At the start of the Cuban revolution, Javier Llorens was one of thousands of children who left the island unaccompanied for the United States, thinking it would be temporary. He is now 64 - and is still in the United States. Like many of the Cuban children who headed to America as part of what is now known as Operation Pedro Pan, named after the fictional leader of the orphaned Lost Boys, Llorens tells of a bittersweet experience.
"It was very hard, but from a good perspective, I would not be the person I am today without having gone through this crisis," Llorens, now a dentist and married with two daughters, tells AFP. Llorens began life in America in one of the shelters that was set up in Florida to receive some of the 14,000 children in an exodus from Cuba that began on December 26, 1960 and lasted until October 1962. He left Cuba with his 16-year-old brother on August 15, 1962 - a date he says is etched in his memory.
"I remember having a rather bad cold with fever, but we had to leave - we had been making preparations for months and months. We needed to have courage," he said. Llorens's parents made the difficult decision to temporarily part with their young children, fearing indoctrination by Fidel Castro's communist government, a fear that spread among other families in Cuba. "When the government of Fidel Castro took power in Cuba in 1959, everything changed. They started to strip people of their personal freedoms, they limited freedom of the press, they took away people's homes," says Eloisa Echazabal, who was 13 when she ended up in Miami on September 6, 1961 with her younger sister and three cousins.
"The final straw for my parents was when the government took over private and religious schools, and communism began to be taught in public schools." About half of the children who came to the United States were met by family or friends at the airport, according to Operation Pedro Pan Group Inc, which documents the stories of those who participated in the program. The operation was created by the Catholic Welfare Bureau (CWB; Catholic Charities) of Miami at the request of parents in Cuba to provide an opportunity for them to send their children to Miami to avoid indoctrination. The other half of the thousands of children were cared for by the CWB, under the direction of a young Irish priest named Bryan Walsh, at a network of temporary shelters in Miami and then homes in other US states. After diplomatic relations were severed between the United States and Cuba in 1961, the CWB was authorized by US officials to notify parents in Cuba that visa requirements had been waived for their children. This meant that Cuban children were able to travel by commercial flights to Miami.
Walsh first became aware of the plight of unaccompanied Cuban children when a Cuban man brought a 15-year-old boy to see him who had come to Miami to live with relatives, but the family had hit hard times and wanted to find foster care. That boy was named Pedro and Walsh discovered there were many more like him - alone, and in a strange country. Echazabal went with her sister to an orphanage in the state of New York, where she later lived with a family. "I remember it was not the happiest days of my life. It was hard to adjust to living in the orphanage," she says.