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| 4/18/00
4:30 p.m. Elián Among the Psychiatrists A long-distance diagnosis should focus on Cuba. Kate O'Beirne is NR's Washington editor. |
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Dr. Redlener should use his unique diagnostic skills and look 90 miles south to assess what effect Elian's Cuban homecoming will have on Castro’s "boy hero." He might check out the Cuban government's official Elián website at http://elian.cu and see the photos of the Havana demonstrations demanding his return. The chilling scenes of a sea of posters depicting the boy would be far more frightening to the average six- year-old than scores of middle-aged women saying the rosary as they keep vigil outside his uncle's house in Little Havana. Elian doesn't appear to be too intimidated to engage in plenty of carefree play in that small, fenced yard. If Dr. Redlener is worried about "psychological abuse," he ought to consider Cuban state-TV reports about the regime's "readaptation" plans for Elián. A large, seaside house with a swimming pool has been prepared for Elián, his family, a team of psychologists, teachers, and about a dozen of his classmates. (Do Cuban parents have anything to say about their children being moved to this communal-indoctrination set-up?). It's a safe bet that when Elián emerges from the planned three-month "transition" period in his temporary digs, he'll not have a kind word to say about Miami, or his American relatives. Dr. Redlener imagined a "hostage situation" in the video of Elián declaring that he didn't want to return to Cuba. It will be the real thing when Elián is held out of sight, until he's willing to be the toughest little Communist in Cuba. |
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