[image: independentLondon]

*Victor Dreke Cruz: Cuba's history man still talks of revolution*

One of Che Guevara's 'pillars' is in London for the 50th anniversary of the
Bay of Pigs. Nina Lakhani meets Victor Dreke Cruz

*The Independent (London) Sunday April 17 2011*

The curiosity and romanticism surrounding Cuba's revolutionary hero Che
Guevara has refused to abate, even slightly, in the 43 years since his
death. Victor Dreke Cruz, who served as Che's number two in Africa, is one
of the very few who can lay claim to a special personal relationship with
the man. Dreke, 74, a former rebel fighter and army commander, is in London
to mark the 50th anniversary of the Bay of Pigs invasion, the disastrous
attempt by CIA-backed Cuban exiles to overthrow Fidel Castro's communist
government, that severely embarrassed President Kennedy.

But Dreke is more than a Che memory bank; he is living Cuban history. His
belief in the socialist system remains resolute; his disdain for the US
unchanged; his pride for what he, Che, the Castro brothers and the
revolution achieved intact. To some, he is a revolutionary hero in his own
right.

Dreke was born in March 1937 in Sagua la Grande, a town on the northern
coast of central Cuba, the youngest of nine children in a poor family
descended from African slaves. His father eked out a living from several
jobs – carpenter, fishmonger and musician – his mother was a housewife.
Unlike most pre-revolutionary black Cubans, Dreke attended school. He grew
up wanting to be a fireman until becoming politicised as a student.

"My revolutionary struggle started on my 15th birthday when we went out to
protest against Batista's coup d'état on 10 March 1952. "I didn't know who
Batista was but we'd heard that he was cruel, so many students went to the
streets to protest. The police came and beat us, and one of them said: 'Who
has ever seen a black revolutionary? Black people are only chicken thieves.'
"

If the young Dreke needed any encouragement, that casual racist remark,
commonplace in pre-revolutionary Cuba, did the trick.

After that he joined and led various rebel groups and underground militia
across Cuba, living a precarious life, always "looking for trouble". He
narrowly escaped capture and almost certain death at the age of 20, after
one member of his group was captured, tortured and gave away his hiding
place. Dreke managed to escape hidden in a wardrobe.

Dreke first met Che just weeks before the revolution. "It was 21 or 22
October 1958. I was with a guerrilla group, recovering from gunshot wounds
after being attacked by police a few days earlier. Che arrived with his
fighters, wearing ragged, torn clothes, exhausted after walking for miles
from the east in the pouring rain – it was hurricane season. But someone
told him there was an injured man, and so he came immediately to check on my
wounds: he was a doctor and a tender man."

The two men fought together in the coming weeks as their units carried out
joint operations, most notably taking the city of Santa Clara on 31 December
1958. It was this victory that caused Cuba's President, General Batista, to
flee to the Dominican Republic on 1 January 1959. Communist Cuba was born.

Dreke describes Che as a "great leader" who led by example. "He was always
looking for the most dangerous places, he was very demanding of himself. He
suffered from asthma and had very bad attacks, but still he would go on
walking, doing everything that we did – in fact, he did more. Good leaders
can't be separate from their men and he was always with us."

Two years later – and 50 years ago today – Dreke, by this time an army
captain, sped towards the coastal town of Giron upon hearing the country was
under attack as the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion began.

He led two units, about 150 men, who clashed with invaders in the narrow
roads around Giron. After three days of fighting and just hours before
victory, Dreke was wounded and briefly captured by mercenaries. Shot in the
arm and leg, his life was saved by his driver, who remains a friend, by
shielding him from further fire.

The abortive invasion forced the resignation of the CIA's director, Allen
Dulles, and deeply embarrassed the new US President, John F Kennedy.
American discomfort was compounded by the support the raid generated for
Castro's government. As Che said in a note to JFK five months later: "Thanks
for Playa Giron. Before the invasion, the revolution was weak. Now it is
stronger than ever."

Dreke insists their victory was also important for other countries fighting
for independence. "We defeated the American imperialists for the first time
in Latin American history and showed that people could live independently
and with dignity."

Having proven himself as a trustworthy leader, Dreke, a commander by this
point, was chosen by the Castro brothers to serve as Che's number two in the
country's first international military mission. They left Cuba secretly in
April 1965 for the Democratic Republic of Congo, to train independence
fighters struggling against the CIA-backed forces of General (later
President) Mobutu.

The journey was an unforgiving one, first by sea and then trekking hundreds
of miles overland from Tanzania. "We didn't know Africa, the terrain was
completely different, and there were wild animals – lions, elephants, snakes
– and so many diseases. We lived in the forest, no houses, no tents and, at
first, no hammocks. We didn't speak the language; it was tough."

He recalls how, en route from Tanzania, they had only one loaf of bread to
eat. "Che asked me to slice this one loaf of bread for 16 hungry, huge men.
It was only after everyone had eaten, he took the last slice, that's the
kind of man he was."

During one ambush, Dreke feared Che was dead or kidnapped, only to discover
that he had gone ahead alone and was fighting on the front line. "He was
very audacious, very brave. He didn't go to Congo to hide or wait for time
to pass before he went to Bolivia or Argentina. He went to help."

On their return to Cuba in November 1965, Che wrote of Dreke in his report
to Fidel: "He was ... one of the pillars on which I relied. The only reason
I am not recommending that he be promoted is that he already holds the
highest rank."

Dreke led similar military missions in both Guinea-Bissau and Guinea, and it
was while serving in the former that he heard about Che's murder in Bolivia.

"This was a very difficult moment. There were rumours Che had been killed,
so I was asked to go to Conakry to see if it was true. I read the dispatches
and one mentioned there was a scar on the man's right hand. When I read that
I knew it was him. When Che smoked, the way he held his pipe meant you could
see the scar, and I had seen him do that many times. It was a very painful
moment... he was my boss, my comrade, my brother."

For Dreke, the achievements of the revolution are enduring. Illiteracy was
wiped out in a year and ever since there has been universal, free education
and healthcare. Racial and sex discrimination, endemic pre-1959, were
outlawed almost immediately. He concedes that some things could have been
done differently, but sleeps easy at night, he insists.

Dreke is adamant that there is no question of Cuba coming into the American
fold, or embracing capitalism, even when Fidel eventually dies. In fact, he
believes the global financial crisis is causing people across the world to
look for alternatives to capitalism, for governments that choose ordinary
people over bankers.

"When Obama was elected many people were very happy because he was a black
man; they thought he would be different. To me, he is neither black nor
white, he is a capitalist; skin colour has nothing to do with who you are in
Cuba ... I'm not disappointed in Obama because I never had any great
expectations. The Cuban people now realise Obama is no different to all the
others."

He insists that Cuba's socialist future is secure despite Fidel having stood
down in favour of Raul: "They are one and the same, united always." Fidel is
important for Cubans and for poor people around the world, he says, but Raul
is in charge now.

Of Dreke's four university-educated children, only one, his eldest daughter,
a doctor, has chosen a military career. Dreke, meanwhile, retired from
active military service 20 years ago. He subsequently studied for two
degrees, and most recently served as ambassador to Equatorial Guinea. Doing
nothing isn't for him.

He is serious and unwavering about the potential of revolution, but still
has a cool sparkle, inviting me to go dancing next time I'm in Havana.

"Fidel will die, I will die, we [revolutionaries] will all eventually die,
but Cuba will never go back to capitalism. The young people didn't live it,
but they know how it was, they have values."

*A life of action*

*10 March 1937* Victor Dreke Cruz born in coastal town of Sagua la Grande,
youngest of seven boys and two girls.

*1953-55* Works as a carpenter, studying business at night school, and
organising student and workers protests in his home town.

*1957* Helps form the student-based rebel unit of Revolutionary Directorate
in Escambray mountains.

*21 October 1958* Comes under the command of Che Ernesto Guevara.

*19 April 1961* Two of his men die as their jeep is ambushed just hours
before victory at the Bay of Pigs.

*1962* Promoted to commander – highest rank in Cuban army; leads the Lucha
Contra Bandidos (Fight against Bandits) – special units set up to "wipe-out"
CIA-backed anti-communist forces.

*1 April 1965* Leaves Cuba for Democratic Republic of Congo as Che's number
two.

*1972* Graduates with a politics degree from Maximo Gomez Military Academy.

*1973* Made chief of Youth Army of Labour, working on agricultural projects.

*1981* Graduates from University of Santiago de Cuba with a law degree.

*1986-89* Heads the Cuban military mission in Guinea-Bissau.

*1990* Retires from active military service.

*2000* Made Illustrious Son of Sagua la Grande.

*2002* Publishes From Escambray to the Congo. Tours the US.

*2003-08* Serves as ambassador to Equatorial Guinea.

*2011* Lives with wife in Havana, near his children. Officer of the
Cuba-Africa Friendship Association.

*Victor Dreke Cruz was hosted by the Cuban Solidarity Campaign*

*
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/victor-dreke-cruz-cubas-history-man-still-talks-of-revolution-2269020.html
*

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