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Revision as of 09:25, 17 January 2003 by Eclecticology (talk | contribs) (Full name)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz (born August 13, 1926) has been the ruler of Cuba since January 1, 1959, having become premier on February 16, 1959 and President of the Cuban Republic on December 3, 1976.
Born in Biran, Holguin, Cuba, into a wealthy farming family, he was educated at Jesuit schools and then the Jesuit preparatory school Colegio Belen in Havana. In 1945 he went to the University of Havana to study law, graduating in 1950.
He practiced law in a small partnership, 1950-52. Castro intended to stand for parliament in 1952 for the Ortodoxo Party but the coup d'état of General Fulgencio Batista overthrew the government of Carlos Prio Socarras and canceled the election. Castro charged Batista with violating the constitution in court but his petition was refused. In response Castro organized a disastrous armed attack on the Moncada Barracks in Oriente province on July 26, 1953. Over eighty of the attackers were killed, and Castro was taken prisoner, tried, and sentenced to fifteen years in prison. (Castro used the closing arguments in the case to deliver "History Will Absolve Me", a passionate speech defending his actions and explaining his political views.) He was released in a general amnesty in May 1955 and went into exile in Mexico and the United States.
He returned to Cuba with a number of other exiles as the 26th of July Revolutionary Movement. Most of the eighty men were killed in their first action in Oriente province on December 2, 1956. Only twelve survived to retreat into the Sierra Maestra mountains and from there wage a guerrilla war against the Batista government. The survivors included Che Guevara, Raul Castro, and Camilo Cienfuegos. Castro's movement gained popular support and grew to over 800 men. On May 24, 1958, Batista launched seventeen battalions against Castro in Operación Veran. Despite being outnumbered, Castro's forces scored a series of stunning victories, aided by massive desertion and surrenders from Batista's army. On New Year's Day 1959 Batista fled the country, and Castro's forces took Havana.
Initially the United States was quick to recognize the new government. Castro assumed the position of premier in February but friction soon occurred when the new government began expropriating property owned by American companies (United Fruit in particular), paying little compensation. In February 1960, Cuba signed an agreement to buy oil from the USSR. The United States broke diplomatic relations with the Castro government soon after.
The United States then sponsored an unsuccessful attack on Cuba. On April 17, 1961, a force of about 1,400 Cuban exiles, financed and trained by the CIA, landed in the south at the Bay of Pigs. The CIA's assumption was that the invasion would spark a popular rising against Castro. There was no rising and what part of the invasion force made it ashore were captured as President Kennedy withdrew support at the last minute. Nine were executed in connection with this action.
Pope John XXIII excommunicated Castro on January 3, 1962. This was consistent with a 1949 decree by Pope Pius XII forbiding catholics from supporting communist governments. For Castro who had previously renounced catholicism, this was an event of very little consequence.
In October, 1962, the Cuban missile crisis occurred. After the tensions were defused, relations remained mutually hostile, and the CIA continued to sponsor a number of assassination schemes over the following years.
Castro took complete control of the nation by nationalizing industry, confiscating property owned by non-Cubans, collectivizing agriculture, and enacting policies to benefit workers. Many Cubans fled the country, some to Miami, Florida, where they established a large, active anti-Castro community. Cuba became increasingly dependent on Soviet subsidies to finance large improvements in Cuba's social conditions. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990 brought real economic hardship to Cuba.
Castro has remained the unchallenged leader, and the masses--whose living conditions he improved--rallied behind him. When Fidel Castro's revolution triumphed in Cuba in 1959, much of the rebuilding of the country focused on children. Education and health care was made available to all, even those living in the remotest corners of the island. Cuba's rate of basic literacy is now among the highest in Latin America. Forty-two years later even those critical of the country's communist authorities are proud of what their revolution has done for the country's children. No Cuban children live on the streets - unlike many neighbouring countries. Infant mortality rates are the lowest in the region, health care is excellent and all receive free milk until the age of six. Cuba's state-controlled media often highlight the contrast between contented Cuban children and their counterparts in Bogota, Los Angeles or Buenos Aires - dealing in drugs, dragged into prostitution or living in shanty towns.