Shortly after 27 Cuban refugees set foot on a Florida beach in
the wee hours of Saturday, July 14, Providence saw fit that I
was among the first Americans to welcome them.
Along with a dozen or so homeowners and vacationers on Little
Gasparilla Island, my teenagers and I witnessed the faces of men,
women and children who had their first taste of freedom. They
arrived on the quiet, sandy shores just before sunrise and
instantly went from great peril to free people.
The U.S. "wet foot, dry foot" policy grants asylum only to those
Cubans who actually set foot on our shore, rather than to all who
make it to open or U.S. waters. The inane plan was adopted by the
Clinton administration, a policy that includes charging the United
States Coast Guard with preventing the freedom-seekers from ever
reaching dry land. Clinton allowed himself to be, in effect,
blackmailed by Castro who had begun loading criminals and the
mentally ill onto boats and shipping them to the United States.
Castro threatened Clinton with a massive immigration crisis and
succeeded in perverting America's long-standing policy of providing
protection to escapees of communism.
Understanding the political suicide of outright reversing the
practice of helping those who flee, Clinton shrewdly decided to
slice the baby in a political move that no president or Congress
has been brave enough to challenge and change. And decent,
patriotic Americans in uniform who enlist to protect liberty and
serve our nation are assigned the task of returning the desperate
to their captors.
Very few make it all the way -- the courageous men, women and
children I met are among the blessed few who have. Somehow, they
avoided detection by the brutal communist officials who scour the
Cuban waters for escapees, braved and survived the unpredictable
open seas, slipped by the U.S. Coast Guard and overcame so many
other odds stacked against them. Yet the event went largely
unnoticed by the U.S. media.
The Cubans' arrival just happened to be on the eve of the 49th
Observance of Captive Nations Week. Of course, they knew not the
significance of the date of their flight. Since 1959 -- the same
year Fidel Castro seized control of the small Caribbean island just
90 miles from our country -- the third week of July has been
designated by Congress to remember and show solidarity with those
oppressed by communism "until such a time as freedom and
independence shall have been achieved for all the captive nations
of the world." What happened to that vision?
Of course, there are those who commit their lives to spreading
the cause of freedom, like my colleague at The Heritage Foundation,
Dr. Lee Edwards, who is one of the forces behind the Victims
of Communism Memorial, which was dedicated just this year. Dr.
Edwards works tirelessly to support political dissidents in captive
nations and to tell the terrible stories of those who have suffered
under communist rule. And then there's Frank Calzon, executive
director of the Center for a Free Cuba, a nonprofit human
rights organization that seeks to promote civil rights in Cuba.
Calzon knows first-hand the suffering and heartbreak of families
torn apart by communism. A native of free Cuba, Castro took control
when Calzon was 15. At the tender age of 16, his parents arranged
to have him flown out of the country. Mr. Calzon's voice is rich
and passionate as he reflects on the cruelty of the "wet foot, dry
foot" policy: "Imagine the insanity if the police in West Berlin
had been forced to capture those fleeing over the wall and return
them to the Soviets. What we are doing to the Cubans today is just
as horrible."
Little Gasparilla is a bridgeless island just off the coast of
Florida. When the Cubans made landfall, they asked islanders to
call the authorities. As the Cubans waited to be boated to the
mainland for processing, word of their arrival spread quickly
through the island. Locals eagerly gave food, water, clothes and a
warm welcome to the foreign strangers. The spirit of Americans, it
seems, naturally reaches out to those who seek liberty. How
horrible that the official policy of our nation does not.
The Cuban's plight is not a new concern for me. I went to high
school with a close-knit Cuban-American contingency whose parents
had fled when Castro took power. My classmates and their families
were among the most patriotic, freedom-loving people I have ever
known. They treasured their liberty, and their hearts broke for
those left behind. They still do. Never in my wildest dreams would
I have imagined that I would have the privilege of welcoming some
of their countrymen to America. Never in their wildest imaginations
would they have believed that nearly 50 years after the bloody
dictator seized their nation, he would still be in control.
As I scanned the faces of the newly free Cubans before me, I
thought of my high school friends and their parents. The Cubans on
the beach were the offspring and grandchildren of those who had not
fled so many years ago. Their lives have been so different from my
classmates -- for whatever reason, their parents did not or could
not make the break. But those before me did, and now their children
will be free. My mind raced back to those who remain in Cuba. How
many generations have to suffer? How long does a proud nation so
close to our border have to be oppressed?
Despite what Michael Moore and revisionists tell you, Cubans
suffer daily at the hands of their evil government. According to
the U.S. State Department's report on human rights practices in
2006, thousands of Cubans serve sentences in dungy prisons absent
any criminal activity; beatings of prisoners is inflicted with
impunity; government-recruited mobs terrorize political opponents;
there is no free speech or free press, no right of peaceful
assembly and association; there are frequent and arbitrary arrests
of human rights advocates. The list goes on and on.
On a personal level, I am still trying to process what my
experience on the island means for my life, and how I am to use the
many blessings I enjoy every day to help others whose souls yearn
for freedom.
In one moment I went from packing up after a weeklong dreamy
island vacation, to standing in the midst of a life-changing
experience. I had the privilege of filing the first detailed press story of the refugees'
successful arrival that bright, sunny morning. I'll always
remember their beaming faces and dazzling eyes - they sparkled not
from the sun, but from the sheer exhilaration of breathing freedom
for the first time. I became immersed in the joy of their
discovery.
In addition to the memories and photographs from that day, I
have a Cuban souvenir that I plan to frame and put on my desk. One
jubilant man who appeared to be in his 20s pulled Cuban bills from
his pocket and began distributing them to the islanders as
officials called him to the waiting boats. Misunderstanding the
money as some attempted payment for the hospitality, at first I
refused. "The Cuban money is no good here in the United States. He
wants you to have the bill -- he says it is for good luck," someone
explained. I hugged my new friend and accepted his token of
goodwill, marveling at how quickly humanitarian bonds can form when
joy is shared.
My prayers are with my new friends and their families -- and
especially for those who remain captive.
Rebecca
Hagelin is a vice president of The Heritage Foundation
and the author of Home Invasion: Protecting Your Family in a
Culture that's Gone Stark Raving Mad.