![]() |
| STAR PROFILE |
GLORIA ESTEFAN
Born in Cuba,
raised in Miami Gloria Estefan is at the vanguard of the second generation
of the Cuban exile. Like other young exiles she carries the burden of
suffering and sacrifice her parents made for freedom. Estefan has traveled the world as a Cuban-American musician, and she has been an emissary on behalf of the Cuban Exile. She is its most visible representative, and like the rest of the exile she is very clear about the wrong done to the Cuban people under the Castroite tyranny. ''People don't have a lot of information and when they ask me about it, I tell them about the drama of the exiles, the repression, the firing squads, the horror of communism. I'm very clear about that. I left Cuba when I was two years old. They took away my country, they stole the most intimate thing a human being can have. How could I forget that Fidel Castro was the person who did me so much harm?,'' said Estefan. Sometimes, speaking about Cuba is not easy, said Estefan.''When they invited me to sing at the Vatican, they asked me what I was going to say,'' said Estefan. ''I told them that I was going to ask the Holy Father for Cuba's freedom. And the Vatican official said, 'Oh no, my daughter, that's political. So I told them that if they didn't let me ask for Cuba's freedom, they would have to get someone else because I wouldn't sing. They gave in and as soon as I grabbed the mike I said it very clearly: Holy Father, do not forget to ask for Cuba's freedom in your prayers.''
Won't you
just go away Stay away Nearly ten years later in 1995 Cuban-born celebrities Gloria Estefan and Andy Garcia returned to Cuba to serenade some 16,000 Cuban refugees held at the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay. In 1997, Gloria Estefan appeared on CNN defending the Embargo as a moral imperative, and once again exposed the regime in Cuba for what it is: a brutal tyranny. Towards the end of 1997 she spoke out in defense of free speech. She was attacked from some quarters, but defended by many more. In 1998 she released Gloria! with a rousing song calling for Cuban freedom in the track Cuba Libre. She has demonstrated that in Miami freedom of speech and tolerance do exist, and for that she serves the memory of her father and of the historical exile well. |