A man lays flowers outside the abandoned small limestone house of Fidel Castro’s father in Lancara on Sunday.—AFP
A man lays flowers outside the abandoned small limestone house of Fidel Castro’s father in Lancara on Sunday.—AFP

LANCARA (Galicia, Spa­in): Historians will deb­ate Fidel Castro’s legacy for years, but the remote Spanish village of Lancara is proud to be the birthplace of the late Cuban president’s father.

“One person might call him a dictator, another a revolutionary, but he is an icon and a symbol of a moment in history, and his origins are in Lancara, so we are very happy,” said Manuel Ferna­ndez, as he sat in a bar in the village in Galicia, a poor farming and fishing region in northwestern Spain.

He recalled catching a glimpse of Castro, who died on Friday at the age of 90, from afar when he visited Lancara in 1992 after attending a summit in Madrid.

“You don’t believe it until he appears in a Mercedes surrounded by his entourage,” said Fernandez, a 60-year-old retired teacher.

The Socialist mayor of Lancara at the time named Castro an “adopted son” of the village, which is home to around 2,700.

The village, made up of houses scattered on hills, has been swarming with reporters since the announcement of Castro’s death.

“Everyone has their own opinion but everyone here is proud that Fidel is a descendant of Lancara,” said Carlos Lopez Sierra, 69, who runs a rural hotel near the one-room stone house where Castro’s father Angel Castro was born. Sierra recalls seeing tears in the revolutionary icon’s eyes when he visited the modest home.

“He entered alone and left drying tears,” said Sierra as he sat in the living room of the hostel, which is decorated with photos of famous visitors, including one of Castro.

If it were not for a commemorative plaque, nothing about the stone house indicates it still belongs to the family of the titan of the 20th century who ruled Cuba from 1959 until 2006.

“In this house, in 1875, Angel Castro Argiz was born, a Galician who immigrated to Cuba where he planted trees that still bloom,” reads the plaque on the facade of the building. Lancara town hall would like the Castro family to donate house to the municipality so it can be turned it into a museum.

Published in Dawn, November 28th, 2016

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