Children Of Cuba Remember Their Flight To America
By Greg Allen
Operation Pedro Pan shaped the lives of a generation of Cuban-Americans.
Between 1960 and 1962, the program airlifted more than 14,000 Cuban
children from Havana to the U.S. Fifty years later, those children are
recalling how that flight changed their lives.
In Miami this weekend, a group of Cuban-Americans now in their 50s and
60s are gathering to commemorate the flights that took them from their
homeland to America.
The journey began in early January 1959, after Dictator Fulgencio
Batista fled the country. Fidel Castro arrived in Havana soon after and
took control.
Back then, Jose Azel was an 11-year-old living in Havana. Today, he's a
research associate at the University of Miami.
"It was clear very early on that the regime was moving in a totalitarian
direction, with confiscations, expropriations of properties and that
sort of thing," he says.
Azel was soon involved in underground activities. By 1961, his mother
had died and his father decided to send him out of Cuba to America. Azel
says the Castro regime had started separating children from their
families as part of its literacy campaign.
He recalls having just a short conversation in which his father told him
he was sending him away for his safety.
"So in the minds, I suspect, of most of the parents of the Pedro Pan
children, this was going to be a short-term, temporary separation," he says.
As it turned out, Azel never saw his father again. His father died in
the mid-1970s without being able to leave Cuba.
The Paper That Led Thousands To Flight
It wasn't until much later that Azel learned he was one of some 14,000
Cuban children who fled the island in similar circumstances. It was made
possible because of a deal a priest in the Miami diocese Father Bryan
Walsh worked out with the U.S. State Department. The agreement allowed
him to sign visa waivers for children 16 or under.
Historian Victor Triay has written about Operation Pedro Pan in his
book, Fleeing Castro. In 1961, Triay says, the failed Bay of Pigs
operation ended hopes that Castro might soon be ousted. Castro also
clearly announced that he was turning Cuba toward communism.
"They started closing down all the schools, including and especially the
private and Catholic schools. So that caused a mass panic," he says.
"And, of course, these visa waivers were photocopied in Cuba with
Walsh's signature. They were accepted by the Cuban government, and so
these visa waivers just started to spread around the island."
There were two direct Pan Am flights every day from Havana to Miami.
Soon, they were full of children some with families, many without.
Carmen Valdivia came with just her sister. At her home in a Miami
suburb, she still has a yellowed letter, her visa waiver. The paper
reads, "WAIVER APPROVED By Department of State and Immigration Services."
Valdivia says she and her sister arrived in Miami with almost nothing.
Security personnel at the airport in Havana took their suitcases,
leaving them just what they carried in their purses.
Valdivia still has the last gift her parents gave her in Cuba: an
autographed book that they both signed.
In it, she wrote: "This autograph I bought at the last moment that I was
in my Cuba, the beautiful. My parents got to sign it, and I am glad that
they did because this is the only thing that I have from them, and they
are what I love the most in this world."
Scattered Around America
In 1963, a U.S. government film crew produced a documentary on the camps
in Miami for displaced Cuban children.
About half of the children airlifted to Miami were, like Valdivia,
reunited with family members within a few years.
Others went to foster families and boarding schools around the country.
That was Carlos Eire's experience. Eire has written about those years in
his book, Learning to Die in Miami.
He left Cuba with his brother in 1962. They shuttled from camp to a
series of group homes and foster families until his mother rejoined them
three years later. For him and most other Pedro Pan children, he says it
was an overwhelmingly positive experience, but one that came with a
sense of loss.
"Not having your parents there, you kind of feel a sense of betrayal,
that you're betraying your parents if you're too happy," he says. "Even
after my mom came, even at the best moments, it was always this feeling
that, 'Gee, you know, my dad's not here.' You feel this sense that you
should never or can never be really happy."
As adults, many of the Pedro Pan kids have done well. Eire went on to
become a professor at Yale and a National Book Award-winning author.
Other Pedro Pan kids include former U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez and salsa
star Willy Chirino.
There's something else, Eire says, that most of the Pedro Pan kids still
share, 50 years later. They're firmly opposed to any normalization of
relations with the Castro regime, the regime that was responsible for
breaking up their families and forcing them from their homeland.
http://www.gpb.org/news/2011/11/19/children-of-cuba-remember-their-flight-to-america
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