Sunday, October 07, 2007

Bolivian town cashes in on Che Guevara legacy

Bolivian town cashes in on Che Guevara legacy
Sun Oct 7, 2007 6:22pm BST
By Eduardo Garcia

VALLEGRANDE, Bolivia, Oct 7 (Reuters) - The bearded image of guerrilla
leader Ernesto "Che" Guevara has become a pop icon splashed on mugs,
T-shirts and even bikinis 40 years after his death, and this Bolivian
town is out to cash in on the marketing frenzy.

In central Bolivia, where Guevara battled the army before he was
captured and killed, tour operators offer a chance to retrace his final
steps on the "Che Trail."

"If it wasn't for Che, not many foreigners would come here," said Carlos
Robert Pena, who owns a Guevara-themed restaurant in Vallegrande
catering to foreign tourists.

Shopkeepers peddle Che posters, pins and hats, and images of the
long-haired Guevara in a beret look down from the walls inside
restaurants, hotels and cafes. A museum recalls his life as a revolutionary.

If, as historians say, Bolivians were reluctant to stand alongside
Guevara in his revolution, some are eager to take advantage of his role
in putting this town in the history books. Each year, thousands of
people make a pilgrimage here to remember him.

After Guevara joined the guerrilla uprising that helped Fidel Castro
seize power in Cuba in 1959, the Argentine-born doctor set off for Congo
to foment revolution there.

But his African campaign failed and Guevara traveled on to Bolivia,
arriving in late 1966 hoping to spark a revolution in this landlocked
South American country.

Guevara was captured and later executed by CIA-backed Bolivian soldiers
after an interrogation in La Higuera, 50 miles (80 km) south of
Vallegrande on Oct. 9, 1967. His body was flown to Vallegrande and put
on display in a hospital before being buried in an unmarked grave.

In 1997, his remains were found and exhumed and taken to a mausoleum in
Cuba.

FROM ARMED STRUGGLE TO REVERENCE

Guevara is revered in Vallegrande not just for his marketing value. Some
locals say his death has added a mystical element to this dusty town of
mud-brick houses and dirt roads.

"His spirit is alive in this town. I think he should be anointed a
saint," said Ligia Moron, who turned out with hundreds of other
Bolivians to see Guevara's corpse in October 1967.

Susana Osinaga, a nurse 40 years ago, said she washed Guevara's body and
peeled off the three pair of socks he was wearing.

"He was following us with his eyes. We were asked to close his eyes, but
no one dared. He stayed there with his eyes open, just like Jesus
Christ," said Osinaga, 74.

Julia Cortes, who worked as a teacher in La Higuera, said she was the
last woman who saw Guevara alive and gave him his last meal -- peanut soup.

"He flirted with me a bit. He said, 'No, I'm not going to eat you, I'm
just going to eat the food,'" Cortes said.

Many of the people who recall Guevara's final days have become a part of
the tourist attraction and some even charge for their stories of Guevara.

"Some people give me $4, some people give me $6," said photographer Rene
Cadima, 88, who took pictures of Che's corpse.

Many locals say the tourism is providing a much-needed boost for the
impoverished town.

"It has brought some hope to this land forgotten by the government,"
said 60-year-old Eliseo Barrancos, carrying a newly bought Che T-shirt
in a plastic bag.

He said Guevara was killed after he was "betrayed" by locals.

"If he was to come back and reappear, I think people would betray him
again," Barrancos said.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUKN0724205120071007

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