"Totally
engrossing, often quite moving, and at times even deeply disturbing, OPERATION
PEDRO PAN is a thought-provoking book about the difficult decisions that parents
must make on behalf of their children; decisions that will alter not only their children
s lives but the parents lives as well... Absorbing from cover to cover."
José Raúl Bernardo,
author of The Secret of the Bulls and Silent Wing

Operation Pedro Pan
The Untold Exodus of 14,000 Cuban Children
Yvonne M. Conde
On August 11, 1961, at the age often,
Yvonne Conde left Cuba thinking she was going to visit a school friend in Miami. It was
not until 1990, when Conde, now a successful journalist, discovered that she was one of
14,000 Cuban children sent to America between 1960 and 1962 by parents fearing
Castros new communist regime. Her flight was part of an underground program called
"Operation Pedro Pan."
Beautifully written and emotionally
charged, OPERATION PEDRO PAN: The Untold Exodus of 14,000 Cuban Children
(Routledge; May 30, 1999; 0-415-92149-X; $27.50 256 Pages; 16 Pages of photos; cloth)
sheds light on an almost unknown chapter of the Cold War. With the pace of a political
thriller, Conde details the events of her childhoodin a family originally supportive
of Castroagainst Castros rise to power. She powerfully recounts the closing of
her school to be conscripted into Castros "Army of Education," the fear of
being taken away from her family to be sent to the mountainsor even worse,
Russiaand her final days in Cuba before journeying to Miami.
Upon discovering that she was a part of
the largest political exodus of children in the Western Hemisphere, Conde embarked on a
different kind of journey. This time she went back into the past to find out how
"Operation Pedro Pan" came about, who was involved, and what happened to the
other 13,999 children who came to the United States alone.
In OPERATION PEDRO PAN,
her journalistic and investigative work uncovers the heroic people who risked their lives
in Cuba to see the children to safety in a free land and those on the American side who
helped the children obtain visa waivers and provided shelter for them. Conde also features
interviews with hundreds of former Pedro Pan children who talk frankly about how this
covert operation changed their lives foreverfor some in a positive way, and for
others in a way that still haunts them to this day.
Expanding on the commonly accepted
version of events, Conde proves that the Catholic Church was the only organization behind
this underground movement. The wife of the Dutch ambassador to Cuba smuggled visa waivers
in and out of Cuba for years; the U.S. State departmentin an unprecedented
movegave a church official the power to issue visa waivers; the U.S. Welfare
department paid for most of the program; and the C.I.A., which to this day claims
ignorance on the subject, has its complicity brought into question in documents uncovered
by Conde. She also provides information about how the Cuban government continued to trace
the Pedro Pan children long after they left Cuba and would often use this knowledge
against parents during police interrogations.
Some of the most interesting parts of OPERATION
PEDRO PAN are the personal stories that fill its pages: painful accounts about
the struggles of life in the overcrowded Miami camps; fond remembrances of life in a
caring foster home where lifelong relationships were formed; humorous anecdotes of culture
shock; horrific tales of racism, sexual and physical abuse in foster homes and orphanages;
the excitement of impending family reunions and the heartbreaking realization that those
reunions would not happen because families could not leave Cuba. Conde closes the book
with a chapter that documents where the children are todaypsychologically and
professionally. They range from security guards and housewives to doctors and teachers to
famed recording artists and ultra-wealthy business professionals. To each of them, Conde
poses the question, "Would you do to your children what your parents did to
you?"
Pedro Pan children were first sent to
refugee camps in Miami, Florida. As the camps became overcrowded, the children were
scattered across the United States with the most children going to California, Colorado,
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York,
Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington, Washington D.C., and West Virginia. Conde
praises towns in Oregon and Illinois for reaching out to the children. At the same time
she exposes orphanages in New Mexico and New York City where the kids were abused and
treated as young criminals.
OPERATION PEDRO PAN is
an important contribution to the history of Cuba as well as a major historical work that
captures a world event that many know very little about. The story of Operation Pedro Pan,
somewhat similar to that of the Kindertransport of World War II that carried 10,000 Jewish
children out of Germany, further illustrates that children are often the innocent victims
when nations are in turmoil.
This page is a courtesy of NoCastro.com |