Tuesday, September 12,
2006
LATINO ADVOCACY GROUP
DEMANDS U.S. PROBE OF FOREIGN SUBVERSIVE ORGANIZATION
WASHINGTON, DC—In a
major attempt to block subversive activities in the Hispanic
community by the Castro regime, Consejo de Latinos Unidos, a
national non-profit organization that educates and assists
Hispanics, called on the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
and the U.S. Department of Treasury to probe activities in the
United States by the Yoruba Cultural Association of Cuba. The
Consejo also asked that individuals and groups tied to the
“foreign subversive organization” be investigated.
“The Yoruba Cultural
Association of Cuba appears to be nothing more than a
state-sponsored, intelligence gathering organization whose sole
objective is to suppress the legitimate religious teachings and
practices of Cuban Santeria, an Afro-Caribbean religion, and to
subvert U.S. law,” said K.B. Forbes, Executive Director of the
Consejo. “Individuals and organizations in the United States
associated with, affiliated with or sponsored by the Yoruba
Cultural Association appear to be catalysts to weaken or subvert
U.S. laws against the Castro regime.”
The Consejo released a
21-page report today documenting how the Yoruba Cultural
Association acting as the “official, government-sanctioned”
voice of Cuban Santeria appear sto have intentionally masked
pleasure travel to Cuba from the U.S. as religious travel,
manipulated Cuban Santeria teachings and pronouncements for the
benefit of the Castro regime—including alluding Fidel Castro to
the “divinity that guides destiny;” and, during Fidel Castro’s
illness, sympathetically called the brutal dictator the “maximum
leader” and the “commandante” to media sources.
“The religious
teachings and holy writings of Cuban Santeria as used by the
Yoruba Cultural Association is blasphemy. To allude to Castro as
‘divinity that guides destiny’ is blasphemy to followers of the
faith,” said Ernesto Pichardo, a Board Member of the Consejo and
a High Priest of Cuban Santeria in the United States “The Yoruba
Cultural Association is a ragged collection of counterfeit
followers of Cuban Santeria and serves as a mouthpiece for the
repressive regime.”
In May of 2005, the
Consejo took on bogus religious entities and organizations that
were violating U.S. laws and offering tourism packages to Cuba
under the guise of “religious” travel. The U.S. has strict
travel policies to Cuba governed by the U.S. Department of
Treasury. In the past year, working with officials of the Office
of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the U.S. Department of
Treasury, the Consejo has successfully had licensees of
illegitimate “religious” entities either revoked or not renewed.