ALTA GRACIA, Argentina - Fidel and Hugo went on a pilgrimage Saturday to 
Che's house. 
In an emotional journey, Cuban President Fidel Castro and Venezuelan ally 
Hugo Chavez toured the Argentine boyhood home of Castro's fallen comrade and 
legendary guerrilla, Ernesto "Che" Guevara. It was a first visit for both.
"Fidel! Fidel!" and "Hugo! Hugo!" the crowd of 2,000 chanted as the 
79-year-old Castro, wearing his trademark green military fatigues, got out of 
his limousine. Chavez was right by Castro's side as they entered the house amid 
a crush of security agents.
While Castro made no public comment, he smiled broadly and shook hands with 
supporters in the crowd. Chavez told reporters the two were delighted by their 
tour: "Fidel invited me to come and get to know the house. For me, it's a real 
honor being here."
"We feel it! We feel it! Guevara is right with us!" the crowd shouted 
Saturday.
Castro first visited Argentina in 1959 after the Cuban revolution and 
returned to attend a regional summit Friday that inducted Venezuela into the 
Mercosur trade bloc.
Guevara spent most of his childhood in central Argentina, where his family 
hoped a mild climate would ease his severe asthma. Guevara's family later moved 
to Buenos Aires, where he enrolled in medical school before launching the famous 
motorcycle trip around South America that inspired him to give up medicine for 
leftist revolution.
He was killed in 1967 while directing a guerrilla movement in Bolivia. His 
remains were taken three decades later to Cuba, where they are entombed under a 
massive monument.
On Saturday, black-uniformed police with guard dogs kept back the crowd as 
bystanders jammed the space outside the green-painted, brick-and-tile middle 
class home in Alta Gracia.
The house bore the famous iconic photograph taken in 1960 that shows the 
legendary "Che" wearing his classic beret at a jaunty angle. A bronze statue out 
front also depicted Guevara as a young boy, and a vintage motorbike inside was 
like the one used by Guevara for his cross-South American trip.
The two Latin American leaders also saw memorabilia including Guevara's birth 
certificate and hand-written letters.
"I'm sure Fidel will be touched because he knew Che so well," said their 
house tour guide, Lauren Gonzalez. She said Cubans are among favorite pilgrims 
to the house, but it also draws admirers worldwide because of Guevara's 
legendary status.
Castro and Chavez viewed the house with three childhood friends of Guevara's 
— Calica Ferrer, Enrique Martin and Ariel Vidoza — and left 90 minutes later 
without talking to the press.
Guevara's former home is owned by the city government. Guevara lived in the 
house for two stretches, first from 1935-1937 and then again from 1939-43.
The home is typical of many on narrow streets of Alta Gracia, a community 35 
miles southwest of Cordoba, where Castro, Chavez and six other Latin American 
presidents attended a regional trade summit Friday.
Ana Ledesma, a 50-year-old housewife, said the Castro-Chavez visit had caused 
a real fuss in her quiet community.
"The truth is we are all surprised by Castro's visit," she said. "This has 
thrown the whole city into a state of shock."
If he had lived today, Guevara would be 78 years old. But his early death in 
Bolivia at the hands of that country's army helped transform him into a 
larger-than-life figure. 
Guevara launched an armed revolt in 1966 to bring communism to Bolivia after 
helping lead the 1959 Cuban Revolution that ousted dictator Fulgencio Batista 
and thrust Castro into power. He waged a guerrilla insurgency for 13 months in 
Bolivia but was captured and executed by the Bolivian army at age 39. 
On Friday night, Castro and Chavez, who openly admires the Cuban leader as 
his political mentor, rallied thousands in Cordoba against U.S.-backed free 
market policies they blame for many of Latin America's woes.