¡no te dejes quitar a tu hijo! Operation pedro pan and the cuban children’s program



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Accessed 18 March 2008.
Imbert, Antonio. “En Búsqueda de su Realidad Histórica,” Pedro Pans of Los Angeles,

http://www.cubankids1960.com/id13.html. Internet. Organization site. Accessed 18 January 2008.
Operation Pedro Pan, Inc. http://www.pedropan.org. Internet. Organization site. Accessed

10 January 2008.


The American Chamber of Commerce in the United States, Inc., www.amchamcuba.org,

Internet, Organization site. Accessed 1 October 2008.


“The Cuban Connection: Cuban-American Money in U.S. elections, 1979-2000.” Apendix, Top Recipients of Cuban-American contributions. OpenSecret.org. Internet. http://www.opensecrets.org/pubs/cubareport/appendix.asp Political contributions tracking site. Accessed 20 March 2008.
United States Information Agency. http://dosfan.lib.uic.edu/usia/. Internet. Organization

site. Accessed 21 February 2008.


Venceremos Brigade, http://www.venceremosbrigade.org/background.htm, Internet.

Organization site. Accessed 18 March 2008.



Dissertations

Clark, Juan. “The Exodus from Revolutionary Cuba (1959-1974): A Sociological

Analysis.” Ph.D. diss, University of Florida, 1975.
Garzón, Carolina C. “A Study of the Adjustment of Thirty-Four Boys in Exile.” Master’s

thesis. Florida State University. December, 1965.


Rodriguez-Nogues, Lourdes. “Psychological effects of premature separation from parents

in Cuban refugee girls: A retrospective study.” Unpublished doctoral diss. Boston

University, MA, 1983;

Appendix
2.1: Douglas Deimer, “After 4-Year Separation Cuban Family Reunited” Dallas News, March 1965. This article records the reunion of the Ferrer family in Dallas four years after they sent the four eldest children to live in Miami with relatives, only to be surprised to realize their children were sent to orphanages in Dallas and Arkansas. The article does not address Operation Pedro Pan, but rather gives Rafael Ferrer’s (the childrens father) account of the conditions in Cuba at the time.




2.2 Visa Waiver used in Operation Peter Pan. Monsignor Walsh’s Personal Collection donated to the Barry University Archives, Miami.

3.1 Resettlement letter from the U.S. Cuban Refugee Program, Circa summer 1962. Personal Collection of Consuelo Cuello.




2.4 Article from The Miami Herald, giving a typical Pedro Pan success story.


The Miami Herald

October 1, 2003, Wednesday




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