devin katayama, from kqed news. thank you for sharing your reporting. >> stewart: today in santiago, cuba, the remains of former president fidel castro, who died ten days ago, were interred in what the government called a simple ceremony. no other man in the 20th century ruled his country long as he did-- 49 years, before he stepped down in 2008. his supporters saw him as a brave champion of the people, and opponents saw a ruthless dictator. with the help of the pulitzer center for crisis reporting, newshour weekend special correspondent nick schifrin is in cuba outside the funeral and joins us now from santiago. nick? >> reporter: allison, good evening. this is the city that birthed the hero's myth of castro as revolutionary, where he descended from the mountains behind me in 1959 to overthrow a corrupt, u.s.-backed dictator. he dominated cuba for the next half century with a combined charisma and cruelty, convincing his people he was their destined savior repressing them with zero tolerance for dissent. but in thi