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Between The Wire And The Sea: A Memoir of Hope and Hard Lessons in Guantanamo Bay, 1994 follows Airman and chaplain manager Keith McCray into the heart of the Guantánamo refugee crisis, where forty thousand Haitians, barbed wire, and relentless heat collide with faith, trauma, and duty. This true story reveals how one quiet serviceman became a bodyguard, bridge-builder, and witness to suffering: discovering that presence, courage, and compassion can create pockets of freedom even when every path is surrounded by fences and uncertainty.
Hey, I’m Keith McCray
Keith McCray never imagined that his quiet work as an Air Force chaplain manager would place him at the center of one of the most complex humanitarian missions of the 1990s. Stationed at Charleston Air Force Base, he organized worship services, supported chaplains, and helped military families find spiritual grounding until unexpected deployment orders sent him to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, in 1994.
There, in the middle of a rapidly growing refugee crisis, Keith’s role shifted from office-based coordinator to chaplain bodyguard, cultural bridge, and tireless listener. For 179 days, he walked the camps of Gitmo, serving Haitian refugees, protecting chaplains, helping reunite scattered families, and witnessing both the worst and the best of human behavior under pressure.
Between The Wire And The Sea is his deeply personal account of that season, written not as a policy critique or political argument, but as a testimony to what he saw, felt, and carried home. Today, Keith continues to value faith, integrity, service, and the quiet, often unseen work of showing up for people in crisis, wherever they are found. He writes to honor the Haitians he served, the chaplains beside him, and lessons that never left.
Between The Wire And The Sea
A Memoir Of Hope and Hard Lessons in Guantanamo Bay, 1994
Between The Wire And The Sea: A Memoir of Hope and Hard Lessons in Guantanamo Bay, 1994 pulls back the curtain on a mission most people never saw, and fewer still understood. As an Air Force chaplain manager unexpectedly deployed to Guantánamo Bay in 1994, Keith McCray stepped into a world of tents, fences, and forty thousand Haitian refugees carrying unspeakable stories.
What began as “temporary duty” quickly became something far deeper. Assigned as a chaplain bodyguard, Keith walked hot gravel paths twelve hours a day, listening to mothers who lost children at sea, fathers haunted by political violence, and children who could only sleep when they felt truly safe. Alongside Haitian ministers and translators, he helped reunite families separated across thirteen camps and created small pockets of normalcy through worship, prayer, classes, laughter, and even impromptu games.
This is not a combat memoir. It is a frontline account of humanitarian crisis, quiet spiritual leadership, and the stubborn belief that dignity and hope still belong to people living behind razor wire and uncertainty, grief, and rebuilding.
Between The Wire And The Sea
A Memoir Of Hope and Hard Lessons in Guantanamo Bay, 1994
One unexpected deployment. Forty thousand refugees. A chaplain manager caught between barbed wire and prayer discovers how presence, courage, and stubborn hope can rewrite lives, even when every exit is fenced.
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Faith Under Canvas: A Story from the Refugee Camps
There are moments in history that never quite make it into collective memory. The Guantánamo refugee camps of 1994 are one of them.
Inside the Fences: When Presence Became the Mission
Some missions change you not because of what you accomplish, but because of what you witness. Between The Wire And The Sea is built on that truth.
What Our Client Say
Readers of Between The Wire And The Sea often say they closed the final page feeling both wrecked and renewed, seen by its honesty and stirred by its fierce commitment to human dignity.
John
“I thought I understood Guantánamo. I was wrong. McCray’s story put me inside the camps and made me care, repent, and hope in entirely new ways.” –
George
“This book should be required reading for anyone in ministry, the military, or humanitarian work. It shows what faithful presence looks like when policies and comfort fall away.” – Pastor and Veteran
Sarah
“Between The Wire And The Sea is heartbreaking and strangely healing. I wept, underlined, and finished convinced that small, persistent acts of compassion really can change the trajectory of history.” –
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