The Cuban Revolution was a successful armed revolt by
Fidel Castro's
26th of July Movement, which overthrew the US-backed Cuban dictator
Fulgencio Batista on 1
January 1959, after over five years of struggle. "Our revolution is endangering all
American possessions in
Latin America.
We are telling these countries to make their own revolution." —
Che Guevara,
October 1962
Castro later travelled to the
United States to explain his revolution. He said, "I know what the world thinks of us, we are Communists, and of course I have said very clearly that we are not Communists; very clearly."
Hundreds of suspected Batista-era agents, policemen and soldiers were put on public trial for human rights abuses and war crimes, including murder and torture. Most of those convicted in revolutionary tribunals of political crimes were executed by firing squad, and the rest received long prison sentences. One of the most notorious examples of revolutionary justice was the execution of over 70 captured
Batista regime soldiers, directed by
Raúl Castro after the capture of
Santiago. For his part in
Havana, Che Guevara was appointed supreme prosecutor in
La Cabaña Fortress. This was part of a large-scale attempt by Fidel Castro to cleanse the security forces of Batista loyalists and potential opponents of the new revolutionary regime.
Others were fortunate enough to be dismissed from the army and police without prosecution, and some high-ranking officials in the ancien régime were exiled as military attachés.
In
1961, after the US-backed
Bay of Pigs Invasion, the new
Cuban government nationalized all property held by religious organizations, including the dominant
Roman Catholic Church. Hundreds of members of the church, including a bishop, were permanently expelled from the nation, with the new Cuban government being declared officially atheist. Faria describes how the education of children changed as
Cuba officially became an atheist state: private schools were banned and the progressively socialist state assumed greater responsibility for children.
According to geographer and Cuban
Comandante Antonio Núñez Jiménez, 75% of Cuba's best arable land was owned by foreign individuals or foreign (mostly
U.S.) companies. One of the first policies of the newly formed
Cuban government was eliminating illiteracy and implementing land reforms.
Land reform efforts helped to raise living standards by subdividing larger holdings into cooperatives. Comandante
Sori Marin, nominally in charge of land reform, objected and fled, but was eventually executed. Many other non-Marxist, anti-Batista rebel leaders were forced in to exile, purged in executions, or eliminated in failed uprisings such as that of the Beaton brothers.
Shortly after taking power, Castro also created a
Revolutionary militia to expand his power base among the former rebels and the supportive population. Castro also initiated Committees for the
Defense of the Revolution or CDRs in late
September 1960.
Government informants became rampant within the population. CDRs were tasked with keeping "vigilance against counter-revolutionary activity." Local CDRs were also tasked with keeping a detailed record of each neighborhood's inhabitants' spending habits, level of contact with foreigners, work and education history, and any "suspicious" behavior. One of the persecuted groups were homosexual men. The
Cuban dissident and exile
Reinaldo Arenas wrote about such persecution in his autobiography, "
Antes Que Anochezca", the basis for the film
Before Night Falls.
In
February 1959, the
Ministry for the
Recovery of Misappropriated Assets (Ministerio de Recuperación de Bienes Malversados) was created. Cuba began expropriating land and private property under the auspices of the
Agrarian Reform Law of 17 May
1959. Cuban lawyer
Mario Lazo writes that farms of any size could be and were seized by the government.
Land, businesses, and companies owned by upper- and middle-class
Cubans were also nationalized, including the plantations owned by Fidel Castro's family. By the end of 1960, the revolutionary government had nationalized more than $25 billion worth of private property owned by Cubans. Cuba also nationalized all foreign-owned property, particularly American holdings, in the nation on 6
August 1960.
The United States, in turn, responded by freezing all Cuban assets in the United States, severing diplomatic ties, and tightening the embargo on Cuba, which is still in place as of
2011. In response to the acts of the
Eisenhower administration, Cuba was forced to turned to the
Soviet Union for support.
- published: 10 Nov 2011
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