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gefilptezot favorited a video
(2 weeks ago)
El Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez en la dictadura fascista de Pinoch...
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El Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez en la dictadura fascista de Pinochet al servicio del pueblo, contra el hambre producto de las políticas antipopulares del general dictador. Comunistas a la vanguardia de la lucha. Sea en el parlamento, como en las calles, los comunistas responden a la situación impuesta por la dialéctica del desarrollo social. Viva el Partido Comunista Chileno Viva el Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez Allende, eres un ejemplo en la lucha de los pueblos latinoamericanos por la liberación de la garra imperialista Internacionalistas siempre!
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gefilptezot favorited a video
(3 weeks ago)
HECHO POR LUCHADOR RODRIGUISTA EN HOMENAJE A TODOS LOS COMBATIENTES ABRIL ...
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HECHO POR LUCHADOR RODRIGUISTA EN HOMENAJE A TODOS LOS COMBATIENTES ABRIL 2009
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gefilptezot favorited a video
(1 month ago)
Gran cancion de SOL Y LLUVIA......y imagenes que a muchos chilenos nos d...
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Gran cancion de SOL Y LLUVIA......y imagenes que a muchos chilenos nos duelen, y las tenemos presentes...Jamas en el olvido !!!!
"Para que nunca mas en Chile la sangre sea derramada............"
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gefilptezot favorited a video
(3 months ago)

Revolutionary leader. Born Ernesto Guevara de la Serna on June 14, 1928,...
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Revolutionary leader. Born Ernesto Guevara de la Serna on June 14, 1928, in Rosario, Argentina. After completing his medical studies at the University of Buenos Aires, Guevara became political active first in his native Argentina and then in neighboring Bolivia and Guatemala. In 1954, he met Cuban revolutionary Fidel Castro and his brother Raul while in Mexico.
Guevara became part of Fidel Castro's efforts to overthrow the Batista government in Cuba. He served as a military advisor to Castro and led guerrilla troops in battles against Batista forces. When Castro took power in 1959, Guevara became in charge of La Cabaña Fortress prison. It is estimated that between 156 and 550 people were executed on Guevara's extra-judicial orders during this time.
Later, he became president of the Cuban national bank and helped to shift the country's trade relations from the United States to the Soviet Union. Three years later, he was appointed minister of industry. Guevara left this post in 1965 to export the ideas of Cuba's revolution to other parts of the world. In 1966, he began to try to incite the people of Bolivia to rebel against their government, but had little success. With only a small guerrilla force to support his efforts, Guevara was captured and killed in La Higuera by the Bolivian army on October 9, 1967.
Since his death, Guevara has become a legendary political figure. His name is often equated with rebellion, revolution, and socialism. Others, however, still remember that he could be ruthless and ordered prisoners executed without trial in Cuba. Guevara's life continues to be a subject of great public interest and been explored and portrayed in numerous books and films, including The Motorcycle Diaries (2004).
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gefilptezot favorited a video
(3 months ago)

Is this the speech in english can anyone verify? Yes, that;s it, even wi...
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Is this the speech in english can anyone verify? Yes, that;s it, even with my chronic spanish i can follow it.
'Che's Farewell Letter to Fidel Castro
HAVANA Year of Agriculture (1965)
Fidel:
I remember many things in this hour—how I met you in the house of María Antonia, and how you proposed that I come with you, and all the strain of the preparations.
One day they passed by to ask who would be advised in case of the death, and the real possibility of it struck all of us. Later we knew that it was true, that in a revolution one triumphs or dies (if it be a true one). Many comrades were left along the road to victory.
Today everything has a less dramatic tone, for we are more mature, but the event is repeating itself. I feel that I have fulfilled the part of my duty that bound me to the Cuban Revolution on its territory, and I take my farewell of you, my comrades and your people who are now my people.
I formally renounce my posts in the leadership of the Party, my post as Minister, my rank as Major, my status as a Cuban citizen. Nothing legal binds me to Cuba, only ties of another kind that cannot be broken, as can official appointments. Looking back over my past life, I believe that I have worked with sufficient faithfulness and dedication in order to consolidate the revolutionary triumph. My only deficiency of any importance is not to have trusted you more from those first moments in the Sierra Maestra and in not having understood soon enough your qualities of leader and revolutionary.
I have lived through magnificent days and at your side I felt the pride of belonging to our people in the luminous and sad days of the Caribbean Crisis. Rarely has any statesman shone more brilliantly than you did in those days. I feel pride, too, in having followed you without hesitation, identifying myself with your way of thinking and seeing and of judging dangers and motives.
Other regions of the world claim the support of my modest efforts. I can do what is forbidden to you because of your responsibility to Cuba, and the time has come for us to separate.
Let it be known that I do it with a mixture of joy and sorrow: I am leaving here the purest of my hopes as a builder and the most loved among my beloved creatures, and I leave a people who accepted me as a son; this rends a part of my spirit. On new battlefields I will carry with me the faith that you inculcated in me, the revolutionary spirit of my people, the feeling of having fulfilled the most sacred of duties: to fight against imperialism wherever it may be; this comforts and heals any wound to a great extent.
I say once more that I free Cuba of any responsibility save that which stems from its example: that if the final hour comes upon me under other skies, my last thought will be for this people and especially for you, that I am thankful to you for your teachings and your example, and that I will try to be faithful up to the final consequences of my acts; that I have at all times been identified with the foreign policy of our Revolution, and I continue to be so; that wherever I may end up I will feel the responsibility of being a Cuban revolutionary, and I will act as one; that I leave nothing material to my children and my wife, and this does not grieve me: I am glad that it be so; that I ask nothing for them, since the State will give them sufficient to live and will educate them.
I would have many things to say to you and to our people, but I feel that they are unnecessary; words cannot express what I would want them to, and it isn't worthwhile wasting more sheets of paper with my scribbling.
To victory forever. Patria o Muerte!
I embrace you with all my revolutionary fervor!'
http://www.histor...
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how is everything in Chile?
He rendered great service to Chile.
greetings from Japan.
Saludos desde México!
North America (U.S) is very bad. Like VERY bad. High crime rates, ignorant leaders, bad education, everything is bad.
watch?v=TV-Ulfo09Bs
Just because he smiles and appears to be nice doesn't mean he is.
I admire a man called Otto wels, he looks like a grumpy man but in reality he was a courageous man who was concerned about the rights of workers and the poor: