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Thor Halvorssen

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An Open Letter to Urban Outfitters Regarding Their Che Guevara Merchandise

Posted: 09/19/2012 11:10 am

Ted Marlow
CEO, Urban Outfitters
30 Industrial Park Blvd.
Trenton, SC 29847

Dear Mr. Marlow,

The Human Rights Foundation recently became aware of the sale of merchandise at Urban Outfitters emblazoned with the image of communist leader Che Guevara, at times accompanied by the word "revolución." As a nonprofit organization dedicated to the defense of human rights, we would like to bring your attention to Guevara's bloody and anti-democratic legacy.

Although Guevara's image has appeared on countless items for consumption over the last few decades as a symbol of change for the better, Guevara's actual record is that of a brutal tyrant who suppressed individual freedom in Cuba and murdered those who challenged his worldview.

Che Guevara
A romanticized poster of Che Guevara currently for sale on the Urban Outfitters website

Guevara undoubtedly played a key role in the overthrow of the dictatorial Batista regime in January of 1959. However, despite promises of a new democratic government, within a few months he and Fidel Castro had designed and installed a full-blown police state that deprived the overwhelming majority of Cuban citizens of democracy and human rights.

From 1959 to 1960, the new government carried out summary executions of at least 1,118 people by firing squad. Guevara himself presided over the notorious La Cabaña prison, where hundreds of the executions took place. For comparison's sake, the Batista regime was responsible for 747 noncombatant deaths between 1952 and 1959. The Cuban revolution under the direction of Guevara also saw the rise of forced labor camps which gave way a few years later to full-scale concentration camps. These were filled with dissidents, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, Afro-Cuban priests, and anyone else who had committed "crimes" against the new moral revolution.

Despite the mountain of evidence for these abuses, much of which comes directly from Guevara's own meticulous journals, popular culture still largely views him as a revolutionary of the people. Urban Outfitters is certainly not the only company to take advantage of Guevara's fame to sell merchandise.

We urge you to consider that the image of Guevara represents tyranny and repression for the millions of people who have suffered under communism. Fifty-three years after Guevara's rise to power, Cuba is still ruled by the Communist party, while all alternative political parties and dissenting civil society groups are outlawed. Any expression of dissent is considered a subversive act, a free press does not exist, and the government regularly imprisons those who speak out. Mr. Marlow, the Cuban government of today, a legacy of Guevara, is the most repressive regime in the Western hemisphere.

These facts forced Polish lawmakers to recently propose a ban on t-shirts with Guevara's image, as part of a previous law banning fascist and totalitarian propaganda. HRF does not advocate the banning of an image -- no matter how offensive. Freedom of expression is a human right, and of course Urban Outfitters is free to choose how to design its merchandise.

However, HRF does question the motives of Urban Outfitters in lionizing a murderer who did not even make an attempt to hide his bloody ideology. In a speech in front of the United Nations in 1964, Guevara proudly admitted that "yes, we have executed, we are executing, we will continue to execute." He boasted of murdering Eutimio Guerra, bragging in his diary how he "ended the problem with a .32 caliber pistol, in the right side of his brain." He believed in doing anything it took to achieve "the greater good" he envisioned for Cuba -- including nuclear annihilation of the United States.

During the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, Guevara favored engaging in nuclear war to "build a better world." After the crisis was averted he lamented Soviet inaction, stating that if the missiles had been under Cuban control, he would have fired them. There is evidence that Guevara was involved in a November 1962 terrorist plot to use 1,200 pounds of TNT to blow up Macy's, Gimbels, Bloomingdale's, and Grand Central Station on the day after Thanksgiving, the busiest shopping day of the year. "At every stage of his adult life," one historian noted of Guevara, "his megalomania manifested itself in the predatory urge to take over other people's lives and property, and to abolish their free will."

Is this really someone that Urban Outfitters wants to emblazon and celebrate on its products?

For the sake of the 1.47 billion people still living under the yoke of communist rule, for the sake of the thousands who perished in the Cuban revolution, and for the sake of the 11 million Cubans who still endure a totalitarian system, we hope Urban Outfitters will reconsider its marketing strategy and set a moral example for the apparel industry.

Sincerely yours,

Thor Halvorssen

President
Human Rights Foundation

 
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07:02 PM on 10/17/2012
An Open Letter to Urban Outfitters Regarding Their Che Guevara Merchandise: STOP using his image. He was against everything that you, as a store, represent. I'm always offended by merchandise with Che Guevara on it. Get it togheter, people.
07:42 PM on 10/01/2012
Why not get real murderers first? Clean up the home ground? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luis_Posada_Carriles
05:20 PM on 10/01/2012
Millions of people died in Asia and Africa worked to death and murdered by imperial capitalism . .
photo
Neiman Marxist
go shopping until capitalism crumbles.
09:59 PM on 09/28/2012
This "letter" isso factually incorrect it's comical.

Che was and is a hero to millions.

I suggest you read Jon Lee Anderson's 800 page biography to realize what a joke this "letter" is.
06:31 PM on 10/06/2012
no Jon Lee Anderson is incorrect....in the 1960's in Florida I met dozens of Cuban that watched Che command firing squads that killed tens of thousands of innocent Cubans whose only crime was they were educated and wanted true freedom not a totalitarian state. By the international laws today he would be charged as a criminal.
10:44 PM on 09/25/2012
So engraged, I had to write a blog post on the topic. http://saynotomean.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-night-che-guevara-kept-me-from.html
07:49 PM on 09/25/2012
True enough, Che was responsible for the deaths of about 1200 people. But even if we assume they were all innocent (which is an important question to ask - funny how we assume everyone sentenced to death by communists was innocent, but everyone sentenced to death in the United States is guilty), the fact still remains that Che's 1200 victims are far less than the number of innocent civilians killed by the average American president as part of various foreign wars.

Quite literally, even if everything his enemies say is true, Che Guevara STILL killed FEWER innocent people than Bush (or Obama, for that matter!). So why the double standard? Why are we outraged when leaders we don't like kill civilians for the "greater good", but we have no problem with our own leaders (or those of pro-Western countries) doing the exact same thing?

If the difference is that you AGREE with the cause that Bush or Obama were killing for, but DISAGREE with the cause Che Guevara was killing for, then please drop the pretense and be honest: this is not about innocent people getting killed, it's about the fact that you want your ideology to win (and the enemy's ideology to lose).

I'll take Thor Halvorssen seriously when he gets equally outraged by anyone killing a thousand people, rather than getting selectively outraged only when the deaths are caused by the "wrong" ideology or the "wrong" government.
11:41 PM on 09/25/2012
If you don't understand the difference you are beyond help
01:59 AM on 09/26/2012
You make some goods points but serious biographers putnthe number at 500 at most and Che was the prosecutor; he did not attend the la Cabana executions, and accusations by his critics that he watched the executions were proven false.
11:43 AM on 09/26/2012
Where did you get this information?
03:11 PM on 09/24/2012
Ernest was a murdering dog; there is no 'debate' concerning this.
03:05 AM on 09/28/2012
oh, there is plenty of debate. He was a soldier defending some of the world's poorest people against some of the richest.
04:50 AM on 09/28/2012
He was a bored, spoiled, rich kid looking for adventure, who, after tasting the high of dispatching others, fueled his blood lust by way of 'revolution' -- ask the folks that he 'liberated' how much better off their lives were after he helped to cage them in a police state.
05:32 PM on 09/28/2012
Soldier's don't shoot men with their hands tied behind their backs. We call those 'murdering dogs'.
03:02 PM on 09/24/2012
I follow his argument until the point he starts equating people that are currently in Cuba under the Castro regime as he puts it the "yoke of communist rule" with the situation in the 60s. The main problem with Cuban democratization and development is directly related to the Cuban embargo as condemned by almost all nations for over a decade. So maybe we could focus on this form of "colonialism" which is currently affecting those 1.47 million people. The fact is that Che Guevara is popular icon throughout the world. He did a lot of bad things and I completely agree with peaceful revolution. However, he didn't start off as a bad man and he distanced himself from Castro and often were at odds with his tactics. The U.S. assassinated him without a trail and possibly added to his romanticization (during a time when the U.S. was pushing its policy in Latin America). People still wear t-shirts with Obama, George Bush, quote Ronald Reagan, & other "western" leaders who kill 1000s of people & maneuver over human rights all the time to push their agenda. How is this different? Cuba's development in the social sphere surpasses that of the U.S. They have one of the best health systems in the world, #1 indisaster relief and disaster preparedness, #1 in pharmaceuticals generics & have some of the best medical facilities & mobile medical crews that help all around the world (even more the than the U.S.).
11:42 PM on 09/25/2012
one of the best health systems if you are related to fidel castro, not so much for the average person, stop smoking the michael moore herb and educate yourself
02:29 PM on 09/28/2012
Believe me I know the health system of Cuba pretty well. Facts, figures, reports etc. I study in depth Cuban development and the relationship to the Embargo. I don't smoke herb and I know more than you about Cuba being from Latin America as well. Thank you for your condescending comment that isn't based in any factual information but merely name calling and making an assumption.
02:32 PM on 09/28/2012
read up on your latin america-u.s. relations that might help you grasps these concepts.
02:02 AM on 09/26/2012
I believe any characterization of Che as a bad man is a Westernized approach. To the people he helped liberate from a brutal dictator, Batista, he was a liberator and a saint.
12:01 PM on 09/28/2012
That the whole point of the article. He did not liberate anyone from a brutal dictator; he merely replaced one brute with another.
12:47 PM on 09/24/2012
While we could debate the issue of whether or not Che Guevara was a good or bad person from now until the 12th of Never, there is one thing that is undebatable: The artwork that depicts the famous Che Guevara icon was originally painted by Mr. Jim Fitzpatrck, an Irish graphic artist, and he did not copyright it. His artwork has made millions of dollars for many companies, and he has received non of it. He, at the very least, deserves recognition and credit for his work.
10:18 PM on 09/23/2012
Slippery slope. hate the message but defend both them and you to say what you believe. Trust in people to make their own decisions based on facts
12:03 PM on 09/23/2012
Hpw many people wearing the shirts even know who he is? How about replacing his image with George Washington?
photo
Neiman Marxist
go shopping until capitalism crumbles.
04:01 AM on 09/27/2012
George Washingtin owned 316 slaves ... Che owned 0.
04:56 PM on 09/27/2012
He made up for that with forced labor camps.
12:03 AM on 09/23/2012
Communism, a complete failure economically, but at least they're great at taking away human rights.
02:01 AM on 09/21/2012
Not too long after the Cuban revolution Che, became disillusioned with Soviet style communisim and wanted to distance himself from the Soviets. This is one of the reasons why he left Cuba and was'ent allowed to return becouse he went against Castro's, ambitions with the Soviets. How many has the US exicuted innocently? Yet people still ware Obama, Bush, and American flags on their T shirts? What grinds my gears is that so many of us Americans has so much denial that our country has never done anything wrong and dosen't mind doing the same things it denounces other nations for doing.
09:23 AM on 09/21/2012
True. Ask native americans what they think about the stars and stripes ...
The brits created the 1st concentration camps in Sauth Africa during the Boer War. Still people can buy, sell or admire the Union Jack.
There are tons of Napoleon fans around the world. He killed millions of people during his quest for Europe dominance.
Julius Ceasar is depicetd as a hero in most of school books. He killed thousands of Gauls & Celts abd was a true Tyran. How many products, shops, restaurant bear the name ceasar in the world?
For a lot of people Che Guevara has a cool image and is considered as a hero. Maybe because of ignorance of some of his deeds or consequences of it. So it is.
But blaming a commercial organization for using the name and image of someone who has not been convinced or even recognized as a mass murderer is completely wrong.
11:44 PM on 09/25/2012
uhm he has been recognized as a mass murdered, by anyone who can read
03:13 PM on 09/24/2012
One must also remember that after the revolution, many of Castro's closest comrades started dying. Castro was, and likely still is, paranoid beyond sanity. Everyone, and anyone, that he saw or imagined as a potential threat to his rule disappeared or died.
02:04 AM on 09/26/2012
This is not true.
10:26 PM on 09/20/2012
May there be even more communists in this world. Thank you very much.
03:13 PM on 09/24/2012
I doubt that we'll have to worry about that; most folks like eating.
photo
Neiman Marxist
go shopping until capitalism crumbles.
09:27 PM on 09/20/2012
[CHE GUEVARA]

- Worked in a Leper colony and treated lepers

- Was instrumental in teaching over 900,000 Cubans to read

- Tended to thousands of sick campesinos

- Helped construct dozens of schools throughout Cuba

- Removed the Mafia and dictatorship of Batista from Cuba which had killed 20,000 Cubans and tortured thousands more

- Desegregated the schools in Cuba before they were in the Southern US

- Called out South Africa’s Apartheid in 1964, 30 years before the West!

- Denounced the racism and KKK in America

- Warned of the dangers of the IMF, 3 decades before most of the developing world realized they had been scammed into debt slavery

- Left a bourgeoisie comfortable life of the upper class, a potential well compensated career as a medical doctor, and a high regarded governmental position, each time to slog through the jungle and fight guerrilla wars against impenetrable odds!
... In fact, near the end it took 1,800 rangers to bring down his 25 men.
01:57 AM on 09/21/2012
He still was a MURDERER
11:44 PM on 09/25/2012
Killed Hundreds of people because they were gay....