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View Full Version : Camilio Cienfuegos - Che's Comrade



pastradamus
30th May 2009, 01:13
Here's an Interesting Piece on Cienfuegos from this site: http://www.historyofcuba.com/history/camilo.htm



Shortly before the defeat of Batista by revolutionary rebel forces in 1958, four men could be said to embody the spirit of the revolution to the Cuban population. Camilo Cienfuegos was one of those men. (The others were the Castro brothers, and Ernesto “Che” Guevara.)
As a young man of twenty-three years, Camilo joined a student demonstration in honor of Cuban folk hero Antonio Maceo. Marching through the street, the crowd was fired upon by Batista’s military police and was attacked by thugs with steel bars wrapped in newspapers.
Camilo was hit in the leg by a bullet, and he recalls his experience at the hospital, “they carried me to the student clinic,” he recalls, “where I experienced one of the greatest emotions of my life, when more than a hundred people gathered there in the entrance broke into cheers and applause when they carried me up, and I felt such an emotion, I felt about to cry, and I yelled out, ‘Viva Cuba!’ I was most sure then that, whatever the cost, Cuba had to be free.”
“In my way of thinking,” he wrote later, there is only one dignified road toward ending the present situation… to follow the cause of Fidel.”



Camilo rose from an undisciplined fighter to a brilliant, disciplined captain of the point platoon, the most dangerous position in the war. He commanded a 700-man force of the Rebel Army, furiously attacking government troops in Camagüey and Las Villas.
Camilo, who was not a communist, became immensely popular among Cubans, but not quite as popular as Fidel Castro.
Less than a year after their victory, on October 28 1959, Camilo’s Cesna-310 mysteriously disappeared over the ocean during a night flight from Camagüey to Havana. An immediate search was called, but the plane was never found.



Over the years, some have charged that Camilo was "probably killed by Castro," but historians seem to agree that Camilo's death is more likely to have been an accident, and not the result of foul play. [Carlos Franqui's book Camilo Cienfuegos is said to address contradictions in the official story, and I'm still hoping to find a copy-JAS]
In the last public speech before his disappearance, Camilo declared, "Even if it brings the sky down on our heads, agrarian reform is on!" showing his full agreement with The Revolution.
"Camilo gave the impression he never thought about death," said Haydée Santamaría to Carlos Franqui for his book The Twelve, "but I think he had a premonition he would die young."
"I constantly imagine Camilo's reactions to things," added Celia Sánchez. "For me, he is still living."
On October 28 the children of Cuba throw flowers into the sea. "A flower for Camilo," they say.

Il Medico
30th May 2009, 05:22
Sound like an interesting guy, too bad he wasn't a communist.

Nakidana
24th June 2009, 22:45
Nice one. Much respect for Cienfuegos. Sometimes it seems like the good really do die young. :(

Don't give much for the conspiracy theories though, what reason would Fidel have to kill him off? More likely a crash à la Air France.

EDIT: Yeah, just read up on him on Wikipedia. Very loyal to Fidel and the revolution, no way anybody would haved ordered him killed. Regarding his politics his close friend Franqui has stated that Camilo "sympathized with socialism" and both his father and brother were radical leftists. I myself don't care much if he was a communist or not, he was still a revolutionary.


There has been debate as to Cienfuegos's political leanings. Many claim that he was anti-Communist (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Anti-communism), though it is not clear if that means he decried socialist ideals. Cuban author and historian Carlos Franqui (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Carlos_Franqui) suggests otherwise in his book, Family Portrait With Fidel. Franqui, one of Cienfuegos's closest friends during the Cuban revolution, asserts that Cienfuegos "sympathized with socialism" and that he followed the Marxist (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Marxism) Che Guevara (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Che_Guevara) politically. Other sources tend to agree with Franqui. Both Cienfuegos's father and his brother, Osmany (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Osmany_Cienfuegos), were, and in Osmany's case still are, radical (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Far_left) leftists (http://www.revleft.com/wiki/Left-wing_politics).

Aww, what the hell, let's get a photo on here:

http://img151.imageshack.us/img151/6502/camilob.jpg (http://img151.imageshack.us/i/camilob.jpg/)