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Fidel Castro Presents Memoir

Fidel Castro Memoir

By ANNE-MARIE GARCIA   02/ 4/12 11:03 AM ET  AP

HAVANA -- Fidel Castro spent six hours presenting a two-volume memoir to an audience at a Havana convention center, state media said Saturday. It was a rare appearance for the retired and increasingly reclusive former Cuban leader.

Images on state television showed a smiling, animated Castro wearing a dark track suit over a blue plaid button-up shirt.

Audio of him speaking was not broadcast, but Communist Party newspaper Granma said he told attendees Friday that they would hear about "two books that you haven't had any news of."

Granma said the two-tome memoir, "Guerrilla of Time," fills nearly 1,000 pages and covers Castro's life from childhood until December 1958, the eve of the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. It is based on interviews with journalist Katiuska Blanco.

"I have to take advantage now, because memory fades," Granma quoted Castro as saying.

Castro, 85, stepped aside provisionally in 2006 due to a life-threatening illness and retired permanently two years later, clearing the way for his younger brother and long-designated successor Raul to take over.

Fidel Castro is seldom seen in public these days, though he did show up at a Communist Party congress last April, holding the arm of an aide as he entered to a standing ovation and tears.

Granma said he mused about a wide range of topics Friday including visits from foreign dignitaries, world events and technological advances.

He reportedly expressed deep opposition to private education and said Cuban leaders were wrong to think that simply by implementing socialism, all the island's economic problems would be solved.

"Our duty is to fight until the last minute for our country, for our planet and for humanity," he was quoted as saying.

Essentially out of the public eye, Castro now speaks to Cubans through sporadic columns called "Reflections" that are published in government-run newspapers and painstakingly read aloud by newscasters.

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HAVANA -- Fidel Castro spent six hours presenting a two-volume memoir to an audience at a Havana convention center, state media said Saturday. It was a rare appearance for the retired and increasingly...
HAVANA -- Fidel Castro spent six hours presenting a two-volume memoir to an audience at a Havana convention center, state media said Saturday. It was a rare appearance for the retired and increasingly...
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aceshigh11
Nowhere is the dreamer or the misfit so alone
06:06 PM on 02/24/2012
I'm not a fan of Castro or his regime...

...BUT I do get a kick out of the fact that he's outlasted TEN U.S. Presidents, multiple attempts on his life and at least one outside-funded coup.

He's like the Keith Richards of Communist revolutionaries.
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12:29 PM on 02/25/2012
No fan either but have to respect the staying power.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
03:52 PM on 02/05/2012
Hey! I wanted to see the cartoon version of him!
09:41 AM on 02/05/2012
One hundred, five hundred, years from now, humanity will still be reading and studying Fidel; whereas in 20 years top, no one will remember Obama, or Reagan, or Bush, etc.
My point, the Cuban Revolution, its leaders, and its moral example will be remembered and admired for generations; whereas USAmerican capitalistic and imperialistic evils will be hated more and more.
12:05 PM on 02/05/2012
I'm sure that Stalin, Lenin and Musolini will also be studied.
09:29 AM on 02/06/2012
As will the way that the US tried to usurp the governments of South American and South East Asia.
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12:25 PM on 02/05/2012
I think you give Fidel a little too much credit.
What leader do we still read from other than Hitler (which people do for historical interest or antisemitism)?
In general, leaders and politicians think they know more than they do because the power they hold goes to their heads.
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celtcalgal
alba gubrath
01:54 PM on 02/05/2012
agreed....Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutly.
09:34 AM on 02/05/2012
The ironic thing is Castro could never have survived for so long if it were not for the embargo. It allowed him to pose as the savior against an interfering US.

End it. It only harms ordinary Cubans, not the Castro bros.
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Michael Ludin
Child advocate
06:38 PM on 02/05/2012
every world leader needs a bogey man!
09:23 AM on 02/06/2012
But he's not a world boheyman, only a far right wing American one.
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Gail Cerridwen
09:04 AM on 02/05/2012
I've always admired this man for the revolution, which was successful with only SIX compatriots beside him to begin with. How? THE PEOPLE supported these guerrillas or it never c ould have happened.

We in the US hear nothing of Cuba's real history, only cartoon images. The two percent who owned everything in Cuba, including the gambling, prostitution, etc., are mainly the ones in the US we still hear from, so upset that they had to run here without their wealth. Cuba's had a hard time of it due to the long US economic embargo. (We couldn't make a socialist Cuba fail any other way apparently?) But they've achieved many things we in the US never have, such as full literacy and almost total elimination of racism.

I would've, however, probably been more interested reading about Castro's reasoning for some political decisions in later decades. But I think many of them were based on trying to keep their tiny island's hope alive while the giant of the world was perched nearby, ceaselessly aiming at its destruction.
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celtcalgal
alba gubrath
01:56 PM on 02/05/2012
Agreed........the 'giant' led by the meglomaniac kennedy.
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05:16 PM on 02/06/2012
My grandfather lost a lot in the revolution, I am sure but he stayed.

The wealthy in this country should see what happened in Cuba as a warning of what happens with the few have many and the many have few. Take heed .001 %
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Vballboy60
The Dudes abides...with the moderation
03:55 AM on 02/05/2012
Regardless of politics, he is an old man who survived a challenging health issue and knows that the number of days left is growing fewer. Being presented with how fragile mortality can be causes most to pause, reassess things to cast off the unnecessary and reflect on days gone by.

It probably would be interesting to read his memoir as long as the political ranting is not too overwhelming. His life has put him in some interesting situations that few others have experienced.
11:52 PM on 02/04/2012
Castro was willing to park a couple dozen nuclear missles (70 times more powerful than little boy) on the Cuban island, we were seconds from atomic war under Kennedy. That country under it's Castro family will never be forgiven or will they be welcomed to join the international community. No policy change is needed between the US or Cuba.
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kwaut lizard
Reductio ad Absurdum
02:56 AM on 02/05/2012
Keep up the hate and keep that citizenry suffering ... hearts and minds baby!

Anyway it is a well known fact that Cuba's entire national economic effort has been focussed on Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT) for well over 3 decades. Castro has been the main recipient of these medical achievements but with the expected typical degradation of memory after each cloning and memory transfer. It is work with the three interconnected memory stores of human memory where the Cubans are falling behind in the Political Leader Cloning Race.
04:32 AM on 02/05/2012
You forgot to mention that Cuba has been a victim of terrorism planned from Miami
10:20 PM on 02/04/2012
I just got back from 10 days in Cuba, a truly great people laboring under a completely broken system. Broken as in the whole place gives off the feeling of twice used duct tape, bits of random string, and that glue that used to be made out of horses hooves. It is time for change in Cuba because I am not sure how the Cubans themselves will feel when they come to understand that they were left holding the check for a global communist party. About the same way the North Koreans will feel I suppose. Viva Cuba.
09:41 AM on 02/05/2012
Only someone whose fallen for propaganda would compare Cuba to North Korea. NK is totalitarian. Cuba has a strong culture of dissent. It is not entirely free, but most "dissidents" are guilty of working with the US to overthrow the govt.
http://www.fpif.org/articles/cubas_culture_of_dissent
08:18 PM on 02/04/2012
Castro arose out of people's fear and frustration at the United States' deadly policies in Latin America: Pinochet, Contra Death Squads, Operation Condor, footballs stadiums in many countries including Bolivia and Chile where people were rounded up and tortured. Etc, etc, etc. Castro dared to say no to the U.S. and the Cuban people have been punished ever since. the same thing is happening with Chavez in Venezuela. The U.S. seeks to demonize whoever stands up to them. Castro is far from perfect, but the U.S. has forced the Cubans into a permanent state of alert for decades because they cannot tolerate a nation that will not bow to them.
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celtcalgal
alba gubrath
02:00 PM on 02/05/2012
F/F
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
03:58 PM on 02/05/2012
Unfortunately, millions of people refuse to believe that. My mom tried to explain to her fundamentalist Christian brother that Cuba has a higher literacy rate than the US as shown by UN data, and he said that he won't pay attention to the UN because "they're socialists".
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Michael Ludin
Child advocate
06:43 PM on 02/05/2012
yes, I have seen that literacy first-hand, but what is the qualifications for and criteria to measure literacy. It seems a very rudimentary letter to Fidel!
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The Mikester
Sntorm: Best argument against evolution
06:58 PM on 02/04/2012
I don't care if he IS Fidel Castro, no one should appear in public in a track suit unless you are a contender in a track contest.

Revolutionaries need to look good too!
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celtcalgal
alba gubrath
02:02 PM on 02/05/2012
ha ha ha........I have always thought those drab outfits depressing.
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06:10 PM on 02/04/2012
My grandfather lost everything to Castro and that part was not too great for him or his family.

However, Castro had some good ideas and some bad ideas, like everyone else in the world. I honestly believe that if the US and Castro had been able to work things out, Cuba would have been a socialist state and would have been a lot better off. However, when we said "No deals with Castro, it forced him to buddy up with the USSR and that as we say... was that.

Shame, cause our whole family would still have the farm my grandpa worked for all his life and the Cuban people would have been much better off.

Castro was no Pig, no great man. Communism isn't perfect, neither is capitalism or socialism. Castro is just a man who did what he thought was best and communism broke in the long run. The US does what it thinks is best and capitalism broke in the long run. Same as it ever was.
08:50 PM on 02/04/2012
It goes without saying that Cubans are not free to travel abroad, but I was amazed when I visited the country that a Cuban must get official permission to travel within the country, say from Havana to Santa Clara. Still very much a prison.
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03:50 AM on 02/05/2012
Well, Castro was very paranoid and with good reason. The US has been trying to get rid of him for decades. I didn't know about the in country travel, that is terrible but that is the kind of thing you done when you want to keep control of everything and of anyone trying to take you out.

I mean did we in the US fair better, sure but that doesn't mean we are perfect, look at how our freedoms are slowly being taken away for the sake of control. Same thing but happening slower. We all, in all parts of the world have to stop the belief that WE have all the answers. The world needs to start thinking like one tribe and start doing what really works, not just what we believe is correct based on how we were raised.

Truth be told, humanity needs to grow up, it's LONG overdue.
09:38 AM on 02/05/2012
Are you kidding? I've visited Cuba dozens of times with my Cuban wife and her family. What you describe just doesn't exist.

And plenty of Cubans travel abroad for work. There are thousands working elsewhere in Latin America, esp as doctors and nurses in Venezuela.
04:39 AM on 02/05/2012
The U.S would never have never allowed for Cuba to succedd under Castro, why because it sets a bad example to other countries in the region. Those countries in the region might began to think for themselves and distance itself from imperialism.
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05:17 PM on 02/06/2012
Maybe but it would have been the better move. Much better.
04:45 PM on 02/04/2012
Long live Castro, Long live Cuba!
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
08:19 PM on 02/04/2012
Long live Cuba after getting rid of the Castros!
04:49 AM on 02/05/2012
And the right wing in Miami hope they all go away
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madcityy
02:39 PM on 02/04/2012
WHEN WILL THIS PIG DIE???????????????
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04:10 PM on 02/04/2012
Ignorant much?
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
04:00 PM on 02/05/2012
Do you know how to do anything except engage in name-calling?
02:35 PM on 02/04/2012
Im buyin it!!!
02:18 PM on 02/04/2012
Fidel Castro is one of the few world leaders I respect. He was one of the few independent leaders and not a puppet like Batista was before the 1959 Revolution. Though I did not agree with 100% of what Fidel Castro stood for, as a Social Democrat, we share alot of the same views regarding economic. I feel that he is a leader that we must listen to, especially during this financial plight that has spread throughout much of the industrialized world. Unlike many leaders who's governments have been overthrown, assassinated, had their governments crumble, Cuba has been able to withstand, agruably, every aggressive act from the U.S. and her propaganda.
05:24 PM on 02/04/2012
Communism should be remembered in the same way as the holocaust. "Never again".
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LostDemocracy
Equality in Opportunity, NOT in outcome
08:48 PM on 02/04/2012
True, but Human memory seems to be really short.
04:44 AM on 02/05/2012
Well hitler believed in capitalism
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
08:20 PM on 02/04/2012
He was a puppet of the Soviet Union.
08:46 PM on 02/04/2012
The irony is that now the Cubans hate the Russians the most. They like Europeans and Americans.
04:48 AM on 02/05/2012
No it was a marriage of convenience. What did you expect him to do when acts of terrorism were being directed at his country. Cuban flight 455 for example