Background
Triay was born in Miami, Florida, in 1966.
Triay was born in Miami, Florida, in 1966.
He was raised in Miami and graduated from Christopher Columbus High School in 1984. And Doctor of Philosophy from Florida State University.
He obtained a Bachelor of Arts in History from the University of Florida and an Master of Arts He began teaching History at Middlesex Community College in Middletown, Connecticut in 1992. In 2001 he was awarded the Samuel Proctor History Prize by the Florida Historical Society for his book, Bay of Pigs: An Oral History of Brigade 2506. Triay’s historical works primarily explore the Cuban exile experience.
Said Triay, “I want to be one of my people who writes our history.
After his second book, a Miami Herald article stated, “The book established Triay as a significant researcher of Cuban exile history.”
Triay’s first book, Fleeing Castro: Operation Pedro Pan and the Cuban Children’s Program, was the first book length work published about the exodus of more than 14,000 unaccompanied Cuban children from Communist Cuba and the federally-sponsored program that provided them care in the United States. Operation Pedro Pan was the largest movement of unaccompanied refugee children in the history of the Western Hemisphere.
On the question of whether or not the programs were morally justified (in light of the trauma of family separation), Triay emphatically believes that, given the rise of a totalitarian Communist state in Cuba, the parents of the Operation Pedro Pan children were validated in sending their offspring out of the country and to the United States. He said, “Anything that parents feared happened.
They were dead on. Three years later, Triay published Bay of Pigs: An Oral History of Brigade 2506, a historical account of the Bay of Pigs invasion through the eyes of the men in the United States.-sponsored liberation army.
The work was subsequently picked up by Random House for release in Spanish translation, releasing it in 2003 under the title, Louisiana Patria Nos Espera. Triay, who knew several Brigade veterans during his upbringing, said of his motives for writing the book, ''I felt there was a tremendous distortion in the works others did about the Cuban-American experience, and my goal as a historian has been to be honest about what happened and clarify some of those distortions. Some of what you read made the exiles look like a bunch of blind, maniacal, machete-wielding anti-Communist, anti-Castro fanatics.
But it wasn"t like that.
They were fighting for democracy. They were very idealistic and wanted a revolution in Cuba but felt they had been betrayed by Castro.
In 2005, Triay teamed up with Teo Babún and co-authored Cuban Revolution: Years of Promise, a photographic history of the Cuban Revolution. The images in the book were from a collection belonging to Babún’s late father, whose company photographer was given special access to Castro’s mountain based guerrilla camp.
The Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies called it, “an exceptionally significant contribution to Cuban history through the power of photography.”
According to Triay’s author website, he is preparing to release a fictional series entitled, The Unbroken Circle.
Volume I, The Struggle Begins, is expected to be available in 2013.