February 17, 2001 Remembered
By Vivian
Narvaez
Today, the Cuban Genealogy Club of Miami, Florida celebrates
its first anniversary. It is difficult
to believe, glancing back to that Saturday afternoon when the original founders
of the CGC “officially met” in Carolina Calderin’s sunny family room, that one
year later, in addition to boasting a growing membership, we would also be on
the road to incorporation, a scant three months from celebrating our first
conference, in possession of a fully functional website and, in short, brimming
over with enthusiasm and ideas on how to make reality the CGC’s main reason for
being: to foster the study and
preservation of Cuban Genealogy.
It bears pointing out that when I say, “officially met,” it
is because those who came together that afternoon had already grown to know one
another through supportive and enthusiastic exchanges at CUBA-L, the genealogy
bulletin board hosted by the Cuban Genealogy Center.
What took place when we left behind our computers and gathered
around the table of bocaditos, pastelitos and notebooks that had been
lovingly prepared by Carolina, was merely the natural outcome of those
exchanges: the cementing of friendships
that already hinted at permanence, the strengthening of bonds of mutual
support, and an eagerness to share the glad tidings that Cuban Genealogy was
alive and well and ready to embrace a new generation of Cubans and
Cuban-Americans who, brought up on family traditions and legends -- whether in
Havana, Miami or any of the many regions where Cuba has carved a second home
for itself -- were determined to rescue their history and preserve their roots.
So, it is only fitting if on this February 17, 2002 I give
special thanks for Carolina Calderin’s generosity, for Carmen Roque’s wisdom,
for Martha Ibañez-Zervoudakis’s warmth, for Mariela Fernandez’s steadfastness,
for Antonio Bechily Carreño’s erudition, for Annette Piedra Baquedano’s youth,
for Jose Morales’s creativity, for Lupe Diaz’s perseverance (she did not let
her leg cast keep her away from our Tertulia Matancera), for Techy
Somoza-Manso’s support, for Eddie Ramos’s humor, for Martha Moreira’s energy,
for Marie Zaret’s dedication, and for that miracle called Cuban Genealogy that
will keep us all working in its behalf -- jointly or separately -- for as long
as our hearts and minds retain the memory of a beautiful island called Cuba.