In other words, the individual is vital to social change and is the target of social change. He goes on to say famously that among the peasantry in the Sierra Masetra he, along with the other guerrilla soldiers, ' learned perfectly that the life of a single human being is worth millions of times more than all the property of the richest man on earth'(117). There are countless examples in Che's guerrilla warfare experience that attest to his commitment to the individual and to individual dignity. It was standard policy, for example, that captured enemy soldiers not be mistreated and in fact they were medically treated with the same care as their own soldiers. Che's capture by the Bolivian army was in part due to the limitations on his group's movements cased by the injured comrade that Che refused to leave behind in favour of finding him a safe escape route to medical attention; it was standard practice to leave no individual behind for the 'good' of the larger group.