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che

Che is a nickname and given name used in Spanish-speaking regions, most notably associated with Ernesto Guevara, the Argentine Marxist revolutionary and guerrilla leader commonly known as Che Guevara. Born in 1928 in Rosario, Argentina, Guevara studied medicine at the University of Buenos Aires, traveled across Latin America, and became known for his habit of addressing people with the vocative “che.” He joined Fidel Castro’s 26th of July Movement and played a central role in the Cuban Revolution, contributing to the overthrow of Fulgencio Batista in 1959. After the revolution, Guevara held various government and military roles and pursued internationalist projects before leaving Cuba in 1965 to support revolutions abroad. He was captured and executed in Bolivia in 1967.

In Rioplatense Spanish, che is a common vocative used to address someone informally, similar to “hey” or

Che Guevara’s image—most famously the black-and-white portrait by photographer Alberto Korda—has become a global symbol of

“mate,”
and
it
can
carry
emphasis
or
camaraderie.
The
term
has
spread
beyond
Argentina,
Uruguay,
and
Paraguay,
becoming
a
recognizable
feature
of
the
dialect
and,
in
some
contexts,
a
cultural
lexeme
associated
with
the
region.
rebellion
and
leftist
movements,
inspiring
admiration
and
controversy
alike.
His
life
and
writings,
including
Guerrilla
Warfare
and
his
diaries
from
the
Motorcycle
Journey,
have
been
the
subject
of
extensive
study,
film,
and
literature.
The
legacy
of
Che
Guevara
remains
debated,
reflecting
divergent
views
on
revolutionary
ethics,
authoritarian
actions,
and
the
broader
outcomes
of
the
Cuban
Revolution.