Long live the Revolution! Long live Communism! - Armando González Ordaz exclaimed, when he was taken to the healing center on October 9, 1935. A few hours later, with only 23 years, the incorruptible and courageous fighter died.
Armando González Ordaz, known as ''Bullita'', was born on May 8, 1912 in San Antonio de los Baños. He lived the phenomenon of class struggle from an early age and joined the workers. During the tyranny of Gerardo Machado, González Ordaz stood out in the fight against the regime. He soon became a representative of communist principles in workers' unions in the Ariguanabo.
His friendship with the priest Arrechea, parish priest of the Church, was significant. Due to this friendship, the soldiers searched the Priest's temple, with the risk of finding weapons and a mimeograph, where the Party printed all the local propaganda that Armando had hidden in the temple.
After the fall of Machado, the Fight Committee was created, which, guided by the Party, achieved countless conquests for the Ariguanabo workers.
The Party called Armando to move to the capital, where he carried out a great activity. Subsequently, due to his courage, he was transferred to Güines in order to organize the sugar workers in the region. During this work he was surprised and arrested. In the barracks of the Rural Guard, he is brutally beaten and tortured.
A delation caused that on October 9, 1935, while having breakfast with comrades Isidro and Sobrín in the cafeteria of the corners of Sol and Inquisidor, in Havana Vieja, the tyranny minions shot them with machine guns. The two revolutionaries responded with their guns, being seriously injured. Thus, Armando González Ordaz, a true communist, entered the History of Cuba and that of the Ariguanabo.

