Camilo Cienfuegos (1932 - 1959)

Sat Feb 06, 1932

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Image: Camilo Cienfuegos, in Cuba in the 1950s [Wikipedia]


Camilo Cienfuegos, born on this day in 1932, was a Cuban revolutionary who served as one of Fidel Castro’s top guerilla commanders, known as the “Hero of Yaguajay” after winning a key battle of the Cuban Revolution.

In 1954, Cienfuegos became an active member of the underground student movement against U.S.-aligned dictator Fulgencio Batista. On December 5th, 1955, the eve of the anniversary of the death of 19th-century Cuban independence figure Antonio Maceo, soldiers opened fire on Cienfuegos and other students who were returning to Havana university after placing a wreath on Maceo’s monument.

Cienfuegos credited this incident with his political awakening and decision to dedicate his life to freeing Cuba from Batista’s government. Along with Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Juan Almeida Bosque, and Raúl Castro, he was a member of the 1956 Granma expedition, which launched Fidel Castro’s armed insurgency to establish Cuban independence.

On the evening of October 28th, 1959, Cienfuegos’ Cessna 310 (‘FAR-53’) disappeared over the Straits of Florida during a night flight, returning from Camagüey to Havana. Despite several days of searching, his plane was not found. By mid-November, Cienfuegos was presumed lost at sea. In 1979, the Cuban government established the “Order of Cienfuegos” in his honor.

In October 1958, when a Cuban Masonic organization expressed concern that someone captured by the rebels might be tortured and killed, Cienfuegos replied:

“Your petition is unnecessary, because under no condition would we put ourselves at the same moral level as those we are fighting…We cannot torture and assassinate prisoners in the manner of our opponents; we cannot as men of honor and as dignified Cubans use the low and undignified procedures that our opponents use against us.”