Today
is the fortieth anniversary of the death of Ché Guevarra. It’s also the day
that the U.S. government officially celebrates Columbus Day. At first glance,
the coincidence may seem like a match made in heaven for folks like Hugo Chávez,
who renamed the holiday Day of Indigenous
Resistance in 2002 and sported the iconic Ché t-shirt to the World
Social Forum in 2005.
And for me also (I admit I had a gigantic
poster of Ché on my wall in high school), the overlap of red-letter days has
provided the fodder for a blog – albeit, not of the celebratory variety. I’m sure
I had some fuzzy notion in high school that Ché stood for freedom from
oppression, disenfranchisement, poverty, just like the fuzzy notion I’d been
fed in elementary school that Christopher Columbus was a great man who discovered
America. While both of those statements may be
true from a certain perspective, it’s the narrow one of the establishment, both
left and right.
After
the Cuban revolution, Ché’s first job was head of the main prison, La Cabaña
(The Cottage), where enemies of the new state, then dissidents, and eventually
gays were incarcerated or sent to labor camps. Two years after Castro came to
power, there were 300,000 Cubans in prison—one out of every twenty-one citizens
of Cuba. According to Humberto Fontova, author of Exposing the Real Ché Guevarra,
Ché signed 400 death warrants and personally executed as many as 180 people
during his first three months at the prison. Stalin and Mao would surely have
cheered on the extermination of back-talk, debate, indifference, and
alternative lifestyles, but you have to wonder what Johnny Depp, Angelina Jolie,
Madonna, and Prince Harry see in the guy to admire.
Not only
that, but there exists the fact of Ché’s legacy and the hundreds of dissidents in
Cuba’s prisons at this very moment. In 2003, ten independent
librarians decided to offer their solidarity to librarians in Cuba and to join
in the demand by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch for the release
of Cuban prisoners of conscience. For some reason, this decision was not
supported by their colleagues at the American Library Association.
Back to Columbus: While the great tragedy
of disease perpetuated by the Spanish colonists was not deliberate or even understood
at the time (approximately 85% of the native population of America died of infections,
primarily smallpox), Columbus personally carried out acutely cruel punishments
and death sentences on specific persons and tribes. The Taino of Hispaniola no
longer populate this planet.
On the other hand, I don’t see his image on
street corners, advertisements, or a president’s chest. Columbus is no poster-boy
for explorers and adventurers. No fashion photographer was standing around on a
foredeck in 1492, ready to snap the photo of the century like Korda got his in
1960—the photo that ubiquitously adorns the mugs and t-shirts. While a picture
may be worth a thousand words, I think in this case it says more about the
person who is buying than the man named Ché himself.
Ché once said, “Those
who shut down the doors to peaceful resolutions open the doors to violent
revolutions.” He should know.