Every morning I routinely open our front door and send the dog out to the end of the driveway to fetch the morning paper. I usually place the paper on the kitchen counter while I rummage under the sink to get a treat for the dog  as a reward for  her service. But on Friday, March 24th, the dog had to wait. The  headline  "Coast Guard to cut operations"  had caught my eye through the plastic bag,  and  this woman's best friend was not going to get her treat until I finished  scanning the front page story to see what was going on.   For several years I have read with great  interest anything the Coast Guard is up to - ever since a young enlisted person did something which had a powerful impact on my life.

     On August 31, 1994  the U.S Coast Guard Cutter Nantucket was  cruising  the Florida Straits in response to the Cuban Refugee Crisis..  If you were standing on the cutter's deck that day, a crew member would have explained   that all the  rafts you  saw floating in the water and the  Cuban refugees sitting in them  were still within the territorial waters of  Cuba.  Beyond the line of rafters the crew   member could have pointed out not only  the skyline of Havana but also a Cuban gunboat cruising within her own territorial waters.

 

     Allan Weisbecker, a writer from New York and on board the Nantucket that day,  could see that the Nantucket's crew of sixteen was having a busy day.  Once the ship spotted a raft which had made it to  international waters,  she pulled aside and boarded the refugees.  Ten days earlier the Nantucket had been in the process of boarding refugees in heavy seas. The raft had capsized, and three crew members had jumped into the rough water, near the jagged edges of the capsized raft,  and rescued the drowning people. In four months the Coast Guard and Navy had rescued 50,000  Cuban refugees..  The  Nantucket's crew alone had saved 1208 lives - young women holding  infants, feeble, dehydrated  old men,  young men claiming to be political prisoners.

 

     It was routine for the ship's crew  to dispose  of the empty raft so that it would not become a hazard to navigation.   Most of the rafts encountered were no more than  an inner tube with some framing of odd pieces of lumber and were disposed of quite easily. However, this day the Nantucket came across a vessel structured of metal piping filled with foam. They knew that this one would be tough.  Two crew members boarded her with pickaxes and set about their task.    One of the crew members  then saw a refugee rise from the collection of Cubans sitting on the deck of the Nantucket and exclaim, "She not sink, never!"  The crew spent twenty minutes hacking away at the La NINA, the name  inscribed on her stern.  The craft would  wallow, but it would not sink.  The  Captain finally ordered them to just set  the vessel adrift.  As the two Coast Guard crew members boarded the Nantucket,   one made his way  over to the Cuban who had spoken .  He asked the Cuban if he built La NINA and as Weisbecker  put it,  the refugee  fearfully nodded yes.  The crew member then offered his hand in respect and admiration.  The Cuban,  having very little dignity left in his present situation, sat down, and unsuccessfully tried to hold back his tears.

     This story has haunted me since I first read it in 1995.  My husband and I were separated for a year due to the Cuban Refugee Crisis, and  for a long time, I am ashamed to say, I had no sympathy for Cuban refugees.  I knew this anger was wrong, and  I worked on  getting over it.  I held onto that story about this crew member of the Nantucket as my own life raft of sorts.  I knew that if he  could show  such empathy and compassion in the midst of yet one more of a long line of twenty-hour days working  in the  heat of a Florida Straits summer, then surely I could get over it.

      His simple gesture  speaks volumes for the  unique culture of the United States Coast Guard.   A simple gesture on our part, in return, would be to support the Coast Guard's call for full funding, so that these dedicated people can continue to not only respond to all search and rescue  calls but  also to  fully enforce fishing laws, prevent illegal aliens, keep drugs off of our streets - and  set a much-needed example for  selfish  folks like me.