Byte Sized Biographies…

Ernesto “Che” Guevara (Volume 1, Podcast 5)


Listen Later

Ernesto “Che” Guevara, Revolutionary Poster Boy
Ernesto Guevara de la Serna was born in Rosario, Argentina on May 14, 1928.   His upper class parents forged his birth certificate to read June 14 to conceal the fact that Ernesto was conceived out of wedlock.  Ernesto Guevara Lynch and Celia de la Serna y Llosa both came from socially well-connected families.  Despite Ernesto Sr.’s attempts at several money-making ventures, the family lived on Celia’s inheritance.
On March 4, 1960 Che Guevara was meeting with industrial management associates in downtown Havana, when a massive explosion ripped through the wharf area of the city.  A French freighter, La Coubre, had been unloading armaments directly onto the dock when a momentous explosion occurred.  Thirty minutes later, with a massive emergency aid effort underway, another explosion went off, killing even more people.  Approximately seventy-five people died and two hundred more were injured in an incident that Castro immediately charged was planned and carried out by the CIA.  He ordered a state funeral with a procession through Havana to a speaker’s platform set up in front of the city’s prominent Colon cemetery.  Castro used the occasion for a typically lengthy and aggressive speech.  Alberto Korda, a former fashion photographer who had joined Castro’s entourage and recorded such events began to photograph various government officials standing in Castro’s vicinity.  He suddenly noticed Che Guevara standing off to the side, gazing introspectively into the crowd.  Korda had only a few seconds to take two photographs before Che Guevara sat down behind Castro.  Although Korda immediately knew he had taken two excellent photos, neither would be published in any newspaper accounts of the memorial.  He cropped the palm tree and profile of another individual out of the picture, tilted Che’s head slightly and tacked the photo to the wall of his studio.
Seems like a rather tense occasion.
For Che Guevara personally, the grim reality of his marriage also reared its head early in the first days of the Cuban revolutionary government.  His wife, Hilda, and daughter arrived from Peru but Che Guevara immediately told her of the “other woman” and asked for a divorce.  Hilda later wrote an unverifiably sentimental account of their discussion but the divorce was granted and Che Guevara quickly married Aleida March.
The Bay of Pigs combined with a disastrous Kennedy-Khrushchev summit meeting at Vienna to prompt the most dangerous episode of the Cold War.  Thinking that his American counterpart was a weak intellectual who could be intimidated, Khrushchev began negotiations with Castro regarding the installation of nuclear missiles in Cuba.  The Soviet Union had been forced to accept similar American missiles in Turkey and the Soviet leader saw an opportunity to humiliate the US and also guarantee Cuba’s security.  Castro, with Che Guevara’s enthusiastic urging, agreed, in principle.  As an indication of Che Guevara’s importance in the Cuban government hierarchy, it was Che who was sent to the USSR in August of 1962 to finalize the deal.
Much of the success of the Cuban revolution was due to a well organized courier underground that allowed the Cuban rebels to communicate their needs at all times.  Tamara Bunke aka “Tania” was attempting to serve this purpose and  connected with Che’s unit in early January.  She had brought with her two agents from Cuban intelligence, Ciro Bustos and Simon Debray.  Unfortunately, a Bolivian communist informer tipped off the government as to her true identity and she could no longer return to La Paz where she had been able to inform Havana by coded radio messages as to the progress of and whereabouts of Che’s mission.
The following morning local senior officials of the Bolivian military as well as Felix Rodriguez arrived in La Higuera by helicopter.  Rodriguez would eventually recount his encounter with the cap...
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Byte Sized Biographies…By Philip D. Gibbons

  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5

4.5

250 ratings


More shows like Byte Sized Biographies…

View all
Stuff You Should Know by iHeartPodcasts

Stuff You Should Know

78,573 Listeners

Radiolab by WNYC Studios

Radiolab

43,981 Listeners

In The Dark by The New Yorker

In The Dark

28,201 Listeners

The Explorers Podcast by Matt Breen

The Explorers Podcast

1,518 Listeners

History Unplugged Podcast by History Unplugged

History Unplugged Podcast

4,053 Listeners

Tides of History by Wondery /  Patrick Wyman

Tides of History

6,294 Listeners

History That Doesn't Suck by Prof. Greg Jackson

History That Doesn't Suck

6,077 Listeners

Ridiculous History by iHeartPodcasts

Ridiculous History

4,563 Listeners

American History Tellers by Wondery

American History Tellers

19,244 Listeners

American Scandal by Wondery

American Scandal

19,138 Listeners

Infamous America by Black Barrel Media

Infamous America

2,952 Listeners

Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford by Pushkin Industries

Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford

5,136 Listeners

HISTORY This Week by The HISTORY® Channel | Back Pocket Studios

HISTORY This Week

4,191 Listeners

Short History Of... by NOISER

Short History Of...

2,860 Listeners

Adrift by Apple TV / Blanchard House

Adrift

706 Listeners