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OPINION

A Refugee Family’s First 4th of July

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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C.B. Schmelter/Chattanooga Times Free Press via AP

“With Latest Nativist Rhetoric, Trump Takes America Back To Where It Came From,” (NPR headline, July 16, 2019.)

“Xenophobe. In Chief,” Democrats blast Trump's plan to suspend immigration to U.S.” (NBC headline, April, 2020.)

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Remember all that? For four years the Democrat-media complex claimed America was cursed with a “xenophobic” and “nativist” president, who feared and loathed refugees. Yet the Americans who voted for him at the highest rate (higher even than native-born “whites”) were foreign-born one-time refugees. Think I jest? Check this out. 

I guess it’s one of those “you had to be there” scenarios. To wit: 

All the “POPS!” and “BANGS!” from fireworks had my single (for the time) mother edgy. Firing-squads had been murdering thousands of Cubans ‘round the clock. Other thousands of Cubans waged a lonely and hopeless guerrilla war against the massively-armed forces of Soviet proxies Che Guevara and the Castro brothers. 

All this drama was taking place 90 miles from U.S. shores—not that anyone would know from the “reporting” by the U.S. media. From these intrepid gumshoes Americans mostly learned of Castro’s heart-warming “literacy campaign,” as transcribed from Cuba’s KGB-mentored propaganda ministry.  

All those bombs and gunshots were only months distant on July 4th, 1962–the Fontova family’s first Fourth in the U.S. We landed in south Louisiana. Castro’s propaganda constantly hammered that such areas of the U.S. were infested essentially by “gun and Bible-clinging people with ingrained antipathy to people who aren’t like them.” In the following five decades this dovetailing of Castroite and Democratic “talking points” became very noticeable to Cubans in the U.S.

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But refugees can’t be choosy. New Orleans then hosted a huge NASA project, attracting blue collar workers from surrounding states, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi. Here’s backwoods states synonymous with hate and murderous bigotry–and here’s the social class most prone to it.

After all, Peter Fonda says Easy Rider was gunned down here. Oliver Stone says JFK’s murder was hatched here by “rabid right-wingers!” both Cuban-exile and American. In brief, showcasing the South’s villainy is a long-time fetish of Hollywood directors and screenwriters. We’d be lucky to get a welcome with mere tar and feathers. Firebombs and nooses were more likely.

My father was one of Castro’s tens of thousands of political prisoners at the time, listening to the gallant Che’s firing squads every dawn, wondering when his turn would come. My mother wondered too, but she didn’t have much time to indulge in things like despair. She was alone in a strange country, a penniless and friendless political refugee, with three kids to somehow feed, shelter, and school. Two nephews were also under a death sentence after fighting to the last bullet at the Bay of Pigs. (Actually, we had it relatively easy. Most Cuban refugee families of the time can relate to stuff ten times as hair-raising and heartbreaking.)

But a knock on the door in those early days and a burly stranger visible through the window wasn’t exactly comforting. We hadn’t been living in the humble apartment complex for long when it came. We peeked through the window, “AHHH!!  Is that a WHITE HOOD?!!

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No, it’s Mrs. Jeffrey from next door with her bleached blonde bouffant.

“And what’s she carrying? – AAAHHH!! Is that a shotgun?! A rope?! A bomb?!”

No. It’s a basket of fried chicken. And that’s Mr. Jeffrey behind her. He’s coming to offer help translating that job application.

The Jeffreys were originally from Texas, yahoo central to liberals (except for Austin.) To us, it was Mrs. Jeffrey with her big basket of food, and more importantly, with her big Texas smile. A few days later she took my mother shopping with her. Next day she consoled her during another sob-fest.

Mr. Jeffrey was a WWII vet and knew some Spanish. I’ll never forget him sitting next to my mother, swerving from fiery rage to silent sympathy while apologizing to her in a heavy Texas twang for JFK’s Bay of Pigs backstab- as if it was his doing, as if he hadn’t done enough for others’ freedom already!

But as Mr. Jeffrey saw it that was his flag on those ships off the Cuban coast in April 1961, his flag on the planes overhead. And his president who gave them the order to scram as Soviet artillery and armor poured in and Cuban patriots fought to the last bullet. Mr. Jeffrey had seen our flag go up over Manila. Dozens of his buddies who helped carry it fell along the way. He saw what that fluttering canvas meant to the delirious crowds who screamed and wept and cheered, knowing that freedom was at hand. The thought of it ordered to betray a freedom fight enraged and sickened him.

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The following week comes another knock……”AAHH!!…. Something’s on FIRE outside! Is that a burning CROSS?!

No it’s Mr. Simpson’s barbecue. He always liked a BIG fire. (Remember Eddie Murphy’s early skit about his uncle Gus barbecuing? “Now THAT’S a FIRE!”)

That always reminded me of our upstairs neighbor Mr. Simpson’s fire. It was Mrs. Simpson at the door, asking us over—in that hilarious (to us) Southern drawl–to share in that mountain of chicken and burgers the Simpsons and the Jeffreys were scorching to celebrate America’s birthday. The Simpsons hailed from Birmingham. To liberals, no doubt, that’s exclusively the land of Bull Connor and fire hoses and nothing more.

Our new neighbors knocked often. And this was in the very gizzard of the “bigoted” and “hate-filled” South. When you’ve just fled a Stalinist hell with the clothes on your back, when you find yourself in a strange land, penniless and not knowing the language, when nights are a sleepless, mind-churning marathon of worries: “Did Uncle Pepe fall to the firing squad this dawn? Is cousin Manolo still in hiding? Where’s the next meal coming from? (None of today’s lavish federal refugee “benefits” existed at the time.) How on earth will we pay for the kids schooling?” With all this going on, that stuff helps, believe me. (I speak here for my parents’ generation. I was seven years old. Seemed like a Disney adventure to me.)

Later in the suburbs, another family became even more special. Years before, the lady had worked at a local plant riveting the hulls on the famous Higgins boats, designed in New Orleans for oil companies to traverse the shallow coastal marshes, then tweaked for work on such as Omaha Beach and Iwo Jima.

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These were “the boats that won WWII,” according to Ike. One such boat carried her fiancé to shore at Salerno, another at Anzio. He clambered out of yet another Higgins boat after crossing the Rhine, where a burst from a German machine gun riddled his legs.

Almost 40 years later, I watched him limping up the aisle, grimacing slightly with each step. Then he broke into a huge smile– while handing me his daughter as a bride.

We landed in the South, but I’ve heard compatriots relate similar stories literally “from sea to shining sea.”

Nobody called them “the Greatest Generation” back then. I guess the perspective wasn’t there in the 60s. But thousands of then-destitute Cubans recall them as “el pueblo que nos abrio los brazos”  (The people who opened their arms to us.)

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