Cuban revolutionary Max Lesnik fights on in Miami
By Tom Brown
MIAMI (Reuters) - He helped his friend Fidel Castro seize power in Cuba on January 1, 1959, and half a century later Max Lesnik is still fighting.
Lesnik ran a rebel propaganda network and served as a head of clandestine operations in Havana during the revolution, but he quickly became disenchanted as Castro forged ties with the Soviet Union and he fled for Miami in 1961 in a small boat packed with other former guerrilla collaborators.
Even after moving to Miami, however, Lesnik kept his rebellious streak and he has been the target of violent attacks by anti-Castro hard-liners in the Cuban exile community.
"I've always been very independent. I said the Cuban Revolution had to be carried out without either Washington or Moscow," Lesnik, 77, told Reuters in an interview last week.
He founded a popular magazine called Replica and used it to espouse his opinions about Cuba and U.S. policy toward the island, which this week celebrates the revolution's 50th anniversary.
Lesnik has sometimes praised Castro, who handed power to his brother Raul Castro this year after falling ill, and he has repeatedly called for an end to the U.S. trade embargo against Havana.
Fidel Castro once considered Lesnik a traitor but the two men smoothed over their differences and Cuba's government now sees him as a useful former odd man out on the home turf of its most strident enemies.
Replica's offices in Miami's Little Havana district were bombed 11 times, mostly in the mid-1970s during a period of political violence that saw drive-by shootings, car bombings and the downing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people.
One of Lesnik's closest friends, Luciano Nieves, was among the victims of the violence, which he blames on "CIA-created monsters" who targeted perceived Castro sympathizers.
Lesnik was eventually forced to shut down Replica in the early 1980s in the face of death threats to himself, his advertisers and businesses that carried the magazine. But he refused to be silenced, and still works as a Spanish-language radio commentator with an audience across South Florida.
Lesnik belonged to the same left-leaning Cuban People's Party as Castro before the revolution. He says he never fired a shot but braved bombs dropped by dictator Fulgencio Batista's air force in frequent visits to rebel-held positions in the Escambray mountains during the conflict.
Unhappy with Castro's alliance with the Soviet Union, he declared he wasn't a communist on a radio program he ran in Cuba just before fleeing into exile.
Lesnik called his adopted home a "hell" in a documentary about his life that was released last year and directed by his daughter Vivien Lesnik Weisman. In the film, "The Man of Two Havanas," he says Miami is a place "where terrorists are heroes" and "political assassination is regarded as heroic."
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