Nickname Che derived from Guevara's habit of punctuating his speech with the
interjection che.
Latin American revolutionary leader, who rejected both capitalism and orthodox communism.
Guevara become an icon for young people throughout the world. His adventurous life with a tragic
early death created a legend that still lives.
Guevara was born in Rosario, Argentina into a middle-class family of Spanish-Irish descent.
His parents were liberal and not very religious. In his youth Guevara read widely and among his
reading list in the 1940s were Sartre, Pablo Neruda, Ciro Alegría, and Karl Marx's
Das Kapital. He also kept a philosophical diary and in Africa 1965 Guevara planned to write a
biography of Marx.
In 1953 Guevara graduated from the University of Buenos Aires, where he was trained as a doctor.
During these years Guevara read Stalin and Mussolini but did not join radical student organizations.
He made long travels in Argentina and in other Latin America countries. At the same time his critical
views about the expanding economic influence of the United States deepened. In 1952 he made journey
with his motor bike, which opened his eyes about the situation of the Indians and was crucial for the
awakening of his social conscience.
After witnessing American intervention in Guatemala in 1954 Guevara radicalized and become
convinced that the only way to bring about change was by violent revolution. In Guatemala Guevara
met Hilda Gadea. They married 1955 and had one child. Guevara was arrested with Fidel Castro in
Mexico for a short time. He had joined Castro's revolutionaries to overthrow the Batista government
and in 1956 they loaded 38-feet long motor yacht Granma full of guerillas and weapons and
sailed to Cuba, landing near Cabo Cruz on December 2.
They made their base in the mountains of Sierra Maestra, attacking garrisons and recruiting peasants
to the revolutionary army. In the areas controlled by the guerillas a Guevara started land reform
and socializing process. Guevara enjoyed the hard conditions and war, in spire of his asthma. He was
respected by his men, although considered violent - Guevara shot Eutimio Guerra who had cooperated with
dictator Fulgencio Batista's army.
In the mountains Guevara met Aleida March in 1958, 24-years old revolutionary fighter, and she became
Guevara's second wife in 1959. He continued to write his diary and composed also articles for El
Cubano Libre. Cuba became a hot subject for the media - New York Times, Paris Match
and Latin American papers sent reporters to the mountains to make stories of the revolutionaries.
Guevara rose to the rank of major and led one of the forces that invaded central Cuba in the late 1958.
After the conquest of power in January 1959 Guevara gained fame as the leading figure
in Castro's government, attracting attention with his speeches against imperialism and US
policy in the Third World. He argued strongly for moral versus material work incentives and
for centralized planning, and emphasized creation of the 'new socialist man'. When the executions
of war criminals started Guevara acted as the highest prosecuting authority. The condemned were
soldiers found guilty of murder, torture and other serious crimes. In 1959 Guevara adopted formally
the nickname Che and was granted honorary Cuban citizeship. He was visited by such
From 1961 to 1965 Guevara was minister for industries, and director of the national bank,
signing the bank notes simply 'Che'. He travelled widely in Russia, India and Africa, receiving
much public attention and meeting the leading figures of the world, among others Jawaharel Nehru
and Nikita Khruschev. Guevara was also the architect of the close relations between Cuba and the
Soviet Union, although he was also critical about the Soviet system. In Cuba he was visited by such
intellectuals as Sartre and
de Beauvoir, who saw
in him the 'perfect man'.
To test his revolutionary theories Guevara resigned from his post as a politician.
He had published highly influential manuals GUERILLA WARFARE (1961) and GUERILLA WARFARE:
A METHOD (1963), which were based on his own experiences and partly chairman Mao Zedong's writings.
Guevara stated that revolution in Latin America must come through insurgent forces developed in rural
areas with peasant support. The is no need for right precondition for revolution - guerilla warfare
can begin the activities.
During his disappearance from public life Guevara spent some time in Africa organizing the Lumumba
Battalion which took part in the Congo civil war. In 1966 he turned up incognito in Bolivia where he
trained and led a guerilla war in the Santa Cruz region. However, he failed to win the support of the
peasants and his group was surrended near Vallegrande by American-trained Bolivian troops. Guevara himself
was captured and shot in La Higuera on October 9, 1967.
FOR FURTHER READING: Che Guevara by A. Sinclair (1970); Che Guevara, A Revolutionary Life by Jon Lee Anderson (1997)
Film: Che! (1969), fictionalized biography, 'hasn't an ounce of political
or historical sense in its nut'. (New Yorker). Film was directed by Richard Fleischer, starring
Omar Sharif (Guevara) and Jack Palance (Castro).
See also: José Martí
Selected works:
- GUERILLA WARFARE, 1961
- PASAJES DE LA GUERRA REVOLUCIONARIA, 1963 - REMINISCENES OF THE CUBAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR
- GUERILLA WARFARE: A METHOD, 1963
- BOLIVIAN DIARY, 1969 -
- diaries: Notas de viaje / Mi primer gran viaje: de la Argentina
e Venezuela en motocicleta; El Diario del Che en Bolivia - 1968
Compiled by Kuusankoski Public Library, Finland (© 1997) and René Märtin (© 1998-2001).