History Daily - The Start of the Cuban Revolution

Episode Date: December 2, 2025

December 2, 1956. Communist revolutionary Fidel Castro launches the Cuban Revolution. This episode originally aired in 2021. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.Histo...ry Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:07 It's shortly before dawn on December 2, 1956. A rickety yacht struggles through the choppy waters off the southwest coast of Cuba. Battered by a rough week at sea, the vessel is barely afloat, creaking beneath the weight of its cargo. Men in green military fatigues crowd the deck, their faces pallid with seasickness. There are 82 men in total hacked tightly onto a 50-foot yacht built to accommodate no more than two dozen. Conditions on board are hellish. The men are starving, thirsty, and exhausted. Above all, they're beginning to doubt their leader,
Starting point is 00:00:45 a 30-year-old lawyer with a patchy black beard and intense mournful eyes. He squats at the prow of the yacht, scanning the darkness for signs of land. This lawyer and his armed revolutionaries are on their way to Cuba to overthrow a corrupt military general named Fulgencio Batista, who seized the reins of power again. Cuba a few years back. This lawyer already tried to overthrow the general once, but his coup failed and he was exiled to Mexico. He's been plotting his next attempt ever since. Now, after months of careful planning, this lawyer and his men are on their way back to Cuba to finish what they started
Starting point is 00:01:24 and get rid of Batista once and for all. Suddenly, there's a sound of splintering wood as the vessel lurches violently forward, throwing the men to their knees. The yacht has crows. crashed into a mangrove swamp, some 30 miles from their intended landing site, where reinforcements await their arrival. Left with no choice, the revolutionaries abandoned the wreckage, along with their equipment and supplies, and begin the laborious trudge to dry land. With their rifles held above their heads, the men waved through muddy water and tangled mangrove routes. And soon, the government will catch wind of the revolutionaries' arrival. They will send troops and fighter jets to crush the insurgency, and only around 20 rebels will survive the
Starting point is 00:02:10 onslaught. Their leader, the young lawyer Fidel Castro, will be presumed dead, and his latest attempt at revolution will swiftly be declared a failure after the disastrous events of December 2, 1956. From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people, and events that shaped our world. Today is December 2nd, 1956, the start of the Cuban Revolution. It's July 24, 1952, four years before Castro and his rebels land in Cuba. A group of young political dissidents has gathered in a remote farmhouse 20 miles outside the city of Santiago de Cuba in the south of the island. Spread across the kitchen table are plans for a
Starting point is 00:03:24 proposed uprising against the government, a dictatorship run by General Fulgencio-Batis. The plan suggests that at 6 a.m. tomorrow morning, 150 rebels will storm the Moncada Barracks, the second largest military garrison in Cuba. There, the dissidents will seize weapons, before taking control of a nearby radio station, from where they will declare a national revolution. But not all the dissidents are on board with the plan. One of them exclaims, this is suicide. You're suggesting we take on the entire army. The incredulous rebel is addressing the plan's architect, a 25-year-old Fidel Castro. The dissidents followed him here to Santiago,
Starting point is 00:04:04 believing they were staging a protest against Batista's iron-fisted rule, not declaring war on the military. But Castro stands quietly by the window and listens to their concerns. Eventually, he turns to his followers. He argues that while Batista might have the army, they have an army of citizens ready to fight. All they need are weapons, weapons that are stashed inside Moncada barracks.
Starting point is 00:04:27 Castro launches into a fiery speech, exhibiting the kind of masterful rhetoric for which he will become known. By the end of it, he's convinced the entire room to go ahead with his plan. And two days later, on July 26th, at 5 a.m., 138 rebels drive through the streets of Santiago. At the front of the convoy, Fidel Castro's hands tightened around the steering wheel as the imposing walls of the barracks loom ahead. This is the moment he's been waiting for, a moment. he's dreamed about for many years. Castro graduated as a doctor of law in 1949 and established his own legal practice,
Starting point is 00:05:06 catering primarily to Havana's working class districts. As a student, he was influenced by the writings of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin. As a working professional, he witnessed the living conditions of the poorest Cubans and came to see Cuba's problems as symptomatic of capitalism's inherent corruption. And so encouraged by the local members of a left-wing political party, Party, Fidel Castro ran for office. He was nominated for the House of Representatives in 51 and began campaigning for the 1952 congressional elections. But then in May of 52, General Batista pulled off a successful military coup and canceled the elections, crushing Castro's ambitions.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Immediately, Batista set about turning Cuba into a playground for the rich and famous. He established ties with wealthy elites and with organized crime, encouraged by Batista himself. gambling and drug trafficking thrived. Havana was dubbed the Latin Las Vegas and became a popular vacation destination. While Cuba's poor languished in the slums, Batista lives in opulence. Castro hopes that all that will end today. But as he pulls up to the Moncada barracks, Castro realizes that something isn't right. One of the vehicles in his convoy, the one carrying the bulk of the rebels' weapons, is missing. It must have gotten separated from the convoy, Castro thinks, but it's too late to turn back. The armed guards standing in front of the barracks have
Starting point is 00:06:32 already spotted them. Castro realizes it's now or never. He slams his foot on the gas and speeds into the crowd of armed guards. They sound the alarm before the rest of the rebels can get into position, and soon the rebels are surrounded and taking heavy fire. Nine of Castro's rebels are killed in the attack. Nineteen are captured to be tortured and executed. Fidel Castro and his brother Raoul, managed to escape into the surrounding countryside, but within days, they too are arrested. When news of the soldier's barbaric treatment of the other captured rebels leaks to the public, there is widespread outcry.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Fearing the tide of public opinion, Batista doesn't execute Castro. Instead, he puts him on trial. And there, Castro uses his platform in court to lambast the government to justify his attack on Moncada barracks. And before his sentencing, he declares to a crowd of transatlose. fixed reporters, history will absolve me. Castro is sentenced to 15 years behind bars, but many of the people stand with Castro, and they make their voices heard. In the end, Batista will bow to public pressure again
Starting point is 00:07:41 and free Castro from prison and exile him to Mexico. But there, Castro will regroup with his comrades and begin plotting another coup. It's July 1955, one year before the Cuban revolution begins. Fidel Castro is in Mexico City, recruiting new members to his 26th of July movement, named after the date of the attack on Moncada Barracks. On this sunny afternoon, Castro sits in his apartment and waits for the arrival of a potential new recruit, an Argentinian doctor named Ernesto Che Guevara. Guevara works at a local hospital and is a friend of Castro's younger brother, Raoul, who arranged a meeting. At first, Castro isn't sure what to make a Guevara. With his tangled mane of black hair and wild eyes, there's something animalistic about him,
Starting point is 00:08:43 something untamed. Gavar's radical Marxism and blistering idealism make Castro look downright conservative, but they're both equally committed to turning Cuba into a socialist republic, and soon the two men become firm comrades. From the cafes and cantinas of Mexico City, Fidel Castro, his brother Raoul, Che Guevara, and the rest of the 26th of July. movement, spend the next year carefully plotting to oust General Batista. Mexico City at this time is a hotbed of left-wing politics, and the movement finds no shortage of willing participants. Castro elicits the help of Alberto Bayo, a veteran of the Spanish Civil War, who trains Castro's rebels in guerrilla warfare. They also make contact with
Starting point is 00:09:31 other anti-Batista militant groups emerging back in Cuba, establishing a support system on the island. Revolution is in the air. Meanwhile, Batista becomes increasingly paranoid. He cracks down on any perceived and subordination and is intent on stamping out the militant groups that are Castro's support base back home. Castro and his rebels need to move fast. But the movement is low on funds, which they need to purchase weapons.
Starting point is 00:09:59 So Castro ramps up his fundraising efforts, even touring the United States to find sympathetic donors. Slowly, money starts trickling in, but is not nearly as much as Castro. was hoping for. To launch a successful invasion, Castro needs a ship, and ships are expensive. He reaches out to an arms dealer in Mexico City, named Antonio Delcande, who already supplies the movement with guns. Delconde invites Castro down to the Mexican port of Tuch's Pond. He leads Castro down to the harbor and shows him the boat he's managed to purchase with the
Starting point is 00:10:33 movement's limited budget. There, bobbing in murky water is a decrepit 50-foot cabin cruiser, Hardly fit for a joyride along the coast, let alone an armed invasion. Painted on the chipped hall is the yacht's name. Grandma, named in honor of the previous owner's grandmother. It's hardly the fearsome warship Castro had hoped for, but he has no other alternative. And so at 2 a.m., on November 25, 1956, Castro and 81 rebels cram on board the leaky creaking ship. The weather is atrocious. The sky wails with driving rain and wild winds.
Starting point is 00:11:12 But Castro figures this could benefit them. No one would launch an invasion in these conditions. And with good reason, the crossing is disastrous. The yacht springs leaks and suffers countless mechanical failures. Violent gales blow them off course. And in the end, the voyage takes two days longer than expected. Eventually, just after dawn on December 2nd, the rebels wash up in the mangrove swamp, soaking wet.
Starting point is 00:11:38 and seasick. After waiting ashore, they begin the long, grueling hike through the jungle, heading for the cover of the Sierra Maestra Mountains in the east. With their feet finally on land, the rebels pray the worst is behind them, but their troubles are just beginning. It's the morning of December 2nd, hours after the rebels arrival in Cuba. Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries are hiking through the jungle. With blistered feet and waterlogged boots, It's a laborious trudge and morale is low. After three days, they stopped to rest at a grove of trees called Allegria-Dipio, just west of the Sierra Maestra Mountains, while his Campaniero's collapse in exhaustion.
Starting point is 00:12:30 Che Guevara walks to the edge of the clearing and leans against a tree, chewing a stale cracker. Suddenly, the moment of stillness is interrupted by the crackle of gunfire. The rebel's position has been discovered. Military fighter jets soar overhead, dropping shells. on the insurgents camp. Infantry units hidden in the trees opened fire. A bullet strikes Guevara
Starting point is 00:12:52 in the neck, sending him to the ground. The other rebels scatter, scrambling for cover. Most will be captured or killed. Castro manages to escape again with two other rebels, and after days of hiding in the countryside, a sympathetic farmer takes them into
Starting point is 00:13:08 his home, where they regroup with other rebels who survive the ambush. Among them, Raul Castro and Che Guevara, who survived. his injury. Incredibly, this band of just 20 rebels will establish a base in the Sierra Maestra Mountains, and from there they will recruit more fighters and wage unrelenting guerrilla warfare against Batista's troops, and after three years of a grueling war of attrition, they will finally succeed in removing Batista from power. The Cuban Revolution will send shockwaves across the world.
Starting point is 00:13:40 By declaring Cuba a communist country, Castro will bring the Cold War to the Western Hemisphere and kick off a decades-long conflict with the United States. After his death in 2016, Castro's poor human rights record, an authoritarian style of rule, will dominate any assessment of his legacy. But what cannot be denied is that his revolution not only changed the history of Cuba, but the entire world, even if it began in the most inauspicious way imaginable on December 2, 1996. Next on History Daily, December 3, 1854, the Battle of the Eureka Stockade in Victoria, Australia results in 27 deaths and gives birth to democracy down under. From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham, audio editing
Starting point is 00:14:40 by Molly Bach, music and sound design by Lindsay Graham. This episode is written in research by Joe Viner. Executive producers are Stephen Walters for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.

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