Periódico ecuménico cubano - Miami, Florida, Enero de
2007
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Che, Cuba and Christmas
By Mary Anastasia O'Grady
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Until yesterday Christmas shoppers at Target department stores
could purchase a 24-CD carrying case decorated with the image of
Che Guevara. When I heard about it, I wondered why the retailer
would want to promote the memory of a mass murderer. What's next,
I asked, when I spoke with a representative of the company on
Wednesday, Pol Pot pajamas?
Late Wednesday evening Target sent me this statement: "It is
never our intent to offend any of our guests through the
merchandise we carry. We have made the decision to remove this
item from our shelves and we sincerely apologize for any
discomfort this situation may have caused our guests."
The fact that it took only a day for Target to make that
admirable decision suggests that at least someone at the company
knows who Guevara was and what Cuba is today thanks in part to
him. The misstep, though, probably occurred because others at
the company allowed Target to become a target itself of the Che
myth.
Guevara is not just a dead white guy from a well-to-do family
who terrorized a racially mixed nation and executed hundreds of
innocents in the late 1950s and 1960s. He is also a symbol of
the totalitarian regime that persists in Cuba, which still
practices his ideology of intolerance, hatred and repression. It
is not the torture and killing alone that make the tragedy. That
only describes the methodology. Guevara's wider goal -- to
forcibly strip a population of its soul and spirit -- is what is
truly frightening and deplorable. Christians, who celebrate the
birth of their Savior on Monday, have particularly suffered
under Guevara's dream of revolution, which has lasted since
1959.
The fear under which Cubans have lived for 48 years was fathered
by the merciless Che Guevara. The unhappy Argentine Marxist met
Fidel Castro in Mexico in 1955 and later became a rebel
commander. "The Black Book of Communism," published in 1999 by
Harvard University Press, notes that early in his career Guevara
earned a "reputation for ruthlessness; a child in his guerrilla
unit who had stolen a little food was immediately shot without
trial." In his will, the book says, "this graduate of the school
of terror praised the 'extremely useful hatred that turns men
into effective, violent, merciless and cold killing machines.'"
Peruvian-born Alvaro Vargas Llosa penned his own book this year
titled "The Che Guevara Myth." Mr. Vargas Llosa documents a
twisted life, such as when Che shot a comrade and made the
following entry in his diary: "I ended the problem with a .32
caliber pistol, in the right side of his brain. . . . His
belongings were now mine." After that, Mr. Vargas Llosa says,
Guevara shot "a peasant who expressed the desire to leave
whenever the rebels moved on." Guevara also liked to simulate
executions, as a form of torture. "At every stage of his adult
life, his megalomania manifested itself in the predatory urge to
take over other people's lives and property, and to abolish
their free will."
Guevara was an architect of Cuba's forced labor camps, which by
1965 were transformed into concentration camps for dissidents,
homosexuals, people with AIDS, Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses,
and Cubans of other religious sects.
All independent thought that refused to worship the communist
state was an affront to Guevara. Christians were an especially
difficult lot. From the earliest days after Castro took power,
Che sent hundreds of men to face firing squads at the Havana
prison known as La Cabaña. His victims could be heard at dawn
loudly crying "Long live Christ the King, down with communism,"
just before the rifle shots rang out.
Thousands of Cubans have perished in daring attempts to get off
the island because they preferred the risks of flight to a life
in which Christianity has been forbidden, children are the
property of the state, thought is policed and spying on your
neighbor is one of the few ways to earn a living. During the
Mariel boat lift in 1980, witnesses told of families arriving at
the pier together only to be separated by Cuban guards who
enjoyed watching their misery. Weeping mothers faced the point
of a gun while their distraught sons and daughters were forced
to board ships. This Christmas thousands of Cuban-Americans will
remember their loved ones who didn't make it out or died trying.
Defenders of Guevara can't even claim that his cruelty brought
about equality. Today state policy makes it a crime for the
raggedly dressed, malnourished and mostly black Cuban people to
visit the beaches, museums and amply stocked stores of their own
country, while well-fed tourists in fashionable cruise-wear go
where they like. This amounts to de facto apartheid.
Amazingly, hope is still alive in Cuba. One reason is because
although Guevara was able to kill a lot of Christians, neither
he nor his successors succeeded in wiping out Christianity. The
struggling Christian community, which takes seriously the
religious teaching to reject fear in the face of evil, is
playing a key role in the island's dissident movement.
An icon of the Christian resistance is Oscar Elias Biscet, a
black physician who is serving a 25-year sentence for his
peaceful activism against the regime. He has been arrested more
than 26 times since he began to express his dissent; he has been
beaten, tortured and locked in tiny windowless cells for days on
end. Hundreds of other prisoners of conscience are in jail,
under atrocious conditions; many are also devout Christians.
The Christian faith has survived Che and Fidel and decades of
brainwashing. It is battered but has not been defeated. Raul
Castro fears it -- which is why he takes Bibles away from his
unbreakable prisoners. The moral of the story seems to be that
even the all-powerful regime cannot stop Christmas from coming
to Cuba.
Reprinted with permission of The Wall Street Journal © 2006
Dow Jones & Company.
All rights reserved.
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