Elian Gonzalez Reacts To Fidel Castro's Death On Cuban State TV

The 21-year-old held back tears while remembering Castro as a father figure.
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Elián González, who as a young boy sat at the center a controversial international custody battle between Cuba and the United States, remembered Fidel Castro as a father figure in an emotional interview that aired on Cuban state TV on Saturday. 

Castro, whose death at 90 was announced late Friday, was still in power when a 5-year-old González was rescued off the coast of Florida on Thanksgiving Day 1999. He had survived a shipwreck that had killed his mother, her boyfriend and several others when he was found adrift at sea holding onto an inner tube. 

But a castaway rescue turned into a heated custody battle when González’s father in Cuba demanded the United States return the boy to the island. His relatives in Miami, however, wanted to raise the child in Florida.

The high-profile case prompted Castro to lead public demonstrations in Cuba asking for his return. And ultimately, the court ruled that González should go back to Cuba to live with his father.

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Fidel Castro was very present in González’s life once back in Cuba.
Jose GOITIA via Getty Images

When relatives refused to give up the boy, heavily armed federal agents raided their home and forcibly removed Elián from their custody in April 2000.

In May 2015, González’s spoke publicly about his relationship with Castro. He told ABC reporters, that since his return to Cuba the former head of state had not only called him every year on his birthday but visited his school and featured him in major national events. 

In Saturday’s interview, which aired on government-run television along with other pro-Castro programming, the now 21-year-old González said it was an “honor” that Castro had once publicly called him a friend. He also praised the late revolutionary leader and asked that he remain “omnipresent,” according to the Associated Press. 

“Fidel began to be a father, initially they all start as fathers but what’s difficult is to have a father become a friend,” González said holding back tears. “And he was a father who, like with my father, I wanted to show him everything I achieved. I wanted him to be proud of me. That’s how it was with Fidel. If I learned to do something, I wanted to show him. And there are many things that I didn’t get to show him.” 

González remained largely out of the public eye after his return to Cuba. But in recent years, he’s begun to make more frequent public appearances, going on record to praise the Castro regime and the island’s government. 

“Fidel was a friend who at a difficult moment was with my family, with my father, and made it possible for me to return to my father, to return to Cuba,” Gonzalez said in the broadcast over the weekend, according to the AP. 

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Fidel Castro and Elián González post during a May Day demonstration in 2005.
ADALBERTO ROQUE via Getty Images

González not only spoke about his close relationship with Castro over the years but also assured viewers that his legacy would live on. 

“Fidel’s legacy is each Cuban and person in the world who has been touched by the revolution,” he said, according to USA Today. “Fidel’s legacy is in each person affected by our programs, in every life saved from Ebola, in every Haitian saved with our missions, in every Latin American who has had eye surgery.

Watch a clip of González’s interview above. 

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Before You Go

Cuban-Americans Celebrate Fidel Castro's Death In Miami's Little Havana
(01 of18)
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Cuban-Americans celebrate upon hearing about the death of longtime Cuban leader Fidel Castro in the Little Havana neighborhood of Miami, Florida, on Nov. 26. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(02 of18)
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Fidel Castro died on Nov. 25 aged 90, after defying the U.S. during a half-century of ironclad rule and surviving the eclipse of global communism. Many exiled Cubans celebrated on the streets of Miami. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(03 of18)
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Many Cuban-Americans banged pots and pans with glee over news of Castro's death. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
(04 of18)
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Some people celebrating Castro's death in Miami's streets held aloft skeletons depicting the former president, as they shouted “Freedom!” (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(05 of18)
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President-Elect Donald Trump was among the figures depicted during the celebrations in Miami. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(06 of18)
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Many exiled Cubans gathered in front of Little Havana’s landmark Versailles Restaurant in Miami after news of Castro's death broke. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(07 of18)
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Thousands of Cuban exiles, who have settled in Miami since the 1950s, filled the streets with boisterous celebration. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(08 of18)
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Many Cuban-Americans held aloft the two countries' flags, as they sang and danced in Miami's streets. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
(09 of18)
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Many in the crowd banged drums, as they took to Miami's streets. Some even popped champagne. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(10 of18)
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Drivers honked in celebration as some passengers waved Cuban flags to celebrate Castro's death. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
(11 of18)
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Many Cuban-Americans toasted news of Castro's death well into the early hours in Miami. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
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It was an emotionally charged night for many in Miami. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
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Many people took selfies as mementos of the occasion. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
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Cars line the street as Cuban-Americans celebrate upon hearing about the death of Castro. (credit:RHONA WISE via Getty Images)
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Some people say they were celebrating the end of an ideology in Cuba when they took to Miami's streets. Others held signs, saying “the rat has died” and “rot in hell,” which certainly seemed pointed at Castro. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(16 of18)
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Cuban Americans celebrate upon hearing about the death of longtime Cuban leader Fidel Castro in the Little Havana neighborhood of Miami, Florida on November 26, 2016. Cuba's socialist icon and father of his country's revolution Fidel Castro died on November 25 aged 90, after defying the US during a half-century of ironclad rule and surviving the eclipse of global communism. / AFP / RHONA WISE (Photo credit should read RHONA WISE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
(17 of18)
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Many in the crowd clapped and sang over the death of Castro. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)
(18 of18)
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Miami's streets were flooded with Cuban-Americans, waving the flags of Cuba after news of Castro's death broke. (credit:John Parra via Getty Images)