
Miami's iconic building is honored, just as immigrants face attacks
And yet, the irony stings. The tower's centennial and reopening comes at a time when Miami — and the country — is in the midst of an aggressive immigration crackdown. In today's South Florida, 'Alligator Alcatraz' has emerged as the twisted, modern-day echo of the Freedom Tower one about confinement and deportation instead of a warm welcome
Originally built in 1925 as the headquarters for the Miami News, the pink tower on Biscayne Boulevard later served as a famed one-stop government processing center and came to symbolize the new-found freedom to hundreds of thousands shellshocked Cuban political refugees fleeing Fidel Castro's communist regime. They dubbed it la Torre de la Libertad.
From 1962 through the 1980s, the tower was the place where the continuous flow of refugees had their initial paperwork done, received food rations, medical care, job placement or relocation help.
Since then, the tower, once one of downtown Miami's tallest buildings, has continued to serve as a symbolic beacon of hope and freedom for all individuals from different countries coming to Miami to escape from political oppression in Latin America and Haiti.
Freedom Tower is now part of Miami Dade College, which has preserved the site as a civic and cultural landmark. The renovation included significant structural work to stabilize and modernize the building while retaining its historic integrity. That guarantees its future as one of our oldest structures. The renovation created new exhibit spaces to preserve and display the impact immigrants and refugees have had on Miami-Dade, with a new immersive museum experience that tells the story of Cuban immigration and Miami's evolution into the vibrant, multicultural city it is today.
'The Freedom Tower represents — not just for Cubans, but Venezuelans, Hondurans, Colombians — it really stands as a beacon of hope and opportunity,' Miami Dade College president Madeline Pumariega recently told reporters. Pumariega is the daughter of Cuban exiles.
Later this year, visitors will be able to walk through the same lobby that once welcomed immigrants, view oral histories, photographs and databases of refugees from Operation Pedro Pan, to the Freedom Flights, to Mariel and the balsero crisis.
There will be personal mementos — passports, photographs, toys brought by children — that speak to exile, resilience and success in a new country.
Today, around the country, ICE agents are detaining migrants for deportation. Back in its glory days, this governmental climate of fear was absence for those who were welcomed through the Freedom Tower's doors. The stark contradiction is hard to ignore and leads many to wonder: Would Cuban refugees, or Haitians or Nicaraguans, be welcomed today at the Freedom Tower, or turned away? This isn't a rhetorical question.
Miami's Freedom Tower represented Miami as a city in the United States where the 'huddled masses' sought refugee, found it and flourished to its benefit.
The restored Freedom Tower is a celebration of Miami's soul — a visible reminder that this city was built and enriched by generations of immigrants, exiles and people looking for a new country, a second chance as they fled from tyranny and poverty. But its centennial should be more than a history lesson.
It should challenge Miami today to live up to the promise that the tower represents.
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Miami Herald
5 days ago
- Miami Herald
Miami's iconic building is honored, just as immigrants face attacks
Miami's Freedom Tower — once the proud 'Ellis Island of the South' — turned 100 on July 25. After a two-year, $25 million restoration, it will reopen next month as a museum honoring Miami's refugee story, especially the Cuban exile journey. And yet, the irony stings. The tower's centennial and reopening comes at a time when Miami — and the country — is in the midst of an aggressive immigration crackdown. In today's South Florida, 'Alligator Alcatraz' has emerged as the twisted, modern-day echo of the Freedom Tower one about confinement and deportation instead of a warm welcome Originally built in 1925 as the headquarters for the Miami News, the pink tower on Biscayne Boulevard later served as a famed one-stop government processing center and came to symbolize the new-found freedom to hundreds of thousands shellshocked Cuban political refugees fleeing Fidel Castro's communist regime. They dubbed it la Torre de la Libertad. From 1962 through the 1980s, the tower was the place where the continuous flow of refugees had their initial paperwork done, received food rations, medical care, job placement or relocation help. Since then, the tower, once one of downtown Miami's tallest buildings, has continued to serve as a symbolic beacon of hope and freedom for all individuals from different countries coming to Miami to escape from political oppression in Latin America and Haiti. Freedom Tower is now part of Miami Dade College, which has preserved the site as a civic and cultural landmark. The renovation included significant structural work to stabilize and modernize the building while retaining its historic integrity. That guarantees its future as one of our oldest structures. The renovation created new exhibit spaces to preserve and display the impact immigrants and refugees have had on Miami-Dade, with a new immersive museum experience that tells the story of Cuban immigration and Miami's evolution into the vibrant, multicultural city it is today. 'The Freedom Tower represents — not just for Cubans, but Venezuelans, Hondurans, Colombians — it really stands as a beacon of hope and opportunity,' Miami Dade College president Madeline Pumariega recently told reporters. Pumariega is the daughter of Cuban exiles. Later this year, visitors will be able to walk through the same lobby that once welcomed immigrants, view oral histories, photographs and databases of refugees from Operation Pedro Pan, to the Freedom Flights, to Mariel and the balsero crisis. There will be personal mementos — passports, photographs, toys brought by children — that speak to exile, resilience and success in a new country. Today, around the country, ICE agents are detaining migrants for deportation. Back in its glory days, this governmental climate of fear was absence for those who were welcomed through the Freedom Tower's doors. The stark contradiction is hard to ignore and leads many to wonder: Would Cuban refugees, or Haitians or Nicaraguans, be welcomed today at the Freedom Tower, or turned away? This isn't a rhetorical question. Miami's Freedom Tower represented Miami as a city in the United States where the 'huddled masses' sought refugee, found it and flourished to its benefit. The restored Freedom Tower is a celebration of Miami's soul — a visible reminder that this city was built and enriched by generations of immigrants, exiles and people looking for a new country, a second chance as they fled from tyranny and poverty. But its centennial should be more than a history lesson. It should challenge Miami today to live up to the promise that the tower represents.

Politico
25-07-2025
- Politico
Venezuelan Little League team denied entry into US amid Trump travel ban
The tournament, which starts Saturday, features 13- to 16-year-old baseball players from the U.S. and around the world competing in Easley, South Carolina. Little League International called the news 'extremely disappointing, especially to these young athletes' in a statement to POLITICO. A White House spokesperson directed a request for comment to the State Department. Representatives for the State Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Little League International said the Santa Maria de Aguayo Little League team from Victoria, Mexico, who finished in second place in the Latin America qualifiers behind the Venezuelan team, will replace them. Kendry Gutiérrez, president of Cacique Mara Little League, said in an interview posted on the team's social media account that the team had traveled to Bogota, Colombia, two weeks in advance of the tournament to try and secure visas. 'This is a sad and regrettable situation,' he said in Spanish during the interview, filmed with the team's players seated behind him. 'They want to have the opportunity to go play.' Trump signed an executive order earlier this year banning all travel from 12 countries and restricting travel from seven others, including Venezuela. The order carved out an exception for athletes traveling to the U.S. for major sports competitions determined by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The State Department's processing of foreign athletes seeking entry into the U.S. will be under heightened scrutiny in the coming years, as the U.S. prepares to host the FIFA World Cup in 2026 and the Olympics in 2028. The Venezuelan Little League team isn't the first sports team to be denied entry into the country. The Cuban women's national volleyball team was unable to enter the country for a tournament in Puerto Rico earlier this month. Cuba is also on the list of countries with restricted travel to the U.S.


USA Today
24-07-2025
- USA Today
Fine dining is booming in Florida. These cities lead the way.
SOUTHEAST | FLORIDA There was a time when travelers came to Florida for a few great culinary hits: Key lime pie, stone crabs, Cuban sandwiches or juicy, handpicked oranges from a roadside stand. Fine dining, for the most part, was not a priority. Not anymore. The Sunshine State has undergone a culinary boom. Migration to Florida has swelled in recent years, bringing young professionals, including chefs and restaurant owners, with it. Miami, Orlando and Tampa, in particular, have raised the bar, boasting Michelin-starred restaurants encompassing everything from sushi omakase to Scandinavian fine dining. Mmmmiami Miami hosts an impressive 14 Michelin-starred restaurants, and chef Shingo Akikuni says the boom can be attributed to restaurateurs offering 'fresh ideas and innovative experiences.' His Michelin-starred Coral Gables restaurant, Shingo, offers a 14-seat sushi omakase experience. Each night, an 18-course meal is artfully presented by chef Akikuni, who has some fish flown in from Japan. Also imported is the restaurant's interior, which was designed and constructed in Kyoto before being shipped to South Florida. The city's two-Michelin-starred restaurant, L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon Miami, is tucked into the Design District and has perfected French dining with gorgeously plated crispy duck, Icelandic halibut and lamb saddle. You can watch the chefs work from a counter facing the open kitchen. Stubborn Seed was one of the first Miami restaurants to earn a star in 2022 and has held the rating for the last two years. The tiny spot, helmed by season 13 Top Chef winner Jeremy Ford, has a rotating menu that draws from Florida's native bounty. Its eight- and 11-course tasting-only menus are guided by the seasons, but Wagyu beef tartare, homemade ricotta gnudi and striped sea bass are signature dishes. Magic Foodie Kingdom Orlando has started to shed its image as a theme park-only destination, and the city has several Michelin-starred and Michelin-recommended restaurants to build your trip around. Four Flamingos, a Richard Blais Florida Kitchen, is a color-blasted, tropical-themed offering from the Top Chef All-Stars winner. There's a smorgasbord of seafood options: smoked salmon croquettes, Florida shrimp, stuffed lobster. For dessert, save room for the Baked Florida: A Key Lime pie topped with flambéed meringue. BACÀN, helmed by chef Guillaume Robin, is a gorgeous homage to South and Central American flavors in a sleek dining room adorned with vivid art. Start with the El Cantarito a punchy mix of tequila, grapefruit, lime and orange juice that serves as a tasty prelude for the charred octopus, pork belly asada and lobster tostada starters. The mains are an amalgamation of Caribbean and Latin flavors, and the standout is the crispy Florida snapper seasoned with Guyanese curry and accompanied by mofongo. The Michelin-starred Knife & Spoon at the Ritz-Carlton Orlando Grande Lakes is farm-to-table excellence. Chef Tyler Kineman draws his ingredients from a handful of local farms and has a tightly curated menu of seafood, pasta and chicken dishes. But the specialty is steaks, dry-aged for up to four months. Bay of Bounty Tampa continues to serve up culinary ingenuity. The Tampa EDITION, the city's first five-star rated hotel, opened in 2022. With it came Lilac, a Michelin-starred restaurant led by chef John Frase serving caviar and Maine lobster as starters. Everything here feels well thought out: diver scallops on risotto and spice-braised rabbit are part of the four-course tasting menu and served in a glossy, emerald green dining room. Ebbe, a Scandinavian restaurant, earned its Michelin recognition last year. Inside, meals are served on a marble countertop in a minimalist, stark space. The menu changes with the seasons, but chef Ebbe Vollmer's signature dish is beets cooked in brown butter. Another 2024 Michelin winner is Rocca, where chef and owner Bryce Bonsack serves Italian fare in a relaxed atmosphere inspired by his pilgrimage to Italy. Beyond the handmade gnocchi and tagliolini, one of the draws here is the mozzarella cart — fresh mozzarella kneaded tableside.