By William F. Jasper.
The New American. Vol. 17, No. 27.
December 31, 2001.
Rabbi Brian Kent went to Cuba with the hope that he could minister to Cuban
Jews. He was instead subjected to a harrowing ordeal at the hands of Castro's
agents.
As Hurricane Michelle's fierce winds and rain pounded his darkened Havana
apartment, Rabbi Brian Kent wondered what to expect next. He was not nearly so
frightened of the hurricane, the worst to hit Cuba in 50 years, as he was of
Fidel Castro's police state.
Since his arrival in Cuba on October 11th, he had spent almost all of his
time under house arrest. It was now November 4th and he was desperately hoping
that he would be allowed to leave on the 8th, as his "hosts" had
assured him he would. But by now he knew that nothing was what it seemed on the
surface in Castro's "paradise," and that he could put no trust in the
promises he'd been given about his imminent departure. The young Orthodox rabbi
was finally released, but not before undergoing a harrowing ordeal that he says
was "life-changing."
"I decided to go to Cuba, very simply, because the Jews there don't
have a rabbi and I wanted to help them," Rabbi Kent explained to The New
American. His mother and stepfather had recently visited the island on a
humanitarian mission and explained to him the predicament of the Havana Jewish
community. "My mother was born in Cuba and grew up there; she escaped to
the U.S. with her family after Castro and the Communists took over," he
said. "The Castro regime ruthlessly suppressed Judaism, just as it did the
Catholic Church and other religions, but in the past few years it has tried to
moderate its image as part of its campaign to lure tourists and end the U.S.
embargo. So, Jews have been allowed to worship openly again, or so I thought.
Unfortunately, Castro's religious 'liberalization' is a total sham."
Rabbi Kent, 38, grew up in New York and graduated in 2000 from the Kollel
Ayshel Abraham Rabbinical Seminary in Monsey, New York. Several months ago he
moved to Boca Raton, Florida, where his mother and stepfather live.
"I had my eyes opened very quickly concerning what it's like to live in
a totalitarian society where your every move is watched and every word recorded,"
says Rabbi Kent. "I was staying at Havana's Hotel Nacional, but it was too
expensive, so I asked a friend if there was anything cheaper available. Before
this friend could arrange anything for me, I was approached by a man who said he
was the landlord of the apartment complex across the street from the hotel and
he had a room available. Amazingly, the price he was asking was exactly the
amount I had mentioned to my friend as the price range I was looking for. I had
been warned that all hotel rooms and public buildings were wired with
microphones and cameras, and this confirmed it."
Rabbi Kent moved into the apartment, which was to become his jail for the
next three weeks. On his fourth day in Cuba, he was arrested on the street by
the National Revolutionary police. He was taken back to his room, where his
belongings were searched and he was accused of espionage. "I told them 'I'm
not a spy, I'm a rabbi. I'm only praying and studying with other Jews,'"
Kent recounted. But that didn't satisfy the Castroite gestapo. "They said I
only had a tourist visa and that I must have a 'missionary visa' in order to
minister to the people. But no rabbi has ever been given a missionary visa, as
far as we've been able to tell." That effectively ended his mission to
Cuba's Jews. "They said I couldn't talk to more than three people at any
one time. I thought that I still might be able to do some good, but then I found
that every Jew I had talked to had been visited by the secret police. I didn't
want to get them in trouble or endanger them, so there was little I could do."
The rabbi also found out that he was not free to leave Cuba, or to travel
about without an "escort." His "landlord" turned out to be
one Miguel Delgado, who, Kent learned, was a high-level agent in Castro's police
apparatus. "Delgado had formerly served in the Soviet submarine forces in
Baku and in Riga, Latvia," says Rabbi Kent. "It was obvious that he
was no ordinary citizen, even though he dressed as a civilian and pretended to
be merely the apartment landlord. Soldiers and police accorded him special
respect, saluted him, and sometimes I heard them address him as 'jefe' [chief]."
Jefe Delgado the landlord quickly became Jefe Delgado the jailer. "He
took all of my cash about a thousand dollars and locked it up. He
said it was 'to protect me,'" Kent recalls. "I was very frightened. I
was wondering if prison and torture were next on the agenda." However, it
soon became evident that Castro's agents had another approach in mind. "I
quickly realized that they were going to use the carrot instead of the stick.
And the carrot was going to be girls, girls, girls. They were going to try to
seduce me with beautiful women."
Rabbi Kent, who is single, says Miguel Delgado kept trying to fix him up
with a Cuban wife to bring back to the U.S. Any "wife" he would have
matched Kent with would actually be a "control agent," of course,
meant to assure that the rabbi would be useful to the regime. "It was
incredible how they staged all these 'spontaneous' encounters," Rabbi Kent
told The New American. "Miguel 'escorted' me out to get an espresso. After
we sat down at the cafe, a beautiful Cuban woman, Ana Ramirez Leal, just
happened to come by and Miguel invited her to join us. What a surprise: She knew
the Torah like a rabbi! It was obvious they had been preparing for me for months
ever since I had applied for the visa."
He had known something of Castro's deception practices before experiencing
them himself. "I knew, for instance, that Dr. Jose Miller, the titular head
of the Cuban Jewish community, was a complete fraud," says Kent. "He's
a medical doctor, an aide to Castro, and the Communist Party's main overseer of
the Jewish people in Cuba. Dr. Miller's assistant, Adela Dworin, also helps the
Communists control the Jews in Cuba. My family has known both Miller and Dworin
for 50 years, since before Castro's time. Castro sends Dr. Miller to the U.S. to
be hosted by liberal Jewish groups to propagandize for the regime. When Jewish
tourists come to Cuba, Miller is brought out to show off the Patronato, the main
synagogue, but the services there are nothing more than a Communist puppet show.
The Jews I met there are terrified to speak; they're in dread of Dr. Miller and
his spies. American and European Jews see the deplorable conditions under which
the Jewish people in Cuba live and give money to Miller to help them. It never
gets to the Cuban Jews."
Rabbi Kent finds it astonishing that so many American Jews have been tricked
by Castro's propaganda. In July, Hassan Khomeini, grandson of Iran's Ayatollah
Khomeini, toured Cuba at Castro's side, while the government-orchestrated crowds
chanted for America's destruction. And, Kent points out, Castro supports every
Middle Eastern terrorist group currently aiming deadly attacks against both
Israel and the U.S.
Rabbi Kent was especially unnerved by the vicious hatred of the U.S.
expressed by Delgado and his family members when he visited their home.
Delgado's nephew, Alfred Castillo, was particularly frightening. "He had a
screen saver on his computer monitor which showed footage of the
terrorist-hijacked planes crashing into the World Trade Center over and
over again," said Kent. "He is virulently anti-American. He is also a
microbiologist and bragged that he is working on anthrax in Cuba's laboratories."
"Sexpionage"
During his house arrest, Rabbi Kent had seven different "jailers,"
four of whom were beautiful young women. He repeatedly, but politely, rebuffed
their sexual overtures, citing his religious convictions; he did not want to
cause Delgado to switch to more brutal techniques. "I told him, 'I know
that you have microphones and cameras in this room.' He just smiled and said,
'It's only for your protection.'"
Two nights before he was to finally leave Cuba, Rabbi Kent came down with
severe asthma-type symptoms. "I've had slight asthma problems before, but
nothing like this, nothing that an inhalant wouldn't solve. But I couldn't
breathe. I thought I was going to die." He knew he had been given something
to bring on this attack. He told Delgado to take him to the U.S. Interest
Section, the American equivalent of an embassy in Cuba. Instead he was taken to
the Camillo Cienfuegos Clinica, where Castro's doctors "took care of"
him. "I was terrified," says Rabbi Kent. "I didn't know what they
were going to do to me. They gave me three hypodermic injections that they said
would help me breathe. It did help me breathe, but also rendered me helpless; I
could barely move and was in a drug-induced stupor."
Kent says he was taken back to his room and put in bed. Then one of his
female jailers disrobed and got in bed with him. When she got out of bed, she
posed for the cameras, laughed and mocked him, saying "Na-na-na, we got
you." Rabbi Kent had just become the latest in a long line of victims of
Cuban "sexpionage." Castro's secret police learned this trade well
from their Soviet masters, the KGB, and have been practicing it for 40 years
against tourists, journalists, diplomats, government officials, academics,
business executives, and others.
Rabbi Kent says he thinks the Cubans view their sexpionage "victory"
with him as a double-edged sword. On the one hand, they want him to come back,
thinking maybe he'll weaken and succumb to the pleasures they can offer him. On
the other hand, if he doesn't, they may try to blackmail and discredit him with
the photographs and lurid stories. "Just today, a couple of hours before
you called," he told The New American, "I received an e-mail from
Alfred [Castillo] informing me that he had prepared a 'reference' letter for me
so that I could return to Cuba." But the rabbi says he does not intend to
go back as long as the Communists remain in power.
"As I see it," says Rabbi Kent, "the most important thing I
can do now is warn the American people about what is really happening in Cuba.
Castro and his apologists here are trying to sell us on the supposed benefits of
warmer U.S.-Cuban ties, but it is a deadly trap. Cuba is a completely corrupt,
oppressive, totalitarian police state which views both America and Americans as
deadly enemies. I've learned that first-hand and I hope that by speaking out I
might prevent other Americans from falling victim to the same traps."
Where Are the ADL and B'nai Brith?
One might expect powerful Jewish organizations like the Anti-Defamation
League and B'nai Brith to rush to Rabbi Kent's defense and demand accountability
and apologies from Havana. Incredibly, just the opposite is true: They're taking
Castro's side! "I knew that B'nai Brith, Jewish Solidarity, and other
liberal-left groups were pro-Castro, but their response really surprised me,"
says Rabbi Kent. "When I came back and started speaking out about this,
they wanted to shut me up. I got an e-mail from Dina Spiegle Vann, who heads
B'nai Brith's Latin American affairs desk in Washington, D.C., saying she was
going to investigate me not Castro's abuse of me!" Kent says he went
on their Internet website and found out why. "Go to
http://jewishcuba.org/bnaibrith/fotos .html and you will see that the top B'nai
Brith leaders are in bed with Fidel Castro and his Communist henchmen who are
oppressing Jews in Cuba. There's a photo there of Dr. Miller on stage with Fidel
and a photo of Adela Dworin with Stanley Cohen, international chairman of B'nai
Brith's Cuban Jewish Relief Project. Eddie Levy's Jewish Solidarity is another
one. These groups portray Castro's Cuba positively and make it appear that it is
the nasty 'Cold War' policies of the U.S. that are responsible for the sad
plight of Cuban Jews. They prey upon the sympathy of American Jews and raise
huge amounts of money, but it doesn't go to helping the Jews who are suffering
under Castro."
Rabbi Rigoberto Viñas, a Cuban Jew, shares Rabbi Kent's disgust with
B'nai Brith, the ADL, and similar Jewish groups that cover for Castro and other
totalitarian regimes. Rabbi Viñas, who teaches at the Hebrew Institute of
Riverdale, New York, and serves as the rabbi of El Centro de Estudios Judios in
the Bronx, says that "someone should ask B'nai Brith who appointed Dr.
Miller 'president' and spokesman of the Cuban Jewish community. Back during the
Elian Gonzalez affair, Dr. Miller even claimed to be speaking for 'world Jewry'
in claiming that Elian should be sent back to Castro's Cuba because it is 'a
gentler society' than the U.S. And this was after Castro had received Libya's
'Human Rights' award from terrorist leader Muammar Qadaffi. It's obvious who
Miller really speaks for. Why doesn't B'nai Brith see that? We had a vibrant,
wonderful, prosperous Jewish community in Cuba before Castro took over. His
Communist government outlawed and persecuted Judaism, as he did Christianity. My
family and thousands of other Jews were forced to flee; most lost all their
property and possessions. Now Castro pretends to allow religious freedom, but it
is a huge charade. He even bugged Pope John Paul II's rooms, when he visited
Cuba! How can B'nai Brith pretend that Castro's 'reforms' are real?"
We called the B'nai Brith in Washington, D.C., to find out. Stanley Cohen,
international chairman of B'nai Brith's Cuban Jewish Relief Project, returned
our call. "I can tell you that there's no truth to what he [Rabbi Kent] is
saying," Mr. Cohen said, right out of the starting gate. "I know all
of the people involved; I've known Adela Dworin for seven years and she's stayed
at my home in Pittsburgh," he noted. "Dr. Miller is highly respected
in the Cuban Jewish community and was elected by them," Cohen said, noting
that he has been to Cuba 17 times and would be going there again in just a few
days. He admitted he did not know Rabbi Kent, yet he was willing to accept as
holy writ the story provided by his Castro-approved friends and the Castro
regime. "He [Kent] wasn't there as a rabbi," Cohen asserted. "He
ran out of money, moved across the street from the hotel he had been at and was
found with a prostitute. His whole story about being held under house arrest is
absurd. He was not detained by the government. His motive, I believe, is he
wants attention."
"I'm not pro-Castro or pro-Communist," Mr. Cohen asserted
repeatedly, but his every statement seemed to belie those disclaimers. Does he
believe there is genuine religious freedom in Cuba and that people can worship
freely? "I've seen nothing to indicate otherwise," he said. Does he
believe that Castro's secret police monitor telephone calls and listen on
microphones in hotels and other public facilities? "Generally no. Maybe not
any more than here." How does he respond to Rabbi Viñas' statements
concerning persecution in Cuba? "Well, you know how those Cubans are in
South Florida."
Rabbi Kent was not surprised by Mr. Cohen's remarks. "His every
statement substantiates precisely the points I made; the B'nai Brith leadership
is completely in bed with Castro and is misleading many American Jews,"
said Rabbi Kent. "Imagine Mr. Cohen making a racist statement like that
about a whole group 'those Cubans' in Florida. Of course, he would be
screaming if someone made a similarly derogatory statement about 'those Jews' in
New York or Beverly Hills. He is parroting the Havana smear against
Cuban-American patriots. We will not have real freedom for Jews or anyone else
in Cuba as long as false leaders like him continue to provide cover for Castro's
tyranny and influence our foreign policy vis-à-vis Cuba."
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