Wednesday, June 16, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Resurrecting Gh CHE: SELECTED WORKS OF ERNESTO GEUVARA, edited by Rolando E. Bonachea and Nelson P. Valdez, MIT paper, $3.9:3. Andrew Sinclair, CHE GUE- VARA, Viking paper, $1.65. * Matija Beckovie and Dusan Ra- devie, CHE: A PERMANENT TRAGEDY, (published in same volume with essays of Matija Bee- kovic entitled RANDOM - TAR- GETS), $5.75. By HELEN HORNBECK TANNER ;r These three titles are samples, indicating the variety of literesty forms and diverse geographic or- igin of publications about Ch" Guevara, hero of the 1959 Cuban Revolution who died as a guerilla fighter in Bolivia in October, 1967. Geuvara is a figure whose ideas, values and total career are destined for re- i nterpretation throughout a long period in the future. Now that three and a half years have elapsed since he ceased active participation in the revolutionary scene, the coler- tion of publications about Gue- 4 vara is already impressive. Out- side the United States, volumes have appeared in France, Ger- a poem dedicated to Fidel Cas- tro, and a comprehensive bibli- ography. Some of these items are of distant origin,-an interview made in Algeria, a denunciation of the Alliance for Progress de- livered in Uruguay, and transla- tion of an article from a Chinese newspaper. Most touching are the farewell letters to his parents and to his five children. In the course of the writings, interviews and speeches, Che Guevara presents his own view of the Cuban Revolution as an ex- ample of the universal struggle against imperialism throughout Latin America, and the first step in the liberation of underdevelop- ed peoples of the world. At the peak of his optimism, Guevara believed that Cuba could be the inspiration for w o r k e r s and peasant sectors throughout Latin America, Africa and Asia. Mini- mizing national and cultural dif- ferences, he appealed to Alger- ians, Venezualans and Southeast Asians to recognize a common bond. But he made a fatal error in predicting that the Andean Cordillera would be a spring- board for successful revolution in South America in the same way 'peace" and socialism" are used together, just as imperialism, capitalism and aggression seem virtually synonymous. In look- ing at political development of Latin America, he found regret- able the association of bourge- ousie national governments with the imperialism aggressor. He castigated the moderate Latin American leaders of the 1950's, Romulo Betancourt in Venezuela and Jose Figueres in Costa Rica. G u e v a r a, the irrepressible idealist, developed some novel and utopian concepts. Looking at laboring situations, he decided that a "work center" should be a place where the "desire to serve society is molded." He exhorted individuals to achieve a sense of social duty. Presented with a choice, he urged investment in projects according to their "so- cial utility" rather than the mon- ey value of production or the re- lationship between supply and demand. He candidly admitted his own errors, and the errors of the Cuban Revolution. If Guevara's economic theory was hazardous and his view of history often faulty, these failures will probably become mere foot- notes to the Geuvara story. His life more than his writings indi- cates his superior commitment to the endless battle against pov- erty, hunger and disease. Not much biographical information comes through in the selections. Guevara does refer to his "on the spot" experience in Guate- mala in 1954, when American airpower destroyed the left-wing Arbenz revolution. He also tells of his conversion to Castro's cause following an all-night con- versation in Mexico in 1955. Fidel and his followers were in exile, following their unscccess- ful attack on the Moncado Bar- racks on July 26, 1953-the event that made "M-26" a revolution- ary symbol. Even then, plans were under way for a renewed revolution in Cuba, precariously launched in November 1956 when all but twelve of 82 invaders were killed shortly after landing. Cas- tro, Guevara and the other sur- vivors fled to the mountains of southern Cuba and began or- ganizing the movement that ove- threw the Batista regime by January 1, 1959. Guevara documented the end of his Cuban career in a moving letter to Fidel Castro made pub- lic on October 3, 1965. He tem- porarily disappeared, and the fol- lowing year reached the heart of the Andes. Bolivian peasants re- mained aloof from the dedicated nucleus of Cuban leaders who set up their base in the highlands in booksbooks bike, worked as volunteer in leper colonies, and in 1953 finally r- ceived a medical degree from the University of Buenos Aires. The chronology is more complete in the Bonachea - Valdes introduc- tion which also mentions his ear- ly enthusiasm for soccer, rugby and French poetry. Neither men- tions that he acquired his iden- tity as "El Che", the Buddy, dur- ing his early political activities in Guatemala. For Guevara, this affectionate title became a vital part of his personality. Sinclair goes beyond a discus- sion of Guevara's life to specu- late about his influence, and the world-wide reaction to his mur- der and cremation in November, 1967. He sees Guevara as the per- sonal symbol for student strikers many, Italy, Spain, Mexico and Argentina. The first of the three books be- ing reviewed in this article, the selections by Bonachea and Val- des, is probably the best single volume on Guevara available in English. The second work, the biographical essay by Sinclair, belongs to the Modern Masters series that includes accounts of the lives of such men as Clastde Levi-Strauss, cultural anthro- pologist, and Herbert Marcuse, influential philosopher currently identified as the mentor of An- gela Davis. The third title (Che: A Permanent Tragedy) is a short but provocative play by two Yugoslavian authors. The selections by Bonachea and Valdes may have particular interest for the Ann Arbor cain- pus, since they represent the work of two students of Martin C. Needler, a member of Michi- gan's political science depart- ment from 1960 to 1965, now di- rector of the Division of Intor- American Affairs at the Univer- sity of New Mexico in Albuquer- que. As Needler points out in his foreward, both Bonachea and Valdez had the advantage of a Cuban educational backgrousl. They personally recorded one of the speeches chosen for publica- tion. Their volume includes useful introduction, e x c e r p ts from e i g h t e e n of Guevara's writings, fourteen speeches, nine interviews, six personal letters, Today's writer .. . Helen Tanner has taught Latin American history at the University and is currently do- ing research on the cultural as- pects of the Cuban Revolution for Queens University in Kings- ton, Ontario. that the Sierra Maestre provided a mountain base for the peasant revolution in Cuba. Although in his writings on revolution he advised attention to differences in environment, he seriously miscalculated the situ- ation in Bolivia. There, a gen--r- ally conservative peasantry had already acquired land after the 1952 National Revolution and the miners-rather than the peasants -have been the revolutionsiy population segment. Although Guevara has little to say about the United States othcr than his freocent condemnation of "Yankee imperialism," bis comments are always those of a sharp and good-natured observ- er. "The North American gov- ernment is obsessed by Cuba," he accurately concluded in the early years of the Castro regime. Yet he declared without reserva- tion that Cuba desired the friend- ship of the United States. Refer- ence to a new kind of tourism for Cuba, different from the gam- bling casino emphasis of the pre- Castro era, appears in his dis- cussion of economic development for the island. Guevara's political and eco- nomic views evolved along with the progressive stages of the Castro Revolution in Cuba. In 1958 before Castro achieved power, he declared, "This Revo- lution is exclusively Cuban." He described the Rebel Army as a "liberating army", true follow- ers of Jose Marti, poet and pa- triotic hero of Cuba's late nine- teenth century War for Indepen- dence. After taking over major responsibility for Cuban econom- ic development, Guevara be- came increasingly preoccupied with ideology and adopted many of the key phrases used in com- munist exposition. The terms Che Guevara is the John Wayne for people who like that kind of thing a big ad for seeing South Amer- ica, a tourist attraction. Visit South America! Take a trip to our mountains! Play the guerilla! We killed the man who killed himself. He came for his bullet. Cowards die, heroes live. This play belongs in the class with Becket's "Waiting for Go- dot," and if it is as widely pro- duced, Guevara's legend may become confused. The script should provide an attention-coin- pelling performance, with ludi- crous moments balancing the bitterest of irony. The message is tersely stated near the end, "We are confronted by a blank wall," and there is no future. It seems quite probable that Guevara has left not a single but a kalaidescopic image. No defi- nitive story of his life has yet been published. With added in- formation and the elapse of time, Guevara may become more ieal and also more legendary, a chal- lenge to biographer, historian, or political theorist. Illustrations Today's illustrations were se- lected from DIEGO RIVERA: The Shaping of an Artist, 1889- 1921, by Florence Arquin (Uni- versity of Oklahoma Press, $8.95. Of Arquin's art criticism, Diego Rivera wrote a personal note to the author following a visit to his home in Mexico in 1949. "I want to thank you for the admirable article which you have written about my work. It seems to me that it is the best that has even been said about it as an analysis of the evoli- tion of my painting and as an evaluation of its plastic and so- cial aspects." In tracing the evolution of Rivera's formative years, Ac- quin provides insightful com- mentary on the complex rela- tionship between Rivera's paint- ing and his politics. 1966. Lack of peasant support contributed to Guevara's defeat and death as much as the c'un- ter - revolutionary military campaign aided by CIA agents and American Special Forces in- structors beginning April, 1967. For biographical information on Guevara, one can turn to ott- er sources. Andrew Sinclair's Che Guevara provides a simple introduction to the life of a very complex personality. He includes the basic information that Gue- vara came from a middle class family in interior Argentina, al- ways combatted asthma, covered miles of South America by motor- in many nations during 1968, bis martyrdom placing him above Castro, Ho Chi Minh or Mao Tse- Tung. But the international impact of Guevara's death is not uni- form. In the play by Beckovic and Radovic, Guevara is a syum- bol of the futility of struggle Io: any good cause. Cuba's hero is represented on stage only by a canful of ashes, and the lines re- ferring to his life and death al- most go beyond sarcasm to the point of insult: .. ..He was a living parody of a social revolution,