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Luis Aguilar León
At the end, father faced
one last enemy
Some people believe that man
is only flesh, blood, mind and molecules. My father's last days were an argument
to the contrary.
Luis Aguilar Leon died
recently at 82 after a futile fight with Alzheimer's. He was a beloved luminary
of the Cuban exile. You can read about him in the new bestseller, The Boys
from Dolores by Patrick Symmes or in the autobiography of his former
Georgetown University student Bill Clinton, My Life.
As a writer and teacher, my
father made the complexities of Castro's Cuba understandable to scholar and
laborer alike. More than once did a security guard or valet parking cars gush to
me about one of his columns.
Dad semi-retired in 1992 to
Key Biscayne, where he became the media's go-to guy for breaking news from Cuba.
He commented on everything Cuban, continuing a lifelong love affair with his
native island. Yet there was one thing that Dad loved more than Cuba. That was
his wife of 55 years, my mother, Vera, whom he recognized almost to the end,
even through the mist shrouding his mind.
Two years ago Dad was
stricken unintelligent by a monstrous disease that he referred to as the Enemy.
''I think the Enemy will beat me,'' he would bemoan in his more-lucid times.
From the start, Mom
dismissed any suggestion of a nursing home, instead setting up a sick room in
her two-bedroom apartment and hiring a live-in caretaker. There, Dad's mental
storm would calm at the sight of a familial face. After an early rage against
the dying light, he began to go gentle into that good night.
Then his life signs dipped,
not precipitously but noticeably. Though it still seemed as if he would last for
months, Mom called a priest. Father Jose Hernando gave him last rites, expecting
to repeat them at a later date. The next day, for the first time, Dad needed
oxygen to breathe. It was as if he had been awaiting the final sacrament to be
free of his body.
When Dad stabilized enough,
I took my mother out to dinner. She feared that he wouldn't last the night. We
got back to the sick room, and I noticed something odd. The little stuffed dog
that my dad never let go of sat all alone on the arm of his chair, though Dad
was breathing regularly. As I did every night, I carried Dad from the chair and
to his bed. He coughed twice and died. He had waited for Mom to get home to say
goodbye.
My father left the world in
peace, if not at peace. A much older enemy, Fidel Castro, had outlasted him. I
doubt they'll meet in the hereafter.
LOU AGUILAR,
Los Angeles |