Born in November 1937 in
Buenos Aires, Argentina, Tamara Bunke was the daughter of Erich Bunke and Nadia Bider. Nadia Bider Bunke, born in 1912, was a
Russian communist who hailed from a
Jewish family within the
Russian Empire. Tamara's father, Erich Bunke, relocated to
Berlin at the age of 18 to pursue studies in architecture. Both Nadia and Erich took part in left-wing activism; however, due to
Nazi persecution, they were forced to flee to
Argentina in 1935. Erich faced persecution for his involvement with the
Communist Party of Germany, while Nadia, who was of Jewish descent, was also targeted. Shortly thereafter, they became members of the
Communist Party of Argentina, ensuring that Bunke and her brother Olaf would both grow up in a
Marxist-Leninist political atmosphere. Their family home in Buenos Aires was often used for meetings, helping communist refugees, hiding publications and occasionally stashing weapons. In 1952, after the end of
World War II, the family came back to the newly created
East Germany, specifically the town of
Eisenhüttenstadt. By the age of fourteen, she joined the ruling
Socialist Unity Party of Germany's (SUPG) youth organization, the
Free German Youth (FGY), and by eighteen she joined the SUPG. Bunke commenced her studies in philosophy or political science, ==Cuba==