| |
 Save Elian!: An
escapee from Communist China speaks out. The
process of learning involves a constant battle
against forgetfulness.
"I would really like to urge
the Joan Campbells and Jose Serranos to live in
Cuba for a while as ordinary subjects of Castro,
and then come back to tell the American people
that Elian is better off living in Cuba than in
the United States."
By Zehao Zhou, assistant professor, York College
of Pennsylvania.Service from the National Review
at www.nationalreview.com
The whole Elian Gonzalez saga has been an
eye-opening experience for me. I grew up in a
Communist country myself, and I resent to this
day the brainwashing, indoctrination, and
government abuses I was subjected to as a child;
I naively thought Elian would naturally be
granted the privilege to stay in the U.S. and
never have to go through the ordeal of growing up
in a Communist country as I did.
But I was wrong. I watched with disbelief as a
freedom-loving American public sided with a
practicing Communist, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, just
because he was Elian's father. I was
flabbergasted to see U.S. Representatives Maxine
Waters, D-Calif., and Sheila Jackson-Lee,
D-Texas, appearing on national television
speaking in favor of returning Elian from the
land of the free to the land of despair and
hopelessness. I was dismayed to see Rev. Joan
Campbell, former head of the National Council of
Churches, refusing to acknowledge that Cuba is
not a free country where her fellow Christians
are persecuted. I found it surreal that Castro's
government is in full agreement with the Clinton
Administration. Obviously, when the world's most
notorious dictator and the leader of the world's
largest democracy see eye to eye, something must
be wrong.
Needless to say, I find all this perplexing. The
United Nations human-rights forum adopted a
resolution on April 19 denouncing Cuba for
repressing political-dissent and religious
groups. The resolution was, interestingly, tabled
by former Communist countries the Czech
Republic and Poland and co-sponsored by
the United States. Cuba has also recently made
the very short list of "Worst of the
Worst" nations in the famed Freedom House
Human Rights Survey. The Cuba Elian is being sent
back to is, according to U.S. State Department's
most recent Human Rights Report on Cuba, a place
where "education is grounded in Marxist
ideology. State organizations and schools are
charged with the 'integral formation of children
and youth' and the Government employs forced
labor, including that by children."
The same report clearly indicates: "Cuban
Government continues to intimidate, detain, and
arrest dissidents and human rights activists.
Hundreds of political prisoners remain in Cuban
jails..."
Why on earth are the American government and
public so gung-ho about sending Elian back to
Cuba, where he will face the certain destiny of
brainwashing and indoctrination? One newspaper
commentator in York, PA, even suggested that
Elian should have been sent back to Cuba within
twenty minutes of his arrival in the U.S.
I racked my brains for an answer, and the answer
has to be that most Americans have no idea what
it is like living in a Communist/totalitarian
regime. They know Cuba is a Communist country,
but that is too vague a concept for them and
therefore doesn't bother them. They know a lot
more about the father-son relationship and the
importance of abiding by the law. They go by what
they know best: Hence the support for sending
Elian back.
But the American public are not alone in their
lack of knowledge about life under Communism, and
it is difficult to fault people for what they
don't know. Education can, I hope, make a
difference.
In the late 70s and early 80s, when
China first allowed some foreign experts to come
in to teach English, nearly all who came were
leftists, radicals, or Maoists in their home
countries of the U.S., West Germany, Australia,
Canada, and so on. They flocked to the Mecca for
their beliefs and causes, only to be
disappointed, disillusioned, and sometimes
shocked by what they learned and experienced
about true life in a Communist/totalitarian
country. They didnt leave China as
Communist sympathizers.
Ever since I came to the United States 12 years
ago, I have run into numerous people in this
country who extol the Castro regime. They have
never been to Cuba, or have paid only short
visits to Cuba--where they were shown what Castro
wanted them to see (thats what happens in
China and North Korea too). I have made a point
of confronting them and challenging their
knowledge about real life in a totalitarian
regime.
I would really like to urge the Joan Campbells
and Jose Serranos to live in Cuba for a while as
ordinary subjects of Castro, and then come back
to tell the American people that Elian is better
off living in Cuba than in the United States.
Before 1989 when the Chinese government
killed the students I met many Americans
who actually told me that Communist China was a
great country and didn't believe what I told them
was actually happening there. After Tiananmen,
many came to me telling how embarrassed they were
that they had to see blood to believe what I told
them about life in China.
The process of learning involves a constant
battle against forgetfulness. If we succumb to
amnesia or choose to ignore what we remember,
then we will pay a price for it, sooner or later.
In Communist China, my parents never had control
over the fate and future of their children. I was
sent to a reeducation-through-labor farm for six
years, against my will and my parents' will; my
brother was sent to the remote countryside where
he worked like a slave for 10 years against his
will and my parents' will; hundreds of millions
of Chinese parents had no control over their
children's future, because the Communist
government had the first say about what should
happen to them, not the parents.
Anyone who would send Elian back to Cuba will
have to settle it with their own conscience. I
have no doubt in my mind that Elian will be used
by Castro as a propaganda tool for as long as the
regime there lasts. Elian will be made to feel
ashamed of his mother who died for him. Juan
Miguel Gonzalez will have little to say about
what should happen to Elian, but Fidel will.
Whatever will happen to Elian once he is sent
back to Cuba will come back to haunt those who
sent him back.
Sadly, the only winner of this whole saga is
Fidel Castro, courtesy of the American government
and public.
|
|