Children unveiled the four-tonne Guevara statue in Rosario on Saturday |
Thousands of people have witnessed the unveiling of a statue of Ernesto "Che" Guevara in his Argentine birthplace on what would have been his 80th birthday.
Events to mark the life and legacy of the man most simply know as El Che were held around the city of Rosario.
While Guevara was Argentine, born and bred, he had more followers and was better known around the world than in his home country.
He flourished in Cuba, fought in Africa and died in Bolivia.
At home, military governments and Cold War politics helped suppress his ideas and image.
But now the man known simply in Argentina as El Che is home.
Iconic brand
The four-tonne bronze statue that has been unveiled in Rosario joins the numerous Che museums dotted around the country.
It's a brand that encapsulates a whole store of values, a whole load of ideas that people hold Michael Casey Guevara expert |
Che the revolutionary, Che the icon, Che the seller of everything from vodka to T-shirts is everywhere.
Michael Casey, who has studied the phenomenon and has a book coming out on the subject, said the icon had become a brand but not just in a capitalist way.
"It's a brand that encapsulates a whole store of values, a whole load of ideas that people hold," he said.
"And they therefore sell those ideas, whether it's leftists in Argentina or manufacturers of snowboards wanting to sell snowboards under a revolutionary label."
Che Guevara's children travelled from Cuba to join thousands of followers from Argentina and beyond in Rosario for the birthday celebrations.
But events had to be curtailed because of widespread protests by truck drivers and farmers blocking Argentina's roads.
Che would probably have approved of that kind of radical action far more than his new statue and certainly more than today's ubiquitous Che merchandising.
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