- Carlos Rafael Rodríguez
Carlos Rafael Rodríguez (
May 23 ,1913 –December 8 ,1997 ) was aCuba n politician. Born inCienfuegos , he becamemayor of the city when he was only 20. Four years later, he joined the Communist Party and was appointed editor of the party newspaper, "Hoy".Dillon.] He graduated from university in 1939. Although he was a participant in the 1935 general strike against provisional PresidentCarlos Mendieta ,Suchlicki 106.] in 1942, Rodríguez joined the cabinet of PresidentFulgencio Batista . [When he was Army Chief of Staff, Batista had forced PresidentRamón Grau to resign and appointed Mendieta president.] A "dedicated Marxist", Rodríguez's participation in the Batista cabinet marked the high point of the regime's collaboration with the Communist Party.Rodríguez first met
Fidel Castro through a mutual friend after Castro visited the Communist Party's bookstore a few days before his disastrous attack on theMoncada Barracks onJuly 26 ,1953 .Domínguez 30.] Although Rodríguez denounced the attack after it occurred, he would eventually ally himself with Castro in theCuban Revolution . In July 1958, he joined the26th of July Movement in theSierra Maestra mountain range in support of its guerrilla war against Batista; it was the first such gesture of support by the Communist Party for the rebels.Castro befriended him, and after his victory, he rewarded Rodríguez with top posts in the Cuban government. From 1962 to 1965, Rodríguez headed the
National Institute of Agrarian Reform , and was referred to by some in the foreign press as Cuba's economic czar. In 1969, Castro sent him as an "observer" to the International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties inMoscow , where he gave an important speech declaring that Cuba would "stand unflinchingly by theUSSR ". [Suchlicki 153–4.] The speech was one of a series of steps taken by the Castro regime to move closer to the Soviet Union after having publicly disagreed with the Soviets in the early- and mid-1960s. Rodríguez would remain a key figure in Soviet-Cuban relations, providing public statements during times of friendship and discord. Before being sidelined in 1997 with deteriorating health, he served on thePolitburo and as Vice President. He suffered fromParkinson's disease and died in Havana, with Castro presiding over his burial ceremony.Notes
References
*Domínguez, Jorge I. (1989). "To Make a World Safe for Revolution: Cuba's Foreign Policy". Cambridge, Massachusetts:
Harvard University Press . ISBN 0674893255.
*Suchlicki, Jaime (2002). "Cuba: from Columbus to Castro and Beyond", 5th Edition. Washington, D.C.: Brassey's. ISBN 1574884360.
*Dillon, Sam (December 13, 1997). " [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B03E7D71E3CF930A25751C1A961958260 Carlos Rodriguez, Castro Ally And Leftist Leader, Dies at 84] ". "The New York Times". Retrieved on January 31, 2008.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.