---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, May 23, 2021 at 2:41 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Diplo]: Lucero on Shnookal, 'Operation Pedro Pan
and the Exodus of Cuba's Children'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Deborah Shnookal.  Operation Pedro Pan and the Exodus of Cuba's
Children.  Gainesville  University of Florida Press, 2020.  326 pp.
$85.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-68340-155-1.

Reviewed by Bonnie A. Lucero (University of Houston-Downtown)
Published on H-Diplo (May, 2021)
Commissioned by Seth Offenbach

This exceptionally smart and timely book examines a large-scale
departure of Cuban children, orchestrated by the US government and
the Catholic Church following the 1959 Cuban Revolution. Operation
Pedro Pan, as the exodus is commonly known, occurred between December
1960 and October 1962, a particularly tense moment of the Cold War,
as anticommunist hysteria and US-sponsored regime change efforts
greeted the first waves of revolutionary reform. The political
polarization that characterized this historical moment has also come
to define prevailing interpretations of Operation Pedro Pan--was it a
benevolent rescue mission, as Cuban exiles so commonly portray it, or
was it the mass criminal kidnapping that the Cuban government
continued to denounce for years? According to Deborah Shnookal,
neither of these facile representations fully captures the
complexities of the exodus, let alone its profound human cost.

_Operation Pedro Pan and the Exodus of Cuba's Children_ offers a more
nuanced narrative. Drawing on documents from several US government
agencies and personal interviews with a range of people involved, it
carefully reconstructs the circumstances leading to the departure of
fourteen thousand children from Cuba. Shnookal shows how the exodus
resulted from a purposeful and politically motivated manipulation of
Cuban parents' fears. The US government used emigration as a
political weapon against the Cuba Revolution and specifically used
Cuban children as pawns in its covert war to topple the Cuban
government. Ultimately, the book exposes a "cruel and calculated
immigration policy that resulted in the unnecessary and unexpectedly
prolonged separation of Cuban families" (p. 217).

One of this book's strengths is the author's ability to challenge the
political mythology surrounding Operation Pedro Pan without
invalidating the anxieties, fears, and other intense emotions
inspiring the families caught up in the events. This is evident in
her careful discussion of the push and pull factors driving the
exodus. In her discussion of the "_patria potestad_ hoax," for
instance, Shnookal rightly acknowledges how rumors that the Cuban
government intended to eliminate parental authority stoked very real
fears among many Cuban parents. It caused the greatest concern to
predominantly white middle- and upper-class families, many of whom
believed the revolutionary government intended to "destroy" the Cuban
family by undermining traditional family values (patriarchal gender
roles), banning religious worship, and preventing Cubans from leaving
the island. The rumor resonated less with poorer families, who
generally maintained more tenuous ties with the Catholic Church and
were more likely to have benefited materially from early
revolutionary reforms, such as the agrarian reform and the literacy
campaign (chapter 3). However, Shnookal also presents ample evidence
that these very real fears were grounded in lies intentionally
orchestrated to evoke those emotional reactions to provoke an
emigration crisis. She demonstrates, for instance, that
counterrevolutionary networks drafted a fictitious law, which they
attributed to the revolutionary government, outlining a supposed plan
to terminate parental authority. Moreover, the appeal to parental
authority appears to have been but a pretext in light of the
1999-2000 custody battle over Elián González, whom many members of
the Cuban exile community argued should be kept in the United States
in violation of his Cuban father's custody rights (chapter 6).

Similarly, Shnookal examines how perceptions of the 1961 literacy
campaign (chapter 2), particularly in the context of the Revolution's
broader reforms on youth and family (chapter 1), stoked fears about
so-called communist indoctrination, declining parental control over
education, and the disruption of "traditional family values,"
including religious piety and patriarchal gender roles. The temporary
closure of Cuban schools during the second half of the literacy
campaign and the relocation of several prominent private schools from
Cuba to South Florida fueled these fears. Responding precisely to
those fears, the Cuban Children's Program offered middle- and
upper-class parents wary of social change the opportunity to preserve
the status-based education of prerevolutionary Cuba by sending their
children to private and religious schools.

Although the hysteria generated by the fictitious
counterrevolutionary rumors was very real for some families, Shnookal
suggests that many families did not simply accept wholesale CIA
propaganda, but rather had varying motives for sending their children
to the United States. To be sure, many families responded most of all
to unprecedented pull factors. The US government lured Cuban parents
to send their children by authorizing a Catholic priest in Miami to
issue unlimited visa waivers for Cuban children to enter the United
States as unaccompanied "students," while making it more difficult
for adults to migrate. The Catholic Welfare Bureau assisted with
travel and administered care to new arrivals. Together these benefits
amounted to an all-expense-paid education in the United States at
precisely the moment many of Cuba's prestigious private schools
relocated to South Florida and as government relations with the
Catholic Church reached their lowest point. As education abroad
remained a cornerstone of privilege in Cuba, the opportunity to
obtain "becas" (scholarships) to study in the United States proved
exceedingly appealing to less prosperous families, who may not have
been able to afford such educational luxuries for their children
(chapter 4).

Another of the book's strengths is its methodical explanation of how
certain false narratives about Operation Pedro Pan emerged and why
they remain so powerful today. A case in point is Shnookal's
discussion of the perceived and real identities of Pedro Pans.
Prevailing interpretations of the exodus depict Pedro Pans as
helpless young children who needed to be saved from communist
indoctrination. However, Shnookal reveals that the average Pedro Pan
was already an adolescent upon arrival to the US, and many were
already involved in political activities. Moreover, the political
orientations of Pedro Pans did not map neatly onto the anticommunist
framework invoked in exile imaginaries. While some Cuban families
undoubtedly sent their children away to shelter them from the
political and criminal consequences of their own or their parents'
counterrevolutionary activities, other parents sent them away to halt
their involvement in revolutionary activities, including the literacy
campaign.

Although it diverged from reality, the image of Pedro Pans as
helpless young children was politically expedient for the US
government, the Catholic Church, and the growing exile community. It
became a key pillar of the creation myth of the Cuban exile
community, giving political credibility to people who claimed the
label. It bolstered the Catholic Church's humanitarian reputation and
advanced the status of certain key players involved. And, perhaps
most significantly, it formed a core part of the United States'
project to effect regime change in Cuba, most notably through its
propaganda war against the Revolution. The specter of helpless young
child refugees helped undermine the moral appeal of the Revolution,
helped consolidate domestic support for the US government's "Cuba
Project" (a covert war aimed at toppling the Cuban government), and
helped assuage the anti-immigrant backlash in South Florida and other
US cities as the Cuban émigré population exploded (chapter 5).

Rather than the compassionate humanitarian response to children in
distress, Operation Pedro Pan emerges as a product of the "cynical
manipulation of parents' deepest fears, and a callous disregard for
Cuban families" (p. 196). The burden of this political experiment
fell squarely upon Cuban families, especially Pedro Pan children. To
be sure, Shnookal is right to point out that Pedro Pans were not
necessarily better off in the United States. While half of Pedro Pans
were reclaimed by relatives or friends, a significant number required
foster care. The most fortunate of these children ended up in good
families and schools, but too many of them languished in orphanages
or state-run refugee camps. Some children faced racist and xenophobic
discrimination in public schools and experienced abuse at the hands
of their foster families. Moreover, while many parents assumed that
the separation would be short-lived, as they expected the United
States to intervene and topple the Revolution, the defeat of the Bay
of Pigs Invasion in April 1961 dashed those hopes. Ironically,
parents who feared losing parental authority ended up relinquishing
custody of their children to face unknown traumas and extended
separation.

The evacuation scheme drew to a close by the end of 1962. Following
the Cuban Missile Crisis, the United States entered an agreement with
the Soviet Union, which included a promise to refrain from further
invasions of Cuba. By this time, counterrevolutionary networks inside
the island were significantly weakened, complicating the logistics of
the airlifts and reducing the probability of an uprising from within.
With the suspension of direct flights between US and Cuba, Operation
Pedro Pan was no longer viable.

As this book aptly shows, the lessons of Operation Pedro Pan are
multiple and profound, reaching far beyond the Cold War context in
which they are typically situated. For one, this book underscores
that immigration policy is--and has always been--intensely political
and cannot be separated from the long histories of US intervention
and neocolonialism throughout Latin America. Welcoming with open arms
certain migrant children, investing in their care and education, and
bestowing them with special political status historically served a
very real political purpose, in this case that of toppling the
revolutionary government and restoring US hegemony in the region. The
politics of Operation Pedro Pan, which this book so masterfully lays
out, offer a stark contrast to the contemporary policies
criminalizing migrant children, ripping them from their parents'
arms, incarcerating them in abject conditions, and withholding basic
care to the point of death. Binding these disparate immigration
policies together is a willful neglect of the ways long histories of
US political, economic, and military interference in Latin America
created the conditions of the exodus, and how family separation has
become somewhat of an American tradition, at least when it comes to
families of color. As more than five hundred migrant children today
remain separated from their families, this book offers a powerful
reminder of the human cost of these politically motivated immigration
experiments.

_Bonnie A. Lucero__ is a historian of Latin America and the
Caribbean. Her research centers on the intersections of race and
gender in colonial and postcolonial contexts, especially in Cuba. She
is co-editor of _Voices of Crime: Constructing and Contesting Social
Control in Modern Latin America_ (University of Arizona Press, 2016)
and author of _Revolutionary Masculinity and Racial Inequality:
Gendering War and Politics in Cuba, 1895-1902 _(University of New
Mexico Press, 2018) and _A Cuban City, Segregated: Race and
Urbanization in the Nineteenth Century_ (University of Alabama Press,
2019). Her new book manuscript, titled _Race and Reproduction in Cuba
since Colonial Times_, is under contract with the University of
Georgia Press. Dr. Lucero currently serves as associate professor of
history and the director of the Center for Latino Studies__ at the
University of Houston-Downtown. She is from Richmond, California._

Citation: Bonnie A. Lucero. Review of Shnookal, Deborah, _Operation
Pedro Pan and the Exodus of Cuba's Children_. H-Diplo, H-Net Reviews.
May, 2021.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=55954

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#8713): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/8713
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/83035111/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES &amp; NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly &amp; permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
#4 Do not exceed five posts a day.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/21656/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to