Twenty-five years ago, a six-year-old boy named Elián González appeared off the coast of Miami. He and his mother had been traveling by boat to the U.S. from Cuba. His mother didn't survive the journey, but remarkably, Elián did. And almost immediately, his fate became the subject of an international debate: Should he stay in the U.S. and live with relatives in Miami? Or should he return to Cuba, to live with his father, who very much wanted him back?
How people answered that question tended to reflect a lot about their larger beliefs – about the benefits of democracy, the importance of family, the distinctions between the U.S and Cuba, and immigration writ large. |