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| The History of Operation Pedro Pan written for this website by Monsignor Bryan O. Walsh, March 1, 2001 |
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| Pedro Pan was a program created by the Catholic Welfare Bureau (Catholic Charities) of Miami in December 1960 at the request of parents in Cuba to provide an opportunity for them to send their children to Miami to avoid Marxist-Leninist indoctrination. After the break in diplomatic relations on January 3, 1961, the Catholic Welfare Bureau was authorized by the U.S. Department of State to notify parents in Cuba that visa requirements had been waived for their children. This enabled the children to travel by commercial flights to Miami. Father
Bryan O. Walsh, the Director of Catholic Welfare Bureau, became aware
of the plight of unaccompanied minors in November 1960 when a Cuban man
brought a fifteen-year-old Cuban boy to his office. The boy, Pedro, had
come to Miami to live with relatives. The family was in dire straits and
the CWB was asked to provide foster care. Father Walsh realized that unaccompanied
minors were always found among refugees seeking a safe haven. There would
be many more Pedros. Father Walsh bought the matter to the
attention of Mr. Tracy Voorhees, sent by President Eisenhower to assess
the needs of Cuban refugees in Miami. Mr. Voorhees recommended that the
President approve funds for the care of unaccompanied minors. This meant
that if the children could get to Miami, funds would be available to their
care. In the course of twenty months between December 26, 1960 and October 23, 1962, over 14,000 unaccompanied minors arrived in Miami under the sponsorship of the Catholic Welfare Bureau. Those included youth from all parts of the island. While the majority was Catholic, several hundred were Protestant, Jewish or non-believers. Very few were from wealthy backgrounds. These were already in Miami with their families. Most were of the middle class or lower middle class and included children of different racial background, Black and Chinese.
After the Freedom Flights started in Dec. 1, 1965, the delays in family reunion were due primarily to the regulations of the Cuban Government in delaying the emigration of certain professionals and its refusal to let young men between 15 and 26 emigrate with their parents because of military service obligations. In the relatively few other cases where such reunions did not eventually take place this was due to parental deaths, or a father or mother staying behind to take care of an elderly parent. The agency has no record of any case where a minor was lost. The agency has not received any request from anyone in Cuba asking for information on the whereabouts of a child. During the past thirty years, it has been relatively easy for people to travel to Cuba to look for family. Nor has the agency been asked by a former unaccompanied minor for help in finding a lost parent. Reports that great numbers of minors lost contact with their families is simply not true.
Unfortunately their fears have been proved by history to have been altogether too true. In January 22, 1998. Pope John Paul II in his Homely in the Instituto Superior de Cultura Fisica Manuel Fajardo in Santa Clara said: Eperiences not easily accepted and often traumatic is the separation of children and the substitution of the role of parents as a result of schooling away from home even during adolescence. These experiences place young people in situations which sadly result in the spread of promiscuous behavior, loss of ethical values, coarseness, premarital sexual relations at an early age and easy recourse to abortion What the parents learned when their sons and daughters returned from the Literacy Campaign of 1960 is still going on. In his Homily in Santa Clara, the Holy Father referred to a problem which has existed in Cuba for years, people being obliged to be away from the family within the country, and emigration which has torn apart whole families and caused suffering for a large part of the population. The Cuban government because of its ideological stance has imposed and is still imposing these sufferings on the Cuban people. No one can deny that separation from ones family is always traumatic and painful. How could it be otherwise? However, at times its is necessary because it is the lesser of the two evils. The real heroes of Pedro Pan were the parents who made the hardest decision that any parent can make.
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