years spent overthrowing Batista’s government in Pasajes de la guerra revolucionaria (1963; Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War, 1968).
After Castro’s victorious troops entered Havana on Jan. 2, 1959, and established a Marxist government, Guevara became a Cuban citizen, as prominent in the new government as he had been in the revolutionary army, representing Cuba on many commercial missions. He also became well known in the West for his opposition to all forms of imperialism and neocolonialism and for his attacks on U.S. foreign policy. He served as chief of the Industrial Department of the National Institute of Agrarian Reform, president of the National Bank of Cuba, and minister of industry.
El socialismo y el hombre en Cuba” (1965; “
Man and Socialism in Cuba,” 1967)—an examination of Cuba’s new brand of communism—and a highly influential manual, La guerra de guerrillas (1960; Guerrilla Warfare, 1961). After April 1965 Guevara dropped out of public life. His movements and whereabouts for the next two years remained secret; it was later learned that he had spent some time in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo with other Cuban guerrilla fighters, helping to organize the Patrice Lumumba Battalion, which fought in the civil war there.
In the autumn of 1966 Guevara went to Bolivia, incognito, to create and lead a guerrilla group in the region of Santa Cruz. On Oct. 8, 1967, the group was almost annihilated by a special detachment of the Bolivian army. Guevara, who was wounded in the attack, was captured and shot. Yet Guevara would live on as a powerful symbol, bigger in some ways in death than in life. He was almost always referenced simply as Che—like Elvis Presley, so popular an icon that his first name alone was identifier enough. Guevara’s romanticized image as a revolutionary loomed especially large for the generation of young leftist radicals in western Europe and North America in the turbulent 1960s. Almost from the time of his death, Guevara’s whiskered face—framed by a beret and long hair—has adorned T-shirts, initially as a statement of rebellion, then as the epitome of radical chic, and, with the passage of time, as a kind of abstract logo whose original significance may even have been lost on its wearer.
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--End--
I don't care if I fall as long as someone else picks up my gun and keeps on shooting.
__Che Guevara
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