NICHOLAS CASEY
LA HIGUERA, Bolivia — Irma Rosales, tired after decades of
tending her tiny store, sat back one morning with a box full of photos and
remembered the stranger who was shot in the local schoolhouse 50 years ago.
His hair was long and greasy, she said; his clothes so dirty
that they might have belonged to a mechanic. And he said nothing, she recalled,
when she brought him a bowl of soup not long before the bullets rang out. Che
Guevara was dead.
Monday marks a half-century since the execution of Guevara,
the peripatetic Argentine doctor, named Ernesto at birth, who led guerrilla
fighters from Cuba to Congo. He stymied the United States during the Bay of
Pigs invasion, lectured at a United Nations lectern and preached a new world
order dominated by those once marginalized by superpowers.
His towering life was overshadowed only by the myth that
emerged with his death. The image of his scruffy beard and starred beret became
the calling card of romantic revolutionaries around the world and across
generations, seen everywhere from the jungle camps of militants to college dorm
rooms.
Yet the villagers of La Higuera, Bolivia, who lived through
that time, tell a story that is far less mythic, describing a short, bloody
episode where a forgotten corner of this mountainous countryside briefly became
a battleground of the Cold War.
It was not long after Guevara and the other strangers with
him first appeared in the area, promising equality, that the guerrillas were
dragged away in pools of their own blood, recalled Ms. Rosales.
“It was torture for us,” she said. “For us, this was a time
of suffering.”
As Latin America remembers Guevara’s death, the region also
faces a larger reckoning with the same leftist movements that drew on him for
inspiration.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the region’s
largest remaining guerrilla group, came out of the jungle and gave
up its arms this year in a war where no one won but Colombia lost more
than 220,000 people.
The Socialist-inspired movement of the late President Hugo
Chávez of Venezuela led to gains in education and health care, but the
country has
sunk into hunger, unrest and dictatorship.
Even Cuba, which for years proudly lived under the
revolutionary banner hung by Guevara, now faces an uncertain fate as a détente
reached with the United States unravels under the Trump administration.
Bolivia is one of Latin America’s last democracies where
leftists remain in control, and it is difficult for political movements to
thrive in such a vacuum, one of the country’s leaders said. “You cannot prosper
or sustain yourself over time if you do not have the victories and struggles in
other places,” said Álvaro García Linera, the vice president of Bolivia.
Jon Lee Anderson, who wrote a biography of Guevara and was
key to discovering his remains — they were hidden by soldiers until the 1990s —
says both Guevara and the left hit such low points before.
“But Che remains kind of pure,” he said. “An ever-present
beacon, the icon. Where will it go in the future? I have this notion that Che
comes and goes.”
A revolutionary
vanishes
In the years before his death, Guevara’s whereabouts was a
global mystery.
After having overseen the firing squads that followed the
Communist victory he helped secure in Cuba, and after a stint running the
country’s central bank, Guevara suddenly vanished in 1965, sent by Fidel Castro
to organize revolutions abroad. He was dispatched on a failed mission to Congo,
then bounced between safe houses in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Prague.
“Back then, people said he had been killed by Fidel, others
that he had died in Santo Domingo, that he was in Vietnam,” said Juan Carlos
Salazar, who, in 1967, was a 21-year-old Bolivian reporter about to begin
chasing his first major story. “They placed him here, they placed him over
there — but no one knew where he was.”
Loyola Guzmán, a Communist youth leader in La Paz, Bolivia’s
capital, would be one of the first to learn. She received a message one day
calling her to Camiri, a small town near the border of Paraguay. She said she
had no idea what the meeting was for.
Ms. Guzmán is 75 now, but a photo in January 1967 shows her
in the flush of youth, in fatigues and a field cap, sitting on a log at a
sweltering jungle camp — and next to her is Guevara.
“He said he wanted to create ‘two or three Vietnams,’” said
Ms. Guzmán, with Bolivia a base for a revolution not only there but in
neighboring Argentina and Peru, as well. Ms. Guzmán agreed with the idea and
was sent back to the capital to drum up support for the revolutionaries and
manage their money.
In March 1967, the battle began.
Mr. Salazar, the journalist, learned later that month that
fighting had broken out between the Bolivian army and an armed group, leaving
seven soldiers dead. The reporter was dispatched to the area to investigate,
but it remained unclear who the militants were — although it was known they
were regularly delivering fatal blows to government forces.
Soon afterward, word began to leak out that the ringleader
might be Guevara.
The army wanted to find and defeat him. Among journalists,
“everyone wanted to interview him,” recalled Mr. Salazar.
Villagers are wary
While Guevara was known around the world, his fame did
little to endear him to Bolivia’s peasants.
And the country had already undergone a revolution the
decade before, instituting universal suffrage, land reform and expanded
education. During Guevara’s time fighting in Bolivia, not a single peasant was
documented to have joined him.
“He didn’t think it through,” said Carlos Mesa, a former
president of Bolivia and a historian who was 13 at the time that Guevara
arrived. “He failed because he had to fail.”
Ms. Rosales, the storekeeper who gave Guevara the bowl of
soup after his capture, recalled being stunned one day in La Higuera, shortly
before Guevara was killed, when one of his guerrillas, Roberto Peredo, known as
“Coco,” walked into the building where she was working and asked to use the
phone.
None of the area’s villagers were hoping for such a visit,
as the guerrillas did not have a good reputation. All the men of the town had
already fled into the hills, fearing the guerrillas would try to draft them as
fighters.
“They told us the guerrillas hit the men and raped their
wives, took things, and for that reason, no one waited for them to come,” said
Ms. Rosales.
The town’s mayor, Ms. Rosales recalled, informed the
authorities that the guerrillas had come to town.
Closing in after
costly mistakes
With tips like the one from the mayor, the army started
closing in on Guevara and his band of guerrillas.
Among those on the hunt was Gary Prado, then a young officer
who had been pursuing Guevara all summer through the mountains.
From his study in the city of Santa Cruz, the retired
general, now 78, admitted that the army had hardly been prepared for the start
of a guerrilla war on its turf. But it was soon being aided by American
training and the arrival of agents from the Central Intelligence Agency, which
was eager to see Guevara dead.
Guevara had earned acclaim for his military tactics in
Castro’s victory in Cuba, and he wrote a manual, “Guerrilla Warfare,” that is
still used as a guide by insurgents around the world. But he was making
mistakes in Bolivia, said Mr. Prado: setting up bases that couldn’t be
defended, splitting up his forces and leaving behind photos that the soldiers
were putting together as clues.
“He was a master of guerrilla war,” said Mr. Prado. “He got
here and did everything to the contrary.”
In his last diary entry on Oct. 7, Guevara writes that he
ran into an old goatherd, taking her hostage while they asked her about
soldiers nearby. “They gave her 50 pesos with instructions not to say a word,
but we have little hope she would keep to her promise,” he wrote.
‘I am Che Guevara’
On Oct. 8, a firefight began between Bolivian soldiers and a
group of fighters.
But this one would end differently than the others, recalled
Mr. Prado. As one of the guerrillas surrendered, he called out, “I am Che
Guevara, and I’m worth more to you alive than dead.”
Julia Cortés, now 69, remembers as a young woman hearing a
firefight in the distance that day as she approached La Higuera, where she
taught in the local school.
It was to this school that the army brought the captured
Guevara, and the guerrilla fighter could barely speak when Ms. Cortés entered
the schoolhouse the next day, Oct. 9. He was muttering a few words about the
revolution, she said, the one he was losing.
“They say he was ugly then, but I think he was incredibly
beautiful,” she recalled.
Ms. Cortés said she had just returned home when the shots
rang out, killing him.
Later that day, Mr. Salazar, the reporter, was back in La
Paz covering the trial of another guerrilla, when word reached him of the
execution in La Higuera. He rushed back to the region to report on the death,
regretting he had missed what he says now “would have been the interview of the
century.”
Mr. García Linera, Bolivia’s vice president, was a child
that day and remembers seeing Guevara’s image on the front page of Presencia, a
Bolivian newspaper, on his grandfather’s bed. “I still can see that photo, his
eyes looking up at the sky, all in black-and-white,” he said. “He looked at
first just like a regular person, like a homeless man even.”
Ms. Guzmán, Guevara’s fellow guerrilla, had already been
taken into custody by the time he was captured. She did not learn about his
death until she found the copy of Presencia in a jail bathroom.
In La Higuera after the killing, Ms. Rosales said she
remembers seeing Ms. Cortés approaching the schoolhouse to clean up the blood
in the classroom.
“There haven’t been classes there since,” Ms. Rosales said
of the site, which is now a small museum. “The children didn’t want to go
there.”
Fotografías de Nadia Shiro Cohen
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