Cuba has published the diary that revolutionary icon Ernesto “Che” Guevara kept during the guerrilla campaign that brought Fidel Castro to power in 1959, its editors announced on Monday.
Diary of a Combatant recounts Che’s experience from the landing on Dec. 2, 1956, of a band of revolutionaries aboard the yacht Granma, and their three-year armed struggle in Cuba’s Sierra Maestra.
Published by the Australian firm Ocean Press/Ocean Sur, the book was edited by the Che Guevara Studies Center, which is directed by his widow, Aleida March.
Che’s diary of his ill-fated guerrilla campaign in Bolivia, where he was captured by the Bolivian military and executed on Oct. 9, 1967, was a publishing sensation when it first appeared in 1968.
Born in Rosario, Argentina, on June 14, 1928, Guevara met Castro in Mexico City in 1956 and joined the expedition of the Granma, which left Mexico with 82 men to overthrow the dictatorship of Cuban president Fulgencio Batista.
During the campaign in the Sierra Maestra, Che was the first member of the band to be promoted to the top rank of comandante by Castro, and after their victory he held the positions of minister of industries and president of the central bank.
In 1960, he published a manual on guerrilla warfare and in 1963 an account of the Sierra Maestra campaign entitled Episodes of the Cuban Revolutionary War.
In 1965, he left Cuba with about 100 soldiers to foment a revolution in what was then the Belgian Congo, but it failed and he returned to Cuba to prepare for the campaign in Bolivia.
His remains were recovered in Bolivia by a Cuban-Argentina forensic team in 1997 and transferred to Cuba, where they are buried in a war memorial in Santa Clara, 280km east of Havana.
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