Title: Heriberto Sedeno Was Born In Havana, Cuba In June 1946
1Heriberto Sedeno Was Born In Havana, Cuba In June
1946
2Heriberto Sedeno was born in Havana, Cuba on June
5,1946. He attended elementary school at Escuela
Primaria del Centro de Dependientes del Comercio
de La Habana at the age of 5. After completing
his 5th grade, he appeared for an early entrance
exam which got him admission in bachillerato. It
is a secondary school in which the 6th grade is
combined with a preparatory year. During the
period from 1957 to 1958, Heriberto Sedeno took
training from Havana Business Academy, a popular
academic center.
3In 1958, he cleared this competitive exam that
lasted three days and after this, his parents
enrolled him at o Academia Pitman which is a
private school that was affiliated to the state
overseen Instituto de Ensenanza Secundaria de La
Vibora, a public secondary school. From
1965-1969, Heriberto Sedeno pursued his
undergraduate degree from University of St.
Thomas, located in Houston, Texas and during this
period, Biology was his Major subject. Later,
form 1969-1975, he attended Medical school at
School of Medicine in University of Zaragoza
which is situated at Zaragoza, in the Aragon
region of Spain.
4In January 1976, Heriberto Sedeno became a
resident doctor at Louisiana State University, in
December 1976, he became a part of Lake Charles
Charity Hospital as a Resident and he also became
a Family Practice resident at Lake Charles
Louisiana. Besides this, from July 1977 to June
1979, he served at R.E. Thomason General Hospital
in School of Medicine in the Texas Tech
University.
5Heriberto Sedeno has 30 years of professional
career as a Pedro Pan. In December 1960, Catholic
Welfare Bureau (Catholic Charities) of Miami
created a program named Pedro Pan. This program
was created at the request of parents in Cuba to
offer them an opportunity to send their children
to Miami, U.S.A to avoid Marxist-Leninist
indoctrination. On January 3, 1961, after the
break in diplomatic relations, the U.S.
Department of State gave authorization to the
Catholic Welfare Bureau to notify parents that
visa requirements for their children had been
waived and children can travel to Miami by
commercial flights.