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SECOND STAGE
“CHÉ, THE COMMANDER”
(Since the Invasion Column No. 8 “Ciro Redondo”
entered Las Villas province until the Santa Clara’s Battle
- October 16, 1958 – January 1st, 1959)
One of the most known Ché’s photographs – after
the famous one that took Korda, where he appears with his dark jacket
and his beret with the star – is possibly that one that shows
the Commander (long beard, black beret, expression of exhaustion,
arm in a sling) during the days of the Santa Clara’s Battle.
This image presides the Ernesto Guevara’s Square and the Memorial
that keeps his mortal remains (with those of his comrades-in-arms
of the Bolivian guerilla) in the capital of this province located
in the center of the island. And this image will be the icon of
the Second Stage of our journey to track Ché Guevara’s
history in Cuba: CHÉ, THE COMMANDER.
We will follow the path to victory. The road has been long, but
that small group of men that landed on December 2nd, 1956, is already
a strong Rebel Army. The uncertain days, when even the most optimists
doubted that victory would be possible, were left behind…
Obeying un order of the Commander in Chief, Fidel Castro, Invasion
Columns No. 8 “Ciro Redondo” (commanded by the Commander
Ernesto Guevara) and No. 2 “Antonio Maceo”, commanded
by another Commander: Camilo Cienfuegos) get prepared to begin the
campaign in order to take the torch of Revolution to the western
part of the island.
Ché tells “…we began to walk on August 31, without
trucks or horses. We expected to find them after having crossed
the road from Manzanillo to Bayamo. We actually found the trucks
when we were crossing it, but – on September 1st – a
terrible hurricane made useless all roads, with the exception of
the Central Road, the only one that was asphalted in that region
of Cuba, and we were so forced to abandon the vehicles. From that
moment, we had to ride or walk. We were carrying a heavy load of
munitions, a bazooka with forty projectiles and all that was necessary
for a long journey and the rapid establishment of a camp.”
“We were walking along flooded and difficult fields, suffering
the attacks of mosquitoes that made unbearable the hours we could
rest. We ate badly and poorly; we drank the water of swampy rivers
or simply of swamps. Our days began to become longer and really
horrible. One week after we left the camp, when we were crossing
the Jobabo River, that separate Camagüey and Oriente provinces,
the forces were very weakened.” 
The journey, calculated to be made in only a week (if we had the
motorized means of transportation) was very far from being a triumphal
march. The troop was more and more exhausted and, to top it all,
they were taken by surprise in Camagüey province. “…On
September 9, at nighttime, when we were arriving to a place called
La Federal, our vanguard walked into an ambush laid by the enemy,
and two valuable comrades died, but the most regrettable result
was that we were found by the enemy forces that from that day, gave
us no respite…” 
From that moment, the encounters with the enemy will be multiplied.
Sieges, ambushes, battles like the Cuatro Compañeros combat
(on September 14, 1958) try to prevent the guerilla column from
climbing the Sierra del Escambray, which was the immediate destination
of the invasion columns.
But on October 16, 1958, the partial objective is accomplished:
the Column No. 8 establishes its camp in the very heart of the Escambray
in Sancti Spiritus. (for
more information see – “Anexo. Cartas a Fidel Castro
sobre la Invasión” (Annex. Letters to Fidel Castro
about the Invasion), in Ernesto Ché Guevara’s “Pasajes
de la Guerra Revolucionaria”
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