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Walking on Freedom Road
The Coconut Telegraph ^ | November 1, 2001 | Luis Gonzalez

Posted on 11/12/2001 7:21:17 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez

It is a thing of beauty when plans work out to perfection; there was little traffic and plenty of parking on the side streets, I wanted to get there early, and have a little coffee before everything got rolling. Still, even then, almost three hours before the official start of the event, others were there. Others with the same idea that I had, get there early, get a good parking spot, find a cup of Cuban coffee, and watch the crowd build up.

I parked near the starting point of the march, close to the Bay of Pigs Memorial, the modest monument to the memory of the men betrayed by John Fitzgerald Kennedy so long ago. We don’t forget, and don’t forgive easily, the monument is there as a constant reminder, and a warning; what we do, we do because it is the right thing to do, and we do it on our own. Expect nothing from no one; give your all because anything less is unacceptable.

I found my cup of coffee and walked to a corner to take in the view, the sky was overcast, and the thought crossed my mind that the attendance may be affected by the inclement weather, the forecast had warned of afternoon rain showers; down here, the weather guy could just record that and play it every afternoon, August through October. I took in the view and breathed in the air, a deep, filling breath, I was breathing in the air of my Little Havana, I was cleansing my soul.

I thought about the author across the ocean, on the other side of the sea of tears, on a land that I may never set foot on again, who wrote that an exile is only left with the sea for a country, and that a man who is forced to leave his land is like a plant that is pulled up by the roots and taken to other soil. The plant may be replanted, even flourish somewhere else, and may bear fruit, but it will never be the same. It is a sad and beautiful thought, he writes of many such sad and beautiful things, his words poetry to the mind and salve for the wounded soul. But he has never set foot on a small street in the heart of Miami, he’s never felt the asphalt beneath his feet, he’s never walked on Calle Ocho.

The crowd was building, many stood and voiced concerns about the weather; the very old looked with knowing eyes to the sky and shook their heads. “Soon it will rain”—an old man behind me—“I can smell it.”

I could too, and for the first time, gave thought to the umbrella safely stashed in the trunk of my car a few blocks away; too far away and too late to retrieve it.

The street was filling rapidly; the time was almost at hand. A little behind me I spied a man on a wheelchair working his way to the street corner where I stood, he was wearing a t-shirt with the words “United We Stand” written across his chest, as he came closer, his Purple Heart became noticeable, as did his sacrifice. I watched him roll unto the crowd and disappear from view. El Nuevo Herald found him as well, and talked to the 56 year-old veteran, whose leg was lost in a far away place. He was still a refugee when he volunteered to fight for his new home, barely a man when he walked the rice paddies. Today, he’s willing to fight again.

The rain began to fall, and the crowd became a red, white, and blue sea of humanity moving east, I unfurled my small flag and joined the tens of thousands on the asphalt.

That’s when I saw him, some yards ahead of me.

From the back, he could have been my grandfather; his white guayabera was impossibly starched, bright white, fine linen perfection…what a proper guayabera should be. Short sleeved because it was a daytime affair. Trousers pressed to a hair-splitting crease, front, and back, shoes shined to perfection just a few minutes before by one of the street-side shoeshines. All accentuated by a slightly cocked, impeccable straw Panama. Give or take a few pounds, I’ve just described nearly every Cuban grandfather that’s ever held that title.

He wasn’t moving real fast, but it struck me that it was not due to any physical limitation, but rather a deliberate, dignified pace, as befitting a proper gentleman of his years. In his left hand, he held an umbrella, and in his right, he held Old Glory.

As I caught up with him, we reached a spot where the crowd grew noticeably thicker, and we all slowed down to his pace. I walked next to him for a few minutes, and then he asked me if I would like to share his umbrella. I gracefully turned down the offer, as I was already soaked.

He introduced himself, I can’t for the life of me remember his name, and extended the offer in case I changed my mind. The crowd was moving much slower at this part, and I could see the flags flying high in the distance, the speakers’ platform was a few blocks away still, I expected the Master of Ceremonies to be the incomparable Armando Perez-Roura, a man of fire and passion who a little over a year before, had electrified a crowd of mourners, a sea of black in our darkest day, and reminded us all that our turn would come in November, that they could take one little boy, but they would never take our city, that a day of reckoning was near.

I looked to the old man and asked him if he knew who the speakers would be, and if Armando was going to be here.

“Yes, Armando will be here”—he said.

We walked slowly in the rain, and I took in the atmosphere, the bodegas, the restaurants, and pharmacies, all with familiar names, names that sounded like home, and family. The sea of humanity around me growing denser with each step, yellow rain slickers, umbrellas, and flags moving solemnly in the rain, one people, with one purpose; old, young, middle aged, fathers, sons, mothers, daughters, every age, every hue, everyone there to be counted.

The first wave reached us about three blocks away from the platform, from behind, building from a rumble to a roar. Tens of thousands of voices in unison, “Bush, amigo. Miami está contigo!” then “USA! USA!” The sound came up from the asphalt and through my bones, exploding as it reached my head, and I was shouting along and waiving my Stars and Stripes high above my head.

Muchachón. Hold the flag in your right hand. Never on your left.”

His voice snapped me out of my trance, the old man was smiling, and looking at me, he spoke again.

“I hope you don’t mind me advice, but you should hold it in your right hand. I don’t think many of us here like the left very much.”

I smiled and changed my flag to the right.

“Gracias, I guess I had never thought of that.”

“De nada.”

There were a few moments of silence as we realized that the crowd had now stopped, this was as close as we would come. The old man spoke again.

“The crowd is as big as the Elián march, bigger than the one in ’98 against lifting the embargo.”

“You must come to all these”—I remarked—“I wish I had the time. I was here for the rally the week after Elián was taken. I wish I could do more.”

“We all do what we can,”—he said—“we do what we can because we can, because we are free to do.”

“This little street has sure seen a lot of marches.”

The rain had let up temporarily, and he was busy examining the clouds, he nodded his head, and closed the umbrella. In typical South Florida fashion, the rain didn’t cool things down, but rather added to the day’s humidity. My newfound friend removed his banded Panama, and wiped his forehead with an embroidered, linen handkerchief.

“This street has seen a lot of everything”—he said as he carefully folded the handkerchief—“it has witnessed our history as a people without a home. It watched us carve out a home on foreign soil with hard work, and by the grace of God.”

“This street watched us arrive”—he continued as he replaced the handkerchief in his back pocket—“penniless and frightened, thinking that what was going on back in Cuba was temporary, and that our stay here would be temporary as well. It watched as we realized that we weren’t going back.”

I shifted my weight from one foot to another, and continued listening.

“I remember the first cafetería, the first bodega, and the first restaurant. I remember listening to news from Playa Girón and the Bay of Pigs on a little radio standing on a corner about two blocks back. I remember the men coming home, and the bitterness. This street watched all that too.”

“I imagine sometimes that the asphalt is cured, like good bacaláo, or tasajo/I>, cured by the salt from the tears of the tens of thousands whose loved one never made it across, and from the tens of thousands more with loved ones who died far away, without saying goodbye. This street watched all that too.”

“Sometimes, I think that exiles are motherless children, walking the earth all alone”—I had to say something that sounded intelligent, and the words from the dissident author from my hometown came to mind—“I read that once.”

“That’s a beautiful thought, and a sad one. But I don’t think that it applies to our people. We are fortunate children, born of a loving mother, and raised by a generous, adopted one.”

The squeal of a microphone being turned on attracted everyone’s attention, all heads turned to the speaker’s platform in the distance. There was a moment of silence, and then, the familiar voice rose to the skies, defying the rain. The voice of Miami and of my people, Armando speaks for all of us, and to all of us.

I don’t remember his words; I remember our shouting, the flag waving, and the wordless sense of unity and purpose. We stood in the rain, a people united in the love of our home…this home, this America, this loving mother who took orphans from the sea, who held us in her arms, and with love and infinite care, mended our wounds.

Now, now it was time to stand and pay back what was given so freely to us, and we stood, defiant and proud, sending a message to the rest of our brothers and sisters across the nation, and the same people that a few months before had been demonized, marginalized, and trivialized by an unjust administration, and its media, stood to be counted.

We stood in the rain for the firefighters, and the police. We said prayers for the heroic dead in the streets of Manhattan, in the skies over Washington and over Pennsylvania. We roared with one voice as the message from President Bush was read. We pledge undying allegiance to the flag, of the United States of America, and for the Republic, for which it stands…and we were one Nation, under God and rainy skies.

The rain let up and the speeches wound down; all the songs had been sung, all the enemies condemned, all the heroes lauded, and the crowd began to disperse. I looked to my newfound friend and the thought struck me that he may need to sit and rest for a spell.

I found a cement planter on the sidewalk, and asked him if he’d like to sit for a few minutes, he accepted and walked with me. He took the fine linen handkerchief from his pocket, and laid it out on the makeshift bench, we sat and watched the people in silence for a few minutes.

“This was a good thing”—he broke the comfortable silence—“a good thing that was done. This street has seen one more little piece of history today.”

We waved to a group walking by carrying an immense Stars and Stripes over their heads, and shouted “Viva Cuba Libre!” they shouted “USA!” “USA!” back at us, in unison with a group of Haitians walking by their side. I pointed out the Vietnam veteran in his wheelchair that I had encountered earlier slowly working his way back down the street.

“I am tired, I know that you must be as well”—I looked at my watch—“do you need a ride somewhere? I could go get my car and come back for you.”

He laughed and told me that his ride was meeting him not far, in a few minutes, and that maybe they could give me a lift. I thanked him and declined the offer; I wanted to walk the street once again.

“This author, the one who talks about exiles, he is a good writer?”

I told him all I knew about Rafael Contreras, trapped in a world where thought was free, but had no voice. I told him about the seaweed from far away, about sand that falls through the fingers and empty shells. He listened quietly to my words, and accepted a business card with a web address scribbled in the back of it, promising that he would get his grandson to print him some stories.

We said our goodbyes and wished each other well, he began to walk away slowly, and then he stopped and turned to face me.

“This writer, this writer has never walked on Calle Ocho, he doesn’t understand what this street means, and why it means so much to so many,” —he rubbed his foot against the asphalt and looked down—“this street has known the dreams of a million people. The dreams of a better tomorrow for their kids, of dignity for the old.”

Then he surprised me by speaking in the accented English of those who learned the language late in life.

“We are came here, the tired, the poor, the masses; and we wanted to breathe free. We were the refuse of somebody’s teeming shore once.”

“I see that you are surprised at an old man, an old man that knows these things.” —with a sweeping motion he pointed to everything around us—“When you walk back, down this street, hold high your head, because you walk on sacred ground. When you walk on this street, you are walking down Freedom road. Be well my young friend.”

I walked back to my car, soaked, tired, and hoarse. With each and every step my chest swelled, and my shoulders squared. There was pride and love of country in my step.

I was walking on Freedom road.


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To: Freedom'sWorthIt
Thank you for the ping. wow !!!
61 posted on 11/13/2001 5:12:07 PM PST by Snow Bunny
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To: Luis Gonzalez
"Three shots of Cuban coffee, and you'll be ready to go dig bin Laden out of his cave bare-handed."

YEARS ago, my friend Joaquin had me taste a little cup his mom made for his dad, Dr. Labarga...

CRAKCASE OIL!!!!!

Why, three shots, and I'd run over there ALL THE WAY!

Ha!

If I remember, it was like Expresso of EXPRESSO!

Wow!

As far as meeting you for lunch, I would consider it MY honor!

The next time I'm in Florida, LET'S DO IT! :)

John

62 posted on 11/13/2001 5:38:52 PM PST by No!
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Each time I read something you have written, I am reminded once again, that there is no better Americans than first generation Americans. They have not lost their passion for freedom. They can still hear the voices of tyranny, smell the aroma of death and see that America is truly the land of the free.

God bless you my friend. Viva los Nuevo Americanos. (forgive my spelling.)

63 posted on 11/13/2001 5:57:06 PM PST by ODDITHER
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To: Luis Gonzalez; Norb2569
Norb, Thanks for forwarding this great piece to me. I received it as I would a great gift and I read it with great pride; As I too have experienced first hand many rallies here in South Florida over the last 31 years since my parents fled the Communist state 90 miles south of us (with my brothers and I in tow). I too am a proud American and would stand up for it under any circumstances. But I must add a special thanks to you for being such a great American, for being a career Marine, and for being such a great friend of the Cuban-American community and for truly understanding what we stand for and what we have gone through. It comes through constantly in your writings and in the times we have spoken in person and on the phone. Thanks again, you are a great human being. To Luis: my words are not enough to say how poetic your writing is and how well it reflects on your life experiences. I enjoyed reading your article immensely. I printed it out and will be passing out copies to my friends and family members. Great job!!! Best regards to all. GOD BLESS AMERICA. Lorenzo Mendez
64 posted on 11/13/2001 6:45:55 PM PST by EliansRevenge
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To: LadyX
What a small world!

Luis Gonzalez--Fighting Commodores, Eau Gallie High School, Class of 1974.

65 posted on 11/13/2001 7:30:46 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Ha!!

In my day, Eau Gallie was so small they closed their high school and sent everyone to mine!
The ONLY high school serving from Sebastian to halfway to Cocoa..:)))
(and west to the St. Johns River)

66 posted on 11/13/2001 7:34:57 PM PST by LadyX
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To: fnord; xsmommy
Your names somehow are not on my flag list. Here's a special heads-up for some good friends.
67 posted on 11/13/2001 7:35:58 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: LadyX
In MY day, the EGHS football team was so bad, the Marching Band played them, and damned near won!
68 posted on 11/13/2001 7:37:10 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Wonderful writing, as always. You paint a vivid picture.
69 posted on 11/13/2001 7:38:13 PM PST by G-Rated
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To: Cyber Liberty; Slip18
Meeting you all was entirely MY pleasure!

Hopefully, we will meet again soon.

Luis

70 posted on 11/13/2001 7:46:07 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: Mudboy Slim
Of course the media will never report such a patriotic march like this one. As long as that Patriotic Bill exists, freedom of the press is one-sided and that also pertains to our Contitution.
71 posted on 11/13/2001 9:59:49 PM PST by goldilucky
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Beautiful post Luis. Don't ever stop sharing your wonderful gift.
72 posted on 11/16/2001 1:04:11 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: rickhammerhead; Norb2569
Raul!

I am enjoying your website tremendously, thank you for the link. I'm finding more and more voices out there, like yours, talking about the Cuban experience, it's great to read your work and nod my head, knowing the feelings that you talk about.

Welcome to FReeRepublic, I hope this place becomes a home of sorts for you, as it did me.

Norb, I've said it before, and I will say it again, youare awesome.

Luis

73 posted on 11/16/2001 1:04:40 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: No!
"The next time I'm in Florida, LET'S DO IT!

The next time you are in Florida, it will be my pleasure to introduce you to the art of the proper arroz con pollo.

74 posted on 11/16/2001 1:04:41 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: Polybius
"Cuban American bump."

Home-boy BUMP!

Lechon for Noche Buena this year?

75 posted on 11/16/2001 1:04:43 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez
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To: goldilucky; Luis Gonzalez; backhoe
"Of course the media will never report such a patriotic march like this one."

Maybe we need to alert those Media folks who might be supportive of our Cause...feel free to add to this list in subsequent posts.

Once again, put "Dear Media" in the TO ADDRESS field, have it routed to yourself in your address book for a file copy. Then paste the following list into the BCC ADDRESS field and each recipient will be unaware that you have blanketed them all.

rush@eibnet.com; speaker@aim.org; takeaction@americasvoice.com; pat@theamericancause.org; cbnonline@cbn.org; viewer@c-span.org; cato@free-market.net; drudge@drudgereport.com; comment@foxnews.com; letter@globe.com; insight@wt.infi.net; jwatch@erols.com; imus@msnbc.com; hq@lp.org; marklevin@aol.com; jacolumn@toto.net; feedback@usatoday.com; editor@dolphin.gulf.net

That's just a start, and we'll compile any other media emails as you make them available to this thread.

FReegards, all...MUD

76 posted on 11/16/2001 1:05:53 PM PST by Mudboy Slim
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Re: Walking on Freedom Road

Thanks for the post, Luis.

I wish Pat Buchanan was made to sit and watch...

77 posted on 11/16/2001 1:06:29 PM PST by TopQuark
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To: Luis Gonzalez
So y'all will know.. In Birmingham,Alabama, there exists a modest little Aviation musuem near the Airport. On a wall there is a memorial to the Alabama Air National Guardsmen who gave the last full measure of devotion in the Bay of Pigs operation as well. I feel anger each time I think of JFK and his rat faced brother turning the white feather over an operation they condoned;then condemned. This disaster set the tone for our nation's wilderness years.

Luis, my friend, gracias. I'll stand with you, physically and emotionally, anywhere , anytime, anyplace.

78 posted on 11/16/2001 1:06:32 PM PST by gatorbait
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Excellent, Luis. Thanks for the ping.

We aren't just walking on Freedom Road, though.

We're building it.

79 posted on 11/16/2001 1:06:49 PM PST by Interesting Times
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To: Mudboy Slim
Maybe we need to alert those Media folks who might be supportive of our Cause...

Communicate! Let the Sons of....

80 posted on 11/16/2001 1:07:00 PM PST by backhoe
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