Top Honors For Elian's Dad
Cuba finally has a communist hero who is not known for his bravery in armed combat.
The courts and the media were instead the proving ground for Juan Miguel Gonzalez, father of Elian Gonzalez, the 6-year-old who was the focus of a seven month-long international custody battle.
Juan Miguel Gonzalez won the fight to bring his son back home to Cuba and Wednesday night was honored in Havana by no less than President Fidel Castro himself.
Gonzalez had tears in his eyes as the Cuban leader cited him for "heroic behavior" and pinned on his suit the Carlos Manuel de Cespedes medal.
![]() Reuters The face of Elian looms large as his father receives an award from Fidel Castro. |
Gonzalez has said that anti-communist Cuban exiles in Miami, who abhor Castro and his government, had offered him $2 million if he would stay in the United States with Elian. Gonzalez, a member of Cuba's Communist Party, also said that he was offended by the offer.
"His conduct was filled with glory and he gained for always the admiration of his people," Castro proclaimed to the crowd gathered to honor Gonzalez.
"A small boy and a humble Cuban father, whom very few people knew just a few months ago, came back converted into gigantic moral symbols of our homeland," Castro told the audience of 5,000, including top government and party officials.
Then, directly addressing Gonzalez, Castro said: "You showed that in the decisive moments in the history of a country, the conduct of a man can overcome all of the traitors put together."
![]() Reuters Fidel Castro praised Juan Miguel Gonzalez as an inspiration to the Cuban people. |
"I owe this to all the people of Cuba," Gonzalez, 31, said, following a standing ovation. "I have not done anything out of this world. I have done what any other father would have."
Ricardo Alarcon, president of Cuba's National Assembly and Gonzalez's adviser during the fight for his son, earlier read a resolution by Cuba's ruling Council of State selecting Gonzalez for the award.
"Juan Miguel Gonzalez stoicaly endured the most cruel suffering of his son, of himself and of his family," it said. He "resisted with his entire being the threats, the pressures and the slanders and rejected with honor the intents to bribe and of force, always maintaining his fidelity to the nation."
Several hours before, state television aired images of a timid but happy Elian as he rode his bicycle and tried on a pair of inline skates in his hometown, then splashed in a pool at a nearby resort.
![]() Reuters Elian Gonzalez plays with friends on the Fourth of July. |
The video clips showed scores of residents cheering as a bus carrying the family drove down the streets of the small port city, about 90 miles east of Havana. At his school, Elian was greeted by his classmates, and a teacher leaned down to show him pictures and something written in a book.
As soft music played in the background, the 6-year-old was shown curiously rummaging through his clothes and toys at the homes of his paternal and maternal grandparents. His face lit up when he seemed to recognize toys he had not seen since November, when his mother took him with her on a boat bound for the United States.
![]() Reuters Juan Miguel Gonzalez is a proud papa as Elian visits him at work. |
Cuba says Elian gave a human face to its four-decade political battle with the United States, allowing many ordinary Americans their first close look at the communist nation. The case also underscored U.S. immigration policies that Cuba says encourages its residents to make illegal attempts to reach the United States.
"With Elian, coverage has been given to an affair that habitually was a theme only for political scientists and specialists," Alarcon said in an interview published Wednesday in a special newspaper supplement about Elian.
For the first time, he said, many Americans heard of the Cuban Adjustment Act, a 1966 law that allows Cubans who reach U.S. soil to apply for permanent residency, even if they entered the country illegally.
Despite the televised images taken by a sole government cameraman, all other journalists have been kpt away from the boy since shortly after he arrived.
Cuban officials have promised to prevent the kind of massive media coverage Elian Gonzalez experienced during the five months he stayed with his Miami relatives while they fought all the way to the Supreme Court in a losing battle to keep him in the United States.
CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report



