Letters From Prison: Castro Revealed
By Ann Louise Bardach
Sunday, February 25, 2007; B05
In April 1959, just months after a charismatic 32-year-old revolutionary
named Fidel Castro seized the reins of power in Cuba, a slim volume of
his correspondence, titled "Cartas del Presidio," or "Letters from
Prison," was published in Havana. The book contained 21 letters
addressed to Castro's inner circle of supporters, including his wife,
Mirta Diaz-Balart; his half-sister, Lidia; a future mistress; the father
of a fallen comrade; and nine missives to his devoted friend and
political devotee, Luis Conte Aguero, who published the book.
The letters, however, have not appeared in English until now, and after
1960, when a disillusioned Conte Aguero fled Cuba, no further copies
were printed in Havana. Nevertheless, this collection of Castro's
writings -- virtually the only unofficial writing he ever did -- has
become something of a Rosetta Stone for historians, biographers and
journalists seeking to understand the man who would become Cuba's ruler
for life. Some may argue that a careful reading of the letters foretells
what would transpire in Cuba over the next 50 years. Others could say
that the Castro of these letters is not the Castro he would become.
Both are true to varying degrees.
The letters begin several months after Castro's ill-fated attack on the
Moncada military garrison. The brazen assault made Castro a household
name. But it also irreparably wounded his wife's family, which included
ministers in Fulgencio Batista's cabinet. Castro was now directly at war
with his brother-in-law, deputy interior minister Rafael Diaz-Balart,
who had introduced Fidel to Mirta when the two men were friends at the
University of Havana.
To supplement her income while Castro was in prison, Mirta accepted a
modest stipend from her well-connected brother through his government
ministry. Castro's discovery of this arrangement catapulted him into a
bottomless rage. Ruled by pride, as he has been throughout his life, he
perceived the bequest as an attack on his honor -- never mind Mirta's needs.
In a letter to Conte Aguero, he railed:
" I never imagined that Rafael could be such a scoundrel and that he had
become so corrupted; I cannot conceive how he could have so pitilessly
sacrificed the honor and name of his sister, exposing her to eternal
shame and humiliation. . . . It is a chore to push away the mortal
hatreds that seek to invade my heart. I do not know if there is anyone
who has suffered more in these past days. It has been a terrible and
decisive test, with the capacity of quashing the last atom of kindness
and purity in my soul, but I have made a pledge to myself to persevere
until death. . . . After such weeping and sweating of blood, what is
left for one to learn in the school of sorrow?"
Castro and Mirta divorced while he was in prison, and she remarried and
moved to Madrid. Although they reconciled about 10 years ago and the
widowed Mirta returned to live in Cuba at Castro's request when he
became ill, Castro waged a scorched-earth campaign in 1955 to keep his
son Fidelito. Custody of his son -- and of his country -- became his
twin jailhouse obsessions. And his battle for both reveals a man with an
indomitable will and steely determination. Of his fight for Fidelito
(which he won) he wrote to his sister Lidia: " I do not care one bit if
this battle drags on till the end of the world. If they think they can
exhaust my patience and, based on this, that I am going to concede --
they are going to find that I am wrapped in Buddhist tranquility and am
prepared to reenact the famous Hundred Years War -- and win it! To these
private matters, add my reflection on the political panorama -- and it
will not be difficult to imagine that I will leave this prison as the
man of iron."
The letters amply illustrate Castro's many gifts: his formidable
erudition, strategic thinking and natural leadership. They are also an
early indicator of his Machiavellian cunning and his genius for public
relations. And they dramatize his resentments and rages. Castro was
remorseless and unforgiving of his perceived enemies, a man for whom
compromise was a mark of weakness. In another letter to Lidia, he
boasted, " I have a heart of steel and I will be dignified till the last
day of my life." What must this intensely proud and private man have
felt about the public disclosures of his recent medical travails, in
which every inch of his intestines has become fodder for the world media?
In an early letter, from December 1953, Castro decides that he and his
followers will forgo Christmas as a protest against authorities. " It is
decided we shall not have Christmas -- not to even drink water on that
day as a sign of mourning. . . . There is no point for prisoners like us
to aspire to the joys of Christmas." Castro banned the public
celebration of Christmas in Cuba for nearly 30 years in 1969.
And yet the letters suggest that Castro was a man of unusual spiritual
depth -- and a fervent believer in God. Addressing the father of a
fallen comrade, he writes: " I will not speak of him as if he were
absent, he has not been and he will never be. These are not mere words
of consolation. Only those of us who feel it truly and permanently in
the depths of our souls can comprehend this. Physical life is ephemeral,
it passes inexorably. . . . This truth should be taught to every human
being -- that the immortal values of the spirit are above physical life.
What sense does life have without these values? What then is it to live?
Those who understand this and generously sacrifice their physical life
for the sake of good and justice -- how can they die? God is the supreme
idea of goodness and justice."
Any reasonable reading of these letters would lead one to anticipate
that Castro would have been an exceptional steward for his country. His
laments about the cruelty of Batista's secret police suggest that he
would institute a system grounded on human rights. He wrote mournfully
of the slaughter of his followers after their capture: " As for the
prisoners, the entrance to the Moncada Garrison could well have had the
warning posted in Dante's Inferno, 'Abandon all hope.' . . . Scenes of
indescribable courage were exhibited by those tortured. Two young women,
our heroic comrades, Melba Hernandez and Haydee Santamaria, were
detained at the Civil Hospital. . . . To the latter, still in the
barracks at dusk, a sergeant . . . with bloody hands, showed her the
eyes of her brother which he had just gouged out. Later that night, they
also gave her the news that her fiancé, also a prisoner, had been killed. "
Of his own situation he bitterly complained:
"About me, I can tell you that the only company I have is when they lay
out a dead prisoner in the small funeral parlor which is across from my
cell; there are occasions of mysterious hangings, strange murders of men
whose health was annihilated by means of blows and tortures. But I
cannot see them because there is a six foot screen blocking the only
entrance to my cell, so that I may not see another human being, alive or
dead. It would be too much magnanimity to permit me the company of a
corpse!"
Most of all, it seemed certain that his outrage against Batista's
upending of the 1952 national elections would have led him to promptly
reinstate free and transparent elections in Cuba. " Any great
civic-political movement ought to have sufficient force to conquer
power, by either the peaceful or the revolutionary route, or it runs the
risk of being robbed of it, as happened to the Orthodox[Castro's
political party] just two months before the elections."
And he lamented the trend toward cults of personality in Latin American
politics. " I believe fundamentally that one of the greatest obstacles
to the formation of such a movement is the excess of personalities and
the ambitions of groups and leaders."
But in a few short years, Castro himself would become the looming
personality in the hemisphere, while maintaining an inviolate zone of
personal privacy for himself. Moreover, Cuba has not had a presidential
election since 1948.
Toward the end of his incarceration, Castro began a correspondence with
an ardent young supporter named Maria Laborde, in which he expressed a
desire for a more intimate exchange. "The inscription on your card was
so beautifully written, I have set my hope on the pleasure of soon
receiving a letter from you, with the only variant that you use 'tu'
instead of 'usted.' Could this be too much to hope?"
Castro's wish was realized soon after his release. Although it is not
widely known, he began a liaison with the devoted Laborde, who later
bore him a son.
In May 1955, just 13 days before his release, a light-hearted Castro
wrote to his sister, ironing out his future housekeeping arrangements: "
Regarding material comforts, if it were not essential to live with a
minimum of material decency, believe me I would be happy living in a
tenement and sleeping on a cot with a box in which to keep my clothes. I
could eat a plate of malanga or potatoes and find it as exquisite as the
manna of the Israelites. . . .
" There is nothing more agreeable than having a place where one can
flick on the floor as many cigarette butts as one deems convenient
without the subconscious fear of a housewife, vigilant as a sentinel,
setting the ashtray where the ashes are about to fall. . . . Do not
think I am an eccentric or that I have become one. . . . Books alone I
need."
On May 15, a triumphant Fidel, his brother Raúl, and their followers
strolled past the gates of the Isle of Pines prison -- the beneficiaries
of a national amnesty for political prisoners that Castro had campaigned
for from his cell. Castro went directly to Havana to resume his campaign
to topple the Batista government while Raul went to visit their ailing
father in Biran. Angel Castro was a brawny, self-made land tycoon with
whom Fidel had had a sometimes contentious relationship. Two months
later, the brothers and their followers fled to Mexico. Castro would
never see his father again.
Several years ago, Castro seemed to have made his peace with his father
and installed a photograph of him on the wall of his office. Angel
Castro died in 1956 of an intestinal hemorrhage at the age of 80 --
precisely the age at which Castro became gravely ill with a similar
affliction.
ABardach@aol.com
Ann Louise Bardach is co-editor of "The Prison Letters of Fidel Castro,"
due out this week from Avalon/Nation, and the author of "Cuba
Confidential" (Random House).
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/23/AR2007022301723.html
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