WSJ
By
Michael M. Phillips
NAVAL STATION GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba—In 1961,
Ramon Baudin
got wind that
Fidel Castro
’s security forces were looking for him. He hid in a bus headed to
this U.S. military base, sneaked past a police checkpoint, then pleaded
with the American sentry: “Hey, buddy, I’m running away. Open the
gate.”
Mr. Baudin has been here ever since, part of a small group
of Cuban exiles who, in a hot moment of the Cold War, won permission
from the U.S. government to stay at the Guantanamo Bay Naval base until
Cuba was free.
For more than 50 years, the exiles have waited out
Mr. Castro, circumscribed by a 17-mile razor-wire fence that separates
their present from their past. They have married and divorced, had jobs
and children. They have danced at base clubs and drunk at base bars.
They play dominoes and listen to singer
Celia Cruz.
They have also seen their adopted home become synonymous with
prisoner abuse since the U.S. housed nearly 800
terror suspects here.
The ill are treated at the Navy hospital, and the dead buried
by the beach in the base cemetery, alongside sailors and Marines who
perished in the tropics 100 years ago.
“I thought I was only going to be here for six months,” said Mr. Baudin’s neighbor
Noel West,
81 years old.
With few exceptions, they have never
returned home. Many have made their way to the U.S. But a core group
chose to stay, even though they acquired U.S. citizenship or residency.
The U.S. Navy provides them free housing, utilities and medical care,
along with subsidized meals at base mess halls.
“At the time, the
Navy offered them safe haven, and we said, ‘Hey, you’re welcome to stay
here until this gets resolved,’ ” said the base commander, Navy Capt.
John Nettleton.
“And here we are half a century later, and they’re still here.”
Now,
the two-dozen remaining exiles are aging at a pace that is outstripping
the Navy’s ability to care for them. The Navy flies the seriously ill
to military hospitals in the U.S. Navy personnel have converted former
nurses’ quarters at the base hospital into a 24-hour assisted-living
facility. Government drivers transport the Cuban exiles to doctor
appointments, exercise classes, McDonald’s and the all-in-one base
store, the Navy Exchange.
U.S. troops landed at Guantanamo Bay during the Spanish-American War
of 1898, and in their victory over Spain signed a perpetual lease that
can only be canceled by mutual agreement between Havana and Washington.
Thousands
of Cubans once commuted to base jobs. But relations with the U.S.
soured quickly after Mr. Castro seized power in 1959, with the countries
severing diplomatic ties in 1961.
The Guantanamo Cubans have
been buffeted by the long conflict between the U.S. and Cuba, as well as
the personal decisions they made long ago. When Washington and Havana
were inches from war in the 1960s, the exiles found shelter on the base
but gave up their homes and families.
For now, the Guantanamo Cubans are staying put, accustomed to
the narrow but easy life on the military base, and skeptical that warmer
ties with the U.S. means the Cuban regime would treat them well if they
returned home.
“It’s kind of early,” said exile
Ramon Romero,
who took refuge on the base in 1960, at age 17. “You can never
trust Castro because he can say one thing and turn around and do another
thing.”
At 92, Mr. Baudin is one of the oldest of the 23 Cubans—known officially as special category residents—remaining on the base.
He
says he isn’t homesick. But every day after the sun comes up, he
settles into a white plastic chair under the roof of his carport and
switches on a portable radio. Despite a broken antenna, it picks up a
station from Caimanera, a town just outside of the barbed wire. Between
news broadcasts and fast-paced guarachas, he listens for obituaries of
long-lost friends.
“I can’t go there anymore,” he said of Caimanera, drawing a finger across his throat. “They’d kill me.”
A
Cuban government spokesman in Washington didn’t return calls or emails
seeking comment on whether the exiles would face legal or political
peril if they returned home.
Mr. Baudin took refuge on the base
when Cold War tension was aggravated by the botched 1961 Bay of Pigs
invasion and the Cuban missile crisis a year later.
Mr. Baudin
was engaged to a woman in Caimanera when he learned that regime security
men were after him. He never had a chance to explain his disappearance.
He heard she married a milkman.
For work, Mr. Baudin was a caddie on the base golf course, then spent
decades pressing uniforms in the laundry. He remembers good times with
his Cuban friends here, fishing in the bay and drinking rum on the
beach.
Most of them are dead now. Mr. Baudin wakes at about 3:30
each morning and meditates. Then, before dawn, he walks the streets,
talking, he says, with the ghosts of his fellow exiles: He sees Gustaff
Polica, who raised two children on Guantanamo and whose body is buried
in the hills. He spots a woman in white who went home to Cuba to die
with her family after decades at Guantanamo.
“I pray for my dead friends,” Mr. Baudin said. “They’re by my side. They watch over me.”
Most
of the Cubans live in a neighborhood of flat-roofed concrete houses
built in 1960, their pastel blues and greens faded by the sun. From his
window across the way, Mr. Romero often watches Mr. Baudin pass under a
streetlight on his predawn walk.
As a boy, Mr. Romero accompanied
his grandfather on a 30-foot banana boat, steering it along the shore.
They stopped at the base each day to sell fruits and vegetables.
By
1960, the family’s standing with the Castro government had become
precarious. Two of Mr. Romero’s cousins had been killed, and another was
languishing in prison, he said.
Mr. Romero’s grandfather, who cared for the boy, sent Mr.
Romero to live on the base. “My grandfather said, ‘Stay here, otherwise
you’ll be in jail or dead,’ ” Mr. Romero, now 71, recalled. “So I’ve
been here ever since.”
Mr. Romero at first cried himself to sleep
on the boat’s wooden seats. He eventually lived with a teacher from the
base school, and then with the man who ran the lighthouse. Over the
years, Mr. Romero worked as a janitor, firefighter and heavy-equipment
operator. His favorite job was running and fixing the projector at the
open-air base theater, the Lyceum. He retired with a small pension in
1998.
He built a dock among the mangroves behind his house and
spends hours on a pontoon boat fishing for mackerel and downing cans of
Miller Lite. He shies away from other exiles, wary of gossip. “I like to
be by myself,” he said.
Capt. Nettleton worries what will become
of the Cubans as they grow infirm. One exile was flown to the U.S. for
dialysis. “I don’t envision us forcing them to go and leave the island,
because of the commitment we previously made to them,” the captain said.
“But it may come to that.”
Navy officials can’t find the
documents that laid out the Kennedy administration’s original promise.
The broad outlines have been passed down from one base commander to the
next, reinforced by a 2006 law authorizing the Navy to “provide for the
general welfare, including subsistence, housing, and health care” of the
Cuban residents.
Exile
Phillip Gayle
has married three times since moving to the base in 1965. He
buried one wife and divorced another. He now shares a room with his
third wife in the assisted-living facility the Navy built to care for
the aging Cubans.
His wife,
Felicita Gayle,
is 95 years old. Her health troubles require round-the-clock
aides. “She put light back in my life when my life was dim,” said Mr.
Gayle, who is 80.
He works off his stress at Zumba classes in the
base gym. An energetic Spanish-speaking instructor leads the exiles—one
of them is in a wheelchair—in dance moves to the song, “I’m Sexy and I
Know It.”
Mr. Gayle thinks often of the 3-year-old son he left
behind when he fled Cuba. His son later joined the Cuban army and fought
in Angola when Mr. Castro intervened to support the leftist government
there.
“If Cuba is free and I die here, bury me over there,” Mr. Gayle said. “As long as Cuba isn’t free, bury me here.”
The Naval cemetery is set amid underground ammunition bunkers. Among
the hundreds of white-marble gravestones are 21 with the words “Cuban
Exile” engraved beneath the names.
The U.S. continues to write
the Cuban government an annual rent check of $4,085 for use of the base,
a figure set in 1934. Each year, Havana signals its disapproval of the
U.S. presence by refusing to cash it.
At one point in the 1960s,
the Castro regime planted a wall of prickly plants to stop Cubans from
seeking refuge on the base. The Americans dubbed it the Cactus Curtain.
In
1964, the Castro regime cut off water and power to the base. In
response, President
Lyndon B. Johnson
dismissed most of the Cubans who commuted onto the facility. By
that time, hundreds of Cubans—opponents of the Castro government—had
already secured the Navy’s permission to live on the base indefinitely.
By
1987, the number of Cuban exiles on the base had dropped to 80. Today,
there are 28 special category residents, including five Jamaicans who
had won the status through marriage to exiled Cubans.
Capt.
Nettleton estimates the Navy spends about $200,000 a year on salaries
for civilian aides who assist the elderly Cubans. The Navy said it had
no estimate of the cost of providing housing, utilities, medical care
and other services for the exiles.
Gloria Martinez, an 81-year-old cancer survivor, said she has
stayed on the base in part because of the promise of lifetime care. Her
late husband was a Cuban army sergeant in the 1950s who fought against
insurgents led by
Raúl Castro,
Fidel Castro’s brother and now Cuba’s president.
In 1959,
Ms. Martinez’s husband, Eduardo Martinez, got a job helping build the
base bowling alley. Each night he returned to the Cuban side of the
fence.
As the Castro regime cracked down on opponents, the
couple’s house was repeatedly searched, Ms. Martinez recalled. She kept
two hand grenades hidden in the house and said she had planned to use
them if her husband ever faced a firing squad. She sealed her husband’s
army medals in a jar and buried them under the patio.
“I told my husband they were looking for him, and he was never to come back to our home,” Ms. Martinez said.
One
day in 1961, Mr. Martinez went to work on the base—and stayed. Ms.
Martinez remained behind for a short time before making her own move.
She glued her photo onto someone else’s ID card and headed to the base,
repeating her fake name to herself: Jorgelina, Jorgelina. Jorgelina.
At a checkpoint, she recalled, the Cuban guard asked her name. Her
mind went blank and she held up the ID card. “Ah, Jorgelina,” the guard
said.
That was the last time she set foot on the Cuban side, she said. On the base she worked giving haircuts to Marines.
Their
two children, now in their 40s and living in the U.S., were born on the
base. Her husband died in 1988. When she fell ill with kidney cancer
the following year, she was treated at a U.S. military hospital in
Washington, D.C.
At the time, she worried if she moved to the
U.S. she would lose her subsidized health care. Mostly, she said, she
doesn’t want to leave Cuba, whose mountains are visible from her window.
She has sisters living in Guantanamo City, an hour’s drive from her
house, if such a drive were ever permitted.
“I’m close to my family here,” she said, “even though I don’t see them.”
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