by Bill Bonnar
The International Socialist Movement has just lost one of its greatest leaders. Fidel Castro was a statesman of the 20th century, the most important Latin American leader since Simon Bolivar and a giant of socialism. His story is so intertwined with the modern history of Cuba they are impossible to entangle. When Castro launched the rebellion against the corrupt war criminal Batista, Cuba was a de-facto colony of the USA.
Run by a cabal of gangsters, a handful of wealthy Cuban families and representatives of American multi-national companies, it had become a cesspool of corruption, violence, exploitation and degradation while the great mass of the people lived in poverty. The 1959 revolution swept this away, restored Cuban independence and set the country on a socialist road with a simple objective: to create a society which put the interests of the Cuban people first.
In more recent years Cuba has been a model of international solidarity, exporting thousands of doctors and teachers to Africa and Latin America. Castro’s entire political life was given to the struggle for Cuban independence and the struggle for liberation and socialism all over the world. He may have died but his legacy will live and endure – because heroes live forever.
Bill Bonnar is the national secretary of the Scottish Socialist Party.