Fidel Castro’s capitalist legacy: the tracksuit

Pope Francis (L) and former Cuban President Fidel Castro (in a tracksuit) share a laugh in Havana, Cuba, September 20, 2015.

The classic image we have of the late Cuban leader Fidel Castro is that of a bearded man in military fatigues — the uniform of revolution. But in his later years, Castro donned another outfit: the retiree tracksuit.

Castro did officially retire from Cuba's presidency in 2006 — though he continued to heavily influence the island nation's leadership — putting his brother Raul in power, where he remains to this day.

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But a curious fact about his retirement outfit of choice is that the Western Hemisphere's longest-ruling communist leader was sporting some of the most globally recognizable capitalist brands: Nike, FILA and Adidas.

What's more, he wore one of them to his meeting with Pope Francis last year. (Castro's revolution long eschewed all religion.)

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The Castro tracksuit has become sort of a thing.

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A German edition of French satire magazine, Charlie Hebdo, recently published a cartoon of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who's governed for 11 years and is running for re-election, wearing a Castro tracksuit.

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Quartz published a whole thing about Castro's habit of wearing these tracksuits to meetings with foreign dignitaries. For his 90th birthday, Castro donned the tracksuit of the Algerian soccer team.

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But he also rocked the Team Cuba tracksuit — created by Adidas for Cuba's Olympic team. Communism!

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