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History Will Absolve Me: 18 Fiery Quotes by Fidel Castro

The communist revolutionary is known for giving the longest ever speech in the United Nations – 4 hours 29 minutes.

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Former Cuban President Fidel Castro breathed his last on Saturday morning (IST). The words of the communist revolutionary, known for giving the longest-ever speech in the United Nations (UN), left a mark on numerous lives.

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Castro in 1953, when as a young lawyer, he was defending himself at a trial for his near-suicidal assault on the Moncada military barracks in Santiago de Cuba:

Condemn me. It is of no importance. History will absolve me.
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Castro in 1959:

I began the revolution with 82 men. If I had to do it again, I would do it with 10 or 15 and absolute faith. It does not matter how small you are if you have faith and a plan of action.
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Castro in a 1959 interview with CBS's Edward Murrow, 30 days after the revolution:

“I’m not thinking of cutting my beard, because I’m accustomed to my beard and my beard means many things to my country. When we fulfil our promise of good government I will cut my beard.”

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Castro in 1959:

A revolution is not a bed of roses. A revolution is a struggle between the future and the past.
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Castro in December 1985 upon announcing he had stopped smoking cigars:

“I reached the conclusion long ago that the one last sacrifice I must make for (Cuban) public health is to stop smoking. I haven’t really missed it that much.”

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Castro in 1985:

“I never saw a contradiction between the ideas that sustain me and the ideas of that symbol, of that extraordinary figure (Jesus Christ).”

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Castro in 1989:

Just imagine what would happen in the world if the socialist community were to disappear... if this were possible and I don’t believe it is possible.
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Castro in 1990 on the development of international tourism in Cuba:

“We do not know anything about this. We, gentlemen, to tell the truth, do not even know what to charge.”

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Castro in 1991:

We have to stick to the facts and, simply put, the socialist camp has collapsed.
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Castro in 1994, explaining the reception usually reserved for heads of state, given to Hugo Chavez upon his arrival in Havana a few months after he was released from prison for leading a failed 1992 coup:

There’s nothing strange about it. I wish I had as many opportunities to welcome personalities as important as this one.
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Castro in 1998:

“These changes (the opening to international tourism, foreign investment, some small business and family remittances) have their social cost, because we lived in a glass case, pure asepsis, and now we are surrounded by viruses, bacteria to the point of distraction and the egoism created by the capitalist system of production.”

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Castro to director Oliver Stone in 2003 documentary Comandante:

“One of the greatest benefits of the revolution is that even our prostitutes are college graduates.”

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Castro's opening quote in Looking for Fidel, Stone's second documentary on the Cuban leader from 2004:

I realised that my true destiny would be the war that I was going to have with the United States.
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Castro in 2005:

“Here is a conclusion I’ve come to after many years: Among all the errors we may have committed, the greatest of them all was that we believed that someone... actually knew how to build socialism... Whenever they said. ‘That’s the formula,’ we thought they knew. Just as if someone is a physician.”

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Castro on 21 July 2006 while attending a summit of Latin American presidents in Argentina:

I’m really happy to reach 80. I never expected it, not least having a neighbour, the greatest power in the world, trying to kill me every day.
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Castro, in February 2008, announcing his resignation as president:

“I will neither aspire to nor accept... the positions of President of the State Council and Commander in Chief... It would be a betrayal of my conscience to accept a responsibility requiring more mobility and dedication than I am physically able to offer.”

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Castro writing in one of his "reflections," or newspaper columns in 2008:

“We are not a developed capitalist country in crisis, whose leaders are going crazy looking for solutions amidst depression, inflation, a lack of markets and unemployment; we are and we must be socialists.”

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Castro in 2010 during an interview with US journalist Jeffrey Goldberg. Castro later said his comment was taken out of context:

The Cuban model doesn’t even work for us anymore.

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Topics:  President   Communism   Cuba 

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