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Cuba
Fidel's biography |
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Fidel
Castro Castro was born on Aug. 13, 1926 (some sources give 1927), on a
farm in Mayari municipality in the province of Oriente. He attended good
Catholic schools in Santiago de Cuba and Havana, where he took to the
spartan regime at a Jesuit boarding school, Colegio de Belen. In 1945
he enrolled at the University of Havana, graduating in 1950 with a law
degree. He married Mirta Diaz-Balart in 1948, but they were divorced in
1954. Their son, Fidel Castro Diaz-Balart, born in 1949, has served as
head of Cuba's atomic energy commission. A member of the social-democratic
Ortodoxo party in the late 1940s and early 1950s, Castro was an early
and vocal opponent of the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista. On July 26,
1953, Castro led an attack on the Moncada army barracks that failed but
brought him national prominence. At the time, his political ideas were
nationalistic, antiimperialist, and reformist; he was not a member of
the Communist party. Following the attack on Moncada, Castro was tried
and sentenced to 15 years in prison but was amnestied in 1955. He then
went into exile in Mexico, where he founded the 26th of July Movement,
vowing to return to Cuba in order to fight against Batista. In December
1956, he and 81 others, including Che Guevara, returned to Cuba and made
their way to the Sierra Maestra, from which they launched a successful
guerrilla war. Castro proved himself a strong leader; he also demonstrated
shrewd political skills, convinced that he had a historic duty to change
the character of Cuban society. Seeing his army collapse, and unable to
count on the support of the United States, Batista fled on Jan. 1, 1959,
paving the way for Castro's rise to power. In its early phase, Castro's
revolutionary regime included moderate politicians and democrats; gradually,
however, its policies became radical and confrontational. Castro remained
the unchallenged leader, and the masses--whose living conditions he improved--rallied
behind him.
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