Rafael Bienvenido Cruz

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Rafael Bienvenido Cruz
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Rafael Cruz at 2013 FreedomWorks Youth Summit in Washington, D.C.
Born Rafael Bienvenido Cruz y Díaz
(1939-03-22) March 22, 1939 (age 85)
Matanzas, Cuba
Residence Carrollton, Texas
Nationality Cuban[1] (1939–1973)
Canadian[1] (1973–2005)
American (2005–present)
Education University of Texas
Spouse(s) Julia Garza (m.1959)
Eleanor Elizabeth (Darragh) Cruz (div. 1997)
Children 3
Parent(s) Rafael Cruz, Laudelina Diaz

Rafael Bienvenido Cruz y Díaz (born March 22, 1939) is an American Christian preacher and public speaker. The father of US politician Ted Cruz, he is described by various media outlets, including the Wall Street Journal, as an acting surrogate in his son's political campaigns.[2][3]

Early life

Cruz was born in Matanzas, Cuba, in 1939. His father, Rafael Cruz, was a salesman for RCA, originally from the Canary Islands, Spain. His mother, Emilia Laudelina Díaz, was a teacher.[4][5][6]

Cruz attended Arturo Echemendia primary school in Matanzas.[7] Cruz states he joined the Cuban revolution as a teenager and "suffered beatings and imprisonment for protesting the oppressive regime"[4][7][8][9] of dictator Fulgencio Batista.[10][11] Cruz enrolled at the age of 17 at the University of Santiago in September 1956.[7] According to Cruz, as a teenager, he "didn't know Castro was a Communist".[12][13][14] Cruz has stated in interviews that he was jailed by Batista for several days in June or July 1957 and after he was released he applied and was accepted by the University of Texas in August 1957. He obtained a student visa[15] after an attorney for the family bribed a Batista official to grant him an exit permit.[1][2][16] Cruz said he left with $100 sewn into his underwear taking a two-day bus ride to the University of Texas, arriving with little or no English.[17][18]

He graduated from UT with a degree in mathematics and chemical engineering four years later in 1961.[9][15] Cruz states he worked his way through college as a dishwasher, making 50 cents an hour and learned English by going to movies.[17][19] When he arrived in Austin he gave dozens of speeches in support of the Revolution to various clubs, but later after a visit back to Cuba in the summer of 1959 he became a harsh critic of Castro after "the rebel leader took control and began seizing private property and suppressing dissent".[12] Upon returning he revisited the same groups to give lectures opposing Castro and the Revolution.[15] Cruz recounts that his younger sister fought against the new regime in the counter-revolution and was consequently tortured. He remained regretful for his early support of Castro and expressed his remorse to his son on numerous occasions.[4][11]

Religious and political beliefs

File:Pastor Rafael Cruz.jpg
Cruz speaking at the Southern Republican Leadership Conference in Oklahoma City - 2015

Cruz left the Roman Catholic Church in 1975 and became an Evangelical Christian after attending a Bible study with a colleague and having a born again experience. Explaining his leaving the Catholic church, Cruz stated in an interview with National Review, "The people at the Bible study had a peace that I could not understand, this peace in the midst of trouble. I knew I needed to find that peace by finding Jesus Christ." Following his conversion, his son and wife also became born-again Christians. In the Cruz home, talk at dinner time was frequently about the Bible.[4] He was ordained as a pastor in 2004.[20]

Cruz works from his home in Carrollton, a suburb of Dallas, as a traveling preacher[21][22] and public speaker, campaigning as a surrogate for his son during the 2016 Presidential campaign season.[17][23] In a 2014 Associated Press story, Cruz was quoted as saying, "I have a burden for this country and I feel that we cannot sit silent." He went on to say that he feels "It's time we stop being politically correct and start being biblically correct."[23][24][25]

About his political involvements in the 1980s, Cruz reflected, "I was on the state board of the Religious Roundtable, a Christian and Jewish religious organization that worked to elect Ronald Reagan." At the time, he told his son, "God has destined you for greatness."[17][26]

At the New Beginnings Church in Irving, Texas, in August 2012, Cruz delivered a sermon where he described his son's senatorial campaign as taking place within a context where Christian "kings" were anointed to preside over an "end-time transfer of wealth" from wicked people to the righteous. Cruz urged the congregation to "tithe mightily" to achieve that result.[27] During an interview conducted by the Christian Post in 2014, Cruz stated, "I think we cannot separate politics and religion; they are interrelated. They've always been interrelated."[28] Salon described Cruz as a "Dominionist, devoted to a movement that finds in Genesis a mandate that 'men of faith' seize control of public institutions and govern by biblical principle."[29]

On Labor Day 2015, Cruz was hosted at the annual "Turning Hearts" celebration in Kalona, Iowa, by the Bontrager Family Singers, a gospel and bluegrass group which became active in the ongoing Ted Cruz presidential campaign.[30]

Personal life

In 1959, Cruz married Julia Ann Garza (August 22, 1939 – May 18, 2013), but divorced after a few years. She later became a professor at California State University, Stanislaus. They had two daughters, Miriam Ceferina Cruz (November 22, 1961-2011) and Roxana Lourdes Cruz (born November 18, 1962), a Greenville, Texas, physician. Miriam died in 2011. He has one grandson.[4][21][31][32][33]

In his twenties, Cruz moved to New Orleans. In 1969, at his new oil company job, he met his second wife, Eleanor Elizabeth Darragh Wilson, a computer programmer from Delaware. Cruz and Wilson lived in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, where their only child, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, was born.[34] While in Calgary, the couple owned a seismic-data processing firm for oil drillers.[4][9]

After Cruz graduated from the University of Texas in 1961, he was granted political asylum in the United States following the expiration of his student visa.[1] Rafael Cruz earned Canadian citizenship in 1973[35] and in 2005 he renounced his Canadian citizenship and became a naturalized U.S. citizen.[4][22][36][37] Eleanor and Rafael Cruz divorced in 1997.[1][32][38]

From 1993 to 2009, Cruz was a top salesman for Mannatech.[39][40]

Politics

At age 76, Cruz is involved with his son's 2016 presidential campaign, playing what the Boston Globe described as "a crucial—if sometimes divisive—element of the Texas senator’s campaign to win over conservative Christian voters."[41] During the campaign, Cruz underwent emergency eye surgery, but returned to campaigning after several weeks' recovery.[41]

In April 2016, it was reported that Cruz had traveled to Puerto Rico to court delegates won by former candidate Marco Rubio.[42][43]

References

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  8. 4 Rising stars from the Democratic, Republican conventions, The Christian Post, Napp Nazworth, September 10, 2012. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
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  18. How Ted Cruz's dad, Rafael, became a GOP rock star, D Magazine, Michael J. Mooney, January 2014. Retrieved November 22, 2015.
  19. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  20. Twohey, Megan. Ted Cruz’s Father Worked With Supplements Maker Sued by Investors, New York Times, April 29, 2016.
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  26. Brody File Exclusive: Ted Cruz’s Father Tells His Son: 'God Has Destined You for Greatness', The Brody File, David Brody, July 22, 2013. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
  27. WATCH: Ted Cruz's Dad Calls US a "Christian Nation," Says Obama Should Go "Back to Kenya" Want to understand where the tea party champion's hardcore views come from? Meet his father, Rafael., Mother Jones, David Corn, October 31, 2013. Retrieved November 29, 2015.
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  33. Dr. Julia G. Cruz, (obituary) Herald-Banner, April 20, 2013. Retrieved November 25, 2015.
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  41. 41.0 41.1 Tracy Jan, Ted Cruz's father gives him edge among conservative Christians, Boston Globe (January 27, 2016).
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