Since 1959, the Cuban revolutionary government has proudly
proclaimed that "the revolution is for the children." Many Cuban
Americans reject this claim, asserting that they chose exile in the
United States to protect their children from the evils of
"Castro-communism." Anita Casavantes Bradford's analysis of the
pivotal years between the Revolution's triumph and the 1962 Missile
Crisis uncovers how and when children were first pressed into
political service by ideologically opposed Cuban communities on
both sides of the Florida Straits.
Casavantes Bradford argues that, in Havana, the Castro government
deployed a morally charged "politics of childhood" to steer a
nationalist and reformist revolution toward socialism. At the same
time, Miami exile leaders put children at the heart of efforts to
mobilize opposition to Castro's regime and to link the well-being
of Cuban refugees to U.S. Cold War foreign policy objectives.
Casavantes Bradford concludes that the 1999 Elian Gonzalez custody
battle was the most notorious recent manifestation of the ongoing
struggle to define and control Cuban childhood, revealing the
persistent centrality of children to Cuban politics and national
identity.