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Anthony Timiraos - A Time To Look Back: Growing Up During the Cuban Revolution

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The current international media coverage of immigrants risking their lives to emigrate to a free country makes my personal story meaningful, educational, and relevant. A cruise to Cuba during the Christmas holidays of 2018 brought me back to my childhood when my family was being forced to adapt to a communist revolution. Then came the disappointment of a failed citizens revolt that attempted to return the country to a democracy, the subsequent raid by armed soldiers of my familys home and the eventual arrest of my father without cause. These were only a few of the events that forced my family to plan our exodus to the United States.

At the age of 8, I was sent to the U.S. alone with my brother under a program coordinated by the Catholic Charites and the U.S. State Department. Operation Pedro Pan is the largest mass exodus of children in the Western Hemisphere. We were welcomed to a new homeland by a network of generous religious organizations, corporations, private citizens, and a country that had empathy for families seeking asylum from restricted and dangerous societies. I had to live in numerous locations including a regretful stay in an orphanage for troubled young boys from broken families who could not be placed in foster homes. While I was still separated from my family, I experienced the horrors of a close encounter with nuclear war.

My book combines my experience in Cuba during the cruise, my recollections as a child, and how political events and decisions made by the Cuban, U.S. and Soviet Union governments during that time changed the course of history and affected my family directly. I wrote this book because history is important and should have a significant place in our education system. Without it, we have no platform from which to leap ahead. I wrote this book because new generations should have access to roads others have paved in the past that perhaps have made life just a bit better for everyone. I wrote this book in hopes that readers take what they can, continue to build their own path and distance themselves from mistakes of the past.

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A Time To L O O K B A C K Growing up during the Cuban revolution A memoir by - photo 1
A Time To
L O O K
B A C K
Growing up during the Cuban revolution
A memoir by
ANTHONY TIMIRAOS
A Time to Look Back is a work of nonfiction.
Some names and identifying details have been changed.
Published by Anthony Timiraos Photography, LLC
Copyright 2021 by Anthony Timiraos
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted by law, without the prior written permission of the Publisher and Author excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
Permission requests, questions, and/or error notifications relating to this book should be communicated to the author at
Website: www.atimetolookback.com
ISBN: 978-0-578-98001-0 (Hardcover)
ISBN: 978-0-578-98004-1 (ePub)
Cover photography by Anthony Timiraos
Cover design by Arthur Crispino
Editor - Ashley Sweren
Book Layout - Saravanan Ponnalyan
Table of Contents
Acknowledgment
The U.S. is built largely by immigrants from all over the world who have made significant contributions in science, medicine, arts, economy, education and every other field imaginable. Immigrants seeking a better and safer homeland were welcomed to this country with open arms. Networks of religious organizations, the non-profit community, the corporate community and local citizens worked hand in hand to help those in need get settled, begin a new life, join and contribute back to our society. Leaving your country of birth is not an easy decision to make and too often their only other choice was to risk their lives and the lives of their family.
The recent debates over immigration issues has escalated to unnecessary levels. False and unbalanced claims about the negative effects of immigration reform by a small vociferous group of individuals and politicians seems to have infected many others who once believed in empathy for those seeking to live in a free world. I am a proud immigrant and grateful for the help and support my family and I received during the early 1960s. I witnessed many other families during the same period transition from nothing to success. Blanket endorsement in support of closing our borders to those in need is contrary to the basic principles that have made the United States a place that many emulate. Yes, there has to be controls and a legal process that one must follow to emigrate. As we all look back in our family history we will find a distant relative who arrived here from a foreign land, was welcomed onto our shores and supported so they could experience a better life for themselves and for their future families.
*************
I am grateful to many friends who knew my story and encouraged me to write this book.
*************
Writing my story of a brief five-year period in my life was more challenging than I had originally expected. Going through old family photos, notes and personal records brought me back vividly to a crucial time in my life which I found strenuous to describe on paper. I was fortunate and grateful to get help from my niece and professional editor, Ashley Sweren who took the time from her busy schedule to review and edit my words to create a visual format that painted the picture of those five years. I could not have finished this book without her feedback. Thank you.
*************
This book would not have been possible if our close friends Stephen Draft and Allen Peterson had not convinced us to join them on a cruise to Cuba during the Christmas holidays of 2018. I enjoyed sharing my childhood experiences with them during our cruise. Thank you.
*************
And last but not least, the day to day encouragement, support, edits and sounding board came from my husband Arthur Crispino. I am grateful for his love and countless contributions to this book.
Dedication
To the 14,048 Pedro Pan children
who experienced a similar story.
To thousands of other children who were forced
to leave their country of birth for a better life.
To my husband
About the Author
Anthony Timiraos was born in Havana, Cuba and currently resides in South Florida with his husband Arthur who has been by his side for 51 years. He began his professional career as a Certified Public Accountant in Hartford, Connecticut. Various career advancement moves for both brought them to Boston, New York City and back to Connecticut.
A retirement to South Florida in 2003 was shortened when he accepted the position of Chief Financial Officer for the countys community foundation. After five years, he co-founded, with four other local philanthropists, Our Fund, Inc, a new community foundation serving LGBTQ+ non-profit organizations providing services in South Florida. He became their first Chief Executive Office and President in 2011 and retired in 2016 to enjoy travel and photography. Our Fund, Inc. is currently one of the largest LGBTQ+ community foundations in the country.
His love for travel and photography began in his early college years, Today, Anthony has traveled the globe extensively and enjoys capturing portraits of the people he meets and the architecture of places he visits. He is also known for his focus of the male form, which has led to the creation of a captivating body of work displayed in four books. His photography from global travels also bespeak a truly perceptive eye for ambiance and character.
Other books published:
Expose - a collection of classical nude photographs
Expose More - the continuing collection of classical nude photographs
Expose Love - photographic essay of male couples in classical nude poses
Expose Art - male nude photography at a virtual art exhibit
The Faces of Cuba - a photographic view of life in the island.
Journey to India - a photographic collection
A child on the other side of the border is no less worthy of love and compassion than my own child.
- P RESIDENT B ARACK O BAMA
Operation Pedro Pan
A mass exodus of 14,048 unaccompanied Cuban minors ages 6 to 18 to the United States between January 1960 and October 1962.
This book is 1 of 14,048 stories of Pedro Pan children and one of many other thousands of untold stories by immigrant minors from other countries whose parents only wanted freedom and a new life for their families.
Prologue
A cruise to Cuba during the Christmas holidays of 2018 brought me back 60 years to a critical period of my life between December 31, 1958, in La Habana, Cuba, and December 31, 1963, in Waterbury, Connecticut.
My story begins as a five-year-old child when my family was forced to adapt to Fidel Castros revolution. I felt their crushing disappointment when a political revolt to return democracy to Cuba failed. I experienced a military raid of our home by government officials and armed militia. I saw the look on my mothers face when we heard my father was sent to jail without cause.
I was being taught in school that capitalism was evil and the only solution was living in a socialistic and communistic society. A constant parade of military vehicles, political assassination attempts, bombings, and gunfire in my neighborhood became the norm.
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