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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Statue hails ‘Che,’ a first for Argentina


Children unveil a statue of Cuba's Argentine-born revolutionary hero Ernesto
Jack Chang McClatchy

ROSARIO, Argentina – While Ernesto “Che” Guevara remains the most famous export of the sleepy city of Rosario, Argentina, his legacy here has long been a low-key one.

Except for a handful of businesses named in his honor, few markers alert visitors that the revolutionary leader was born here exactly 80 years ago before becoming one of the most mythic figures of the 20th century.

That changed Saturday when civic leaders inaugurated the first official monument honoring the revolutionary leader in Argentina, ending decades of government silence about the controversial figure.

A 13-foot-high bronze statue unveiled before hundreds of cheering admirers depicts the beret-wearing Guevara standing defiantly while facing toward Santa Clara, Cuba, where another statue of Guevara faces toward Argentina.

Much of Guevara’s family, including three of his children, attended the ceremony along with other veterans of the Cuban Revolution who fought beside Guevara.

Sculptor Andres Zerneri, who created the statue, said the time had come in Guevara’s native country for such a monument, especially as the revolutionary’s influence spreads around a Latin America increasingly dominated by leftist governments.

As a show of Guevara’s international fame, Zerneri solicited donations of keys from around the world to be melted for the bronze used in the statue. That request unleashed a flood of some 75,000 keys.

“There’s a more Latin American consciousness now in the region, and it’s the direct influence of Che,” Zerneri said. “We understand now that he didn’t do all this just for the sake of revolution but to change the political face of Latin America.”

Yet the fact that Argentina’s first monument to Guevara comes 41 years after his death reveals the ambivalence many in this country feel about one of their most famous native sons, said political analyst Julio Burdman.

Statues of Guevara have already been erected in Cuba, Bolivia and other countries, and he’s been the subject of several films, including a much-awaited biopic starring Benicio del Toro.

In particular, Guevara’s philosophy of armed, socialist revolution has long made Argentine governments uncomfortable with his legacy and has been out of place in politics here, Burdman said.

“Guevara never left any solid political movement in Argentina,” Burdman said. “He’s more of an image that’s been used by political movements around the world than a relevant figure here.”

While flag-waving, drum-banging leftist groups marched through Rosario on Saturday, some residents said honoring Guevara was a waste of public money.

“I’m in total disagreement with this homage,” said Luis Oskis, 50, who owns a store in the city’s downtown. “I’m against all extreme movements and all wars, whether they’re from the left or the right. After all, Che ordered a lot of deaths.”