Hugo Chávez still rockin' the cult of personality, 2 years after his 'transition to immortality'
Two years after the so-called “physical disappearance” of the “eternal commander” of Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution, the supercharged cult of personality surrounding the late President Hugo Chávez is as strong — and strange — as ever.
This week, pro-government Venezuelans are paying tribute to the former firebrand with a 10-day commemoration to mark the second anniversary of his death, which is usually referred to with gloriously euphemistic phrases such as “his transition to immortality.”
Government supporters are gathering outside Chávez’s hilltop mausoleum and crowding the streets to pay their respects to the man who changed Venezuelan history forever.
Since his death on March 5, 2013, after a long battle with cancer, the figure of Chávez still looms large in the South American country, as well as in the client nations he helped support with Venezuelan oil largess. The comandante’s painted visage appears on the side of buildings and in street murals, and his speeches are still rebroadcast on state-run TV. Chavez’s hand-picked successor, President Nicolas Maduro, is frequently accompanied by larger-than-life pictures of Chavez at official government events.