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sake
9th May 2004, 23:36
What kind of volunteer labor did che do over his life? I know that he helped out with a leper colony then did weekly volunteer service in Cuba, but what exactly?

missfortune
10th May 2004, 00:58
He did a little of everything...in Anderson's book he said he worked building roads, in the sugar plantations and factories. As I know he basically worked his Saturdays and half of his Sunday doing goddamn near everthing!!

Essential Insignificance
10th May 2004, 01:10
You've summed it up rather well yourself…excluding the point that you disregard miserably, Che’s most important volitionary work…for same that is.

His revolutionary activities in Cuba, the Congo and Bolivia.

I believe that Che done the majority of his exertion with the leper victims in Peru.

Che was also one of the integral organizers of the "voluntary" work of Cubans on Sunday mornings…which of course he fulfilled himself.

I believe that Che's voluntary work landed himself all over the differing forms of production in cuba…cutting sugar cane, building housing complexes, shifting wheat at the ports, etc.

A hard worker indeed.

Raisa
11th May 2004, 00:57
Originally posted by [email protected] 9 2004, 11:36 PM
What kind of volunteer labor did che do over his life? I know that he helped out with a leper colony then did weekly volunteer service in Cuba, but what exactly?
One thing that I thought that was very nice that he did was simply spend time and listen to the lepers. That would have meant so much to me if I were a lepper, becasue the leppers are isolated and ignored. So to take the time to choose to see the lepers is very kind indeed.

Wiesty
11th May 2004, 02:53
found this
probable che in the loading surgar

emmissary
14th May 2004, 05:22
Che was the perfect example of the ideal man. No time was free time. Every effort to the Revolution.

Essential Insignificance
14th May 2004, 08:55
Che was the perfect example of the ideal man

The term "ideal man" is awfully Nazi like…the "perfect Aryan".


No time was free time.

Everyone one needs time too cultivate his or her peculiar interest...if Che didn't he would of being a fool, but he did.


Every effort to the Revolution.

Sometimes fruitlessly.

M_Rawlins
14th May 2004, 14:46
The term "ideal man" is awfully Nazi like…the "perfect Aryan".

I was reading the book "Stalin - The court of the red tsar" and came across this quote, which is about is one of Stalin's cronies [Mekhlis]


he placed Lenin's portrait with a red ribbon in his baby's cot and recorded the reactions this of New Man in his special diary :lol:

Subversive Pessimist
14th May 2004, 18:08
Che was the perfect example of the ideal man

He was a good man, indeed.


Sometimes fruitlessly.

And yet, he did it.

Kurai Tsuki
14th May 2004, 22:27
Yet another question that can be answered by, you guessed it, reading.

The most basic biography of Che would probably answer that queston.

Essential Insignificance
15th May 2004, 03:41
And yet, he did it.

Some might put in down as stupidity, rather then heroic revolutionary, ineffectual advances.

emmissary
15th May 2004, 05:46
The important lesson mis companeros is that if you belive in something, act upon it. Whether Che was an active volunteer is not important. The revolution is now and WE must act upon it!