The patriarch of a large family now scattered across the United States,
Rumbaut is part of a tight-knit community of more than 8,000 Cuban exiles
lured to the Houston area in the 1960s and '70s by jobs in medicine,
education, oil and banking.
South Florida may be home to 600,000 Cubans, the largest Cuban
community outside the island, but after 40 years of exile, the Cuban
diaspora extends all over the United States -- and to some of the
unlikeliest spots around the world.
Australia. Sweden. Russia. Some will tell you this is a true story:
There's a Cuban refugee in Cairo who makes a living giving camel rides to
tourists. His story has traveled in Cuban circles all over Europe and back
to Miami and Havana.
``I was in Munich with my wife when we came upon a group at a park
singing and dancing to La Guantanamera,'' said Rumbaut, who also has heard
the camel story. ``And on an excursion, we were taken to a Cuban club
named Babalu. I have found Cubans in the most unexpected places. We are
scattered all over.'' A European presence
``People think it's very glamorous to live here, but we are very
misunderstood in Europe,'' said Valdes, who often appears in public forums
to talk about human rights abuses in Cuba.
Among the more recent exiles in Europe are los gusanos rojos -- the red
worms -- the nickname for young Cubans who were studying in Moscow in the
early days of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring), and
never returned to Cuba. In the chaos as the Soviet bloc broke up in 1989,
many escaped to Sweden, where the Cuban community is now estimated to
number 1,000. Others found refuge in a united Germany after the fall of
the Berlin Wall.
A number of them found their way to Spain and have become part of a
Cuban community that officials estimate at more than 10,000, although
Cuban activists believe it is three times as large.
``The earliest waves of exiles had very close ties to Spain and were
either Spaniards by birth or the children of Spaniards,'' said writer
Carlos Alberto Montaner, who has lived in Madrid since the 1960s. ``Now
there are Cubans from all walks of life here. There used to be only one
Cuban restaurant in Madrid, and now there are about six. There are
literary magazines and many successful musicians. There's even a Cuban
bordello in Barcelona.'' Miami is focal point
No place has been more marked by four decades of Cuban immigration than
South Florida -- the official waiting room of exile, where Cubans dream,
wait and plot the end of Castro's rule. Each exile wave -- the Freedom
Flights of the late 1960s and early '70s, the Mariel boatlift of 1980, the
rafters of the '90s -- injected the region with a new dose of Cubanness
and renewed the painful cycle of separation, exile and family
reunification.
``In Miami, you sweat and suffer more intensely the passions of the
Cuban problem,'' said Roberto Fontanillas Roig, exiled in Venezuela for
almost 38 years.
Venezuela is another traditional exile outpost experiencing a constant
flow of Cuban refugees.
``Our exile here began with a stampede in the early '60s when Venezuela
was one of the countries that gave Cubans political refuge,'' said
Fontanillas, who is director of the Cuban Venezuelan Democratic
Foundation, which holds forums on Cuba and sponsors cultural activities.
``Now you could say that there are several Cuban communities -- even one
made up of immigrants who are here primarily for economic reasons.'' Bitterness in Peru
Ignacio Ramirez was one of nearly 10,000 Cubans who took refuge in the
Peruvian Embassy in Havana in April 1980, demanding political asylum and
permission to leave the island. But unlike others who made it to Florida
on the Mariel boatlift, Ramirez never did. He ended up in Lima as part of
a group of nearly 1,000 Cubans granted refugee status by the Peruvian
government.
Ramirez, who works at odd jobs such as selling fried banana chips on
Lima beaches in the summer, said he doesn't like living in the Andean
nation.
``When we first arrived here, I thought it would be only for a short
time and then we would be allowed to go to Florida like the rest. We were
tricked,'' said Ramirez, who lives in the downtown Lima neighborhood of
Barrios Altos, where many Cuban refugees settled.
Another group of about 175 were given homes in a United Nations-built
compound on the southern outskirts of the city. And more than 600 other
Cubans who have migrated to the country over the past few years, according
to Peruvian government statistics, are happier and have made their mark in
everything from theater to sports and cuisine.
Michael Garcia, a young actor, went to Peru two years ago to try his
luck in television after he met Peruvians in Cuba who said he could easily
get work there. He has landed work as a model and dancer, forming part of
the cast of Peru's most famous TV shows.
``The situation in Cuba is very bad -- you can't get any work,'' Garcia
said. ``Nothing will change until the dictatorship ends.'' Across the Pacific Ocean
Many of the estimated 200 Cubans living mostly in Sydney and Melbourne
moved to Australia in the late 1960s and early '70s after a long voyage
that took them first to Spain. The exiles had planned to travel to the
United States, but after U.S. visas became difficult to obtain and jobs in
Spain became scarce, they accepted generous offers from the Australian
government to resettle there.
The Australians paid the Cubans' air fare, found them jobs and offered
them free medical care and education, a 38-hour work week, subsidized
housing, a guaranteed month's vacation and many holidays.
Other Cubans, and some Cuban Americans, have found their way to
Australia through the twists and turns of life.
``Australians have an expression for when the tide has come in and
taken everything away and left only one thing behind,'' said writer Olga
Lorenzo, who lived in Hialeah until she went away to college, met an
Australian, married and moved to Melbourne. ``They say, `He left me washed
up like a shag on a rock.' I don't know what the shag is, but I feel like
some bit of debris left washed up over here on this far shore.''
Two years ago, Lorenzo published in Australia the novel The Rooms in
My Mother's House, an exile family's saga that links the Cuban worlds she
has known -- Miami, Havana and her own little slice of Australia.
To keep each other informed, the Australian Cubans publish a newsletter
named Mambi after the insurgents of Cuba's war of independence. But
there's not much news about Australians in it.
It is all about Cuba, the United States and especially Miami. Traditions, culture survive
In Houston, an area better known for its Mexican heritage than its
slender ties to Cuba, exiles raised money to place a bust of patriot Jose
Marti in the city's central park. Several cultural clubs have been
established, and tertulias, informal gatherings to discuss all things
Cuban, take place monthly. Cubans in the news elsewhere are invited to
make presentations. And every year, on the feast day of Our Lady of
Charity, Cubans organize a special Mass in the cathedral.
Similar cultural events take place all over the country -- staged by
Cubans yearning for their roots.
``I take my two daughters twice a week to rehearse in a comparsa [Cuban
line dance] 45 miles away from home so they can also maintain our
culture,'' said Nilo Lipiz, a Cuban exile who has lived in Southern
California for 30 years.
Lipiz, one of eight Cuban administrators and professors who work for
the Rancho Santiago Community College District in Orange County, gets
together with other Cubans at least once a month.
``It is interesting that although we are [almost] fully assimilated to
the mainstream majority, we perceive ourselves as different,'' Lipiz said.
``People cannot tell who we are by our looks, but they might be able to
tell by how we interact with each other . . . hablando Cuban
Spanglish and carrying on four or more loud conversations at once!'' Miami-New York ties
But mostly, the Cubans in the Northeast are spread out in big and small
communities, and they circulate among groups of friends.
``People are more integrated into the mainstream, but without a doubt
we can't help walking in some place and hearing someone speak a Spanish
that's different from anyone else's and say, `Hey, they're Cuban,' ''
said Raul Arrazcaeta, a Cuban-American investment banker on Wall Street.
``You bond more quickly.''
Many of the Cubans living abroad and in other parts of the United
States visit Miami as often as they can.
``My whole family goes to Miami several times a year,'' said Maria
Cristina Garcia, a professor of history at Texas A&M University who as an
exile child grew up in the Bahamas, Miami and Puerto Rico before the
family settled in Texas. ``My mother calls it La Meca [The Mecca]. If you
can't go to Cuba, you go to Miami.''
Fontanillas, who lives in Venezuela and has an apartment in Key
Biscayne, visits his mother in Coral Gables every six weeks or so. He also
spends the Christmas holidays here with his Venezuelan wife. Montaner has
an apartment and a business office on Brickell Avenue and shuttles across
the Atlantic between Miami and Madrid as if he were just traveling across
the state. A family gathering
After Ruben Rumbaut's wife, Carmita, died of cancer, the entire Rumbaut
clan flew to Miami for a special farewell tribute.
The children, spouses and grandchildren came from Texas, Michigan and
Washington, D.C. Together with relatives and friends from Miami, they
rented a bus and drove to Key West in a small caravan. They ate lunch in a
Cuban restaurant, then set sail in a boat for the Florida Straits.
They could not take Carmita's ashes to Cuba, as would have been her
wish, but that July afternoon -- on the 37th anniversary of the Rumbauts'
arrival in the United States -- the family sailed as close to Cuba as they
could.
Then, Ruben Rumbaut took the ashes of his beloved wife and scattered
them in the turquoise sea separating Cuba and Florida.
``At that moment, seven dolphins jumped from the sea,'' Rumbaut said,
his voice breaking with emotion. ``It was a beautiful afternoon of many
colors.''
Herald special correspondent Lucien O. Chauvin in Lima contributed to
this report.Separated yet together, exiles span many lands
Copyright © 1998 The Miami Herald