 92 years ago on June 14, 1928, the iconic revolutionary Ernesto Che Guevara was born in Rosario, Argentina. While studying medicine at the University of Buenos Aires in 1948, Che travelled across South America. The suffering, poverty and the exploitation of the peasants, workers and the indigenous people that he witnessed in his travels motivated him to join the struggles for justice and liberation of the people from oppression, exploitation and imperialism. He supported the resistance against the United Fruit Sponsored CIA coup which toppled the progressive regime of Acorbea Rebenz in Guatemala on 26 June 1954. In 1955, in Mexico, he befriended Fidel Castro and Raul Castro and subsequently joined their July 26th movement to overthrow the US-backed dictator Valencio Batista in Cuba. Che was part of Fidel's revolutionary expedition of Cuba on the Grandma Vessel which set sail on November 25th in the year 1956. This is now recognized as the starting point of one of the major events of the 20th century, the Cuban Revolution. Che played a central role in the Cuban Revolution led by Fidel Castro which started on July 26th, 1953 and ended in the victory on January 1st, 1959. He also held various key positions in the revolutionary government in Cuba and carried out significant policies including revolutionary justice, land reforms and the literacy drive. Che was the chief ambassador of Cuban relations with the Soviet Union, Eastern Bloc and many countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Being a perpetual rebel, Che left his government work to lead inspiring revolutionary expeditions in Congo and Bolivia during the 1960s. In Bolivia, Che met his tragic end at the hands of CIA-backed Bolivian security forces on October 9th, 1967. Since then, at every instance of people's victory and collective struggle against injustice and oppression, the name and memory of Che is invoked. His image has become an emblem of people's resistance, internationalism and humanism. We remember Che on his 92nd birthday in midst of a raging pandemic that has devastated human life across the world. The need of the hour is leaders with scientific temper who can actually put people over profits. In these times, we miss our Che, a doctor, a revolutionary humanist, forever young comrade.