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n 1997, Maria Tuma, an art teacher at the Miami-Dade
County Public Schools who was nominated as the
teacher of the year in 1994, was fired after 22
years of service. Her mortal sin was giving
Bibles to six children.
She sighted her “freedom of
expression” given by the 1st Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States. The County
School Board alleged “insubordination.”
She says, “the 1st Amendment
supposedly allows freedom of expression, but
they cancelled my freedom.”
In 1997 she suffered hearings
resembling those in Communist Russia and Nazi
Germany in which her sentence like in a
totalitarian country “was already predetermined
and didn’t even allow my lawyer to defend me,”
she says.
The Miami-Dade County Public
School Board banned the Bible because someone
found it offensive. And nothing offensive to
blacks, Jews, and they are very sensitive not to
offend other minorities – even illegal
immigrants - but when something offensive to
Cuban Americans is involved, they stubbornly
refuse to bulge.
Meanwhile, this year, a
parent found two books in the Miami-Dade School
Libraries that have caused uproar in the Cuban
American community in Miami. They are A Visit to
Cuba and Cuban Kids.
Both books portray Castro’s
Cuba as if it is a free country in which
everything is fine and dandy, food, clothing,
education and health care is no problem, and
everybody is very happy. This is of course
inaccurate; therefore these books are giving the
children misinformation and propaganda.
These books are not
contributing to education but to
“dis-education,” contrary to the goals of a
normal school system. Notice that I say
“normal.”
Americans, sadly misinformed
by the liberal U.S. media and the Marxist
professors very much in control of our learning
centers, may swallow these books. But Cuban
Americans - with firsthand experience of 47
years living under Castro’s boots - cannot sit
idly by while these patently erroneous books are
presented as valid by a U.S. school system.
It is not an issue of Cuban
American imposing censorship; it is a matter of
facts vs. lies and deceptions with the purpose
to misinform.
And, by the way, these books
are extremely offensive for Castro’s victims –
which Dr. Armando Lago has been painstakingly
documenting for ten years and which totals over
100,000 deaths including about 32 U.S. citizens
whose bodies are exhibited in Castro’s museums
in Cuba.
Not yet documented are the
deaths that Castro caused all over Central and
South America, and all the deaths of blacks his
army caused in Angola – Castro used
bacteriological arms to exterminate them – as
well as in Ethiopia, other places in Africa and
the Middle East. Also not yet documented are the
deaths he caused in the U.S. due to the drug
trafficking which Castro fostered and aided
since the early 1960s.
How ironic that in an area
heavy with Cuban Americans, the School Board
insists on maintaining books that are so utterly
known by a major component of the community to
be inaccurate, not to mention offensive.
After living in the U.S. for
39 years, I am painfully aware that the liberal
Media, the academic professors, elitist
intellectuals and Hollywood circles have created
a double standard in relation to Cuba and Cuban
Americans. It is all right to refer to us with
derogatory terms and to malign us in public
forums.
It is all right to laugh at
us and to censor the tragedy Cuba has been
experiencing since Castro hijacked the
democratic political change that all Cubans
wanted in order to get rid of Batista’s six-year
dictatorship.
So with all these powerful
enemies around have been very difficult and will
continue being difficult to get our message
across to the American people. But we will
continue and will not rest until democracy,
freedom and justice return to Cuba.
On June 14, 2006, at 1 p.m.
the final appeal of a Miami-Dade father to the
School Board to remove these offensive books
from his child school library will take place.
So we have to wait and see what will be the
response of the School Board this time.
Meanwhile, on June 9 at 2:30
p.m., a Cuban American pro-democracy group,
Vigilia Mambisa, held a press conference and
presented Manny Añon, a new candidate to run for
the Miami-Dade School Board, for District 6. So
that officially is the beginning of the campaign
against Agustin J. Barrera, the incumbent
president of the Miami-Dade School Board who has
been opposed to the removal of these two books.
That’s the way Cubans Americans work in a
democratic system.
David Rosenthal of Vigilia
Mambisa says that Barrera “has not understood
how to represent those who elected him.”
Although I have never lived
in Miami, I join my fellow Cuban Americans in
Miami in their objective for a satisfactory
resolution of the issue of these two inaccurate
books at the Miami-Dade School Libraries.
© 2006 ABIP |