| Belen Jesuit Preparatory School | |
|---|---|
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Belen Jesuit Preparatory School in Havana | |
| Location | |
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500 Southwest 127th Avenue,Miami ,,33184 United States | |
| Coordinates | 25°45′46″N80°24′06″W / 25.76278°N 80.40167°W /25.76278; -80.40167 |
| Information | |
| Former name | Colegio de Belén (1854) |
| Type | Private,Roman Catholic Non-profit College preparatoryAll-boys Secondary (grades 6–12) education institution |
| Motto | Latin: Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam Spanish: Para la mayor gloria de Dios English: For The Greater Glory of God |
| Religious affiliation | Roman Catholic (Jesuit) |
| Established | 1854; 172 years ago (1854) |
| Founder | Queen Isabella II of Spain |
| President | Guillermo García-Tuñon |
| Dean | Andres De Angulo |
| Principal | José E. Roca |
| Enrollment | 1,367 enrollment as of 2025-26 |
| Campus | Urban 33 acres (130,000 m2) |
| Colors | Blue and Gold |
| Athletics | Varsity team name Belen Wolverines |
| Mascot | Waldo the Wolverine |
| Nickname | Wolverines |
| Website | belenjesuit.org |
Belen Jesuit Preparatory School (Spanish:Colegio Preparatorio Jesuita Belén) is a private, Catholic,all-male,preparatory school run by the Antilles Province of theSociety of Jesus inTamiami,[1][2]unincorporatedMiami-Dade County,Florida, operated by theSociety of Jesus. It was established inHavana,Cuba by theJesuits in 1854 but moved to theUnited States after thecommunist government ofFidel Castro, himself analumnus, took power and expelled the Jesuits.[3] It has since made theCardinal Newman Society's honor roll.[4] The name Belen is Spanish for "Bethlehem."[5]

In 1854,Queen Isabella II of Spain issued a royal charter founding the "Colegio de Belén" in Havana. The school took its name from the building it occupied at its founding, the colonialconvent and convalescent hospital of Our Lady of Belén. Over time, the school expanded through the acquisition of several nearby buildings in Havana. The resulting complex became known as "El Palacio de Educación" (The Palace of Education). "El Palacio" now houses theInstituto Técnico Militar (Military Technical Institute).
A meteorological observatory was established in 1857. A facility was built in 1896.[6] The education of students was assigned to the priests and brothers of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits).


The Colegio de Belén opened inMarianao in 1925, situated next door to theTropicana Club, it was constructed on sixty acres of land that had been donated and was to be used as the main building of theColegio de Belén, which had been opened since 1854 within the premises of the convent of the same name inOld Havana. Those premises had become unsuitable and badly located due to the change of atmosphere in the neighborhood and the growth of the city. The project was designed by the Cuban architectural firm of Morales & Cia (Leonardo Morales y Pedroso) in 1925 with an unlimited budget for designing a religious school, theColegio de Belén, Havana.[7]
The result was a monumental pan-optical edifice[citation needed] with an extensive neoclassical façade perpendicular to the chapel and four large courtyards, recalling the building in Havana Vieja, with three stories of porticoed galleries to link nine radial pavilions. The appearance is of extreme monumentality which is supported both in the design resources and the unusual dimensions of the spaces. The structure is built from concrete-covered steel, the flooring and roof are monolithic reinforced concrete.[citation needed]
In 1961 the government ofFidel Castro (himself a graduate of Belen) confiscated all private and religious schools in Cuba. Castro expelled the Jesuits and declared the government of Cuba an atheist government.[8] Thousands of those dubbed "enemies of the revolution" were executed or imprisoned, and the school curriculum was reshaped by communist doctrine.[9]
In 1961, the revolutionary regime confiscated the school's property and expelled the Jesuit faculty. The school was re-established in Miami the same year on the fourth floor of the Gesu Elementary School. The building no longer exists and is now downtown Miami'sGesu Church's parking lot. In 1962, a new building was acquired and the school moved to the new site on the corner of SW8th Street and 7th Avenue.
Since 1981, Belen Jesuit sits on a 34-acre site in western Miami-Dade County. There are over 8,000 members of the Belen Alumni Association currently active. Belen Jesuit is a member of the Society of Jesus Caribbean Province which consists of the sections of Miami, Dominican Republic, Cuba, Jamaica, and Guyana.
Belen Jesuit is accredited by Cognia. The school is also affiliated with the National Catholic Educational Association and is a member of the Jesuit Schools Network and the Jesuit High School College Counselors Association.[10]
The Fr. Benito Viñes, S.J. Observatory for Astronomy and Meteorology was built with donations from the Belen Jesuit Class of 1972 and is named the Fr. Benito Viñes, SJ Observatory. The observatory has an array of 11 telescopes, and Belen is the only middle/high school in South Florida equipped with a 16" telescope with a charge-coupled device (digital) camera for astrophotography. Weather forecasts from the facility are radioed daily to various cities in Florida. The observatory has grown and made popular under Fr. Pedro Cartaya, S.J.
The De la Cruz Stadium is used for athletic competitions such as track & field, soccer and football games. The artificial turf field is one of the best in Miami and allows student athletes the ability to use the field year-round. De La Cruz Stadium has hosted major events such as Regional Track and Field Championships, the All Catholic Conference Championships, and various classes District Championships.
The Gian Zumpano Aquatic Center was completed on June 6, 2018 and is the home to the Belen Jesuit swimming and water polo teams. This Olympic-sized swimming facility was built in honor of Belen alumnus Gian Zumpano from the class of 1986. Gian was the salutatorian of his class and died at the age of 22. The competition complex is the first known facility of its kind designed in the Jesuit tradition.[11]
Hernandez Field is a multipurpose facility. It features a synthetic field built by A-turf and a natural grass field. It also adds a quarter mile to the cross country course as well as shot put and discus rings to the track facility.
Maury Park is home to the newly added Baseball Complex. It includes brand-new turf fields for the middle school and varsity fields, dugouts, locker rooms, and bleachers. The Curbelo Family Indoor Baseball Facility is a state-of-the-art facility where Belen Jesuit baseball athletes train year-round.
The Roberto C. Goizueta Innovation Center is the home of Belen Jesuit's gymnasium which includes two full-length basketball courts and two full-length volleyball courts. The building also houses a lobby, three locker rooms, and the STEAM program on the second floor.
The Roberto Surís Athletic Center is a three-story, nearly 60,000-square-foot facility. It features two workout rooms, a gym, two dozen treadmills, ERG machines, and golf simulators. It also serves as the centerpiece of a developing athletic complex that will bring together all sports facilities on campus.
This area is a vibrant new gathering space uniting de la Cruz Stadium, Maury Park, Nike Hill, and Hernández Field. The plaza features covered seating areas and a 700-pound, 6-foot Wolverine statue. A tribute to state champions past and present is also displayed by sport in the plaza. The design is intended to be both functional and inspiring, with a clear nod to the school’s athletic legacy and an invitation to future greatness. The plaza connects with the renovated Café Belen, enhancing student life and campus cohesion.
Belen Jesuit Preparatory School makes financial assistance available to all students who attend the school regardless of race, color, creed, disability, or national origin. The financial assistance program takes the form of hardship assistance. Hardship assistance is determined by financial need based upon the evaluation of a financial assistance application. Belen Jesuit does not award academic or athletic scholarships.
Belen's financial assistance program is made possible by contributions of friends and family of Belen along with the school's signature events and The Fund for Belen.[citation needed]
Belen Jesuit is one of the state’s best college preparatory schools and is among the nation’s top Catholic high schools. Niche also ranked Belen as the best all-boys high school in Florida. Our classes range from Latin American History to Anatomy and Physiology, as well as Mandarin and Philosophy.
A robust and rigorous honors, AP, and dual enrollment program is offered to our students and Project Lead the Way (PLTW) courses in middle and high school. Our students can earn an AP Capstone diploma or certificate, as well as an AP and PLTW Student Achievement Certificate.
The state-of-the-art Roberto C. Goizueta Innovation Center exposes students to a rigorous STEAM program that prepares them to become problem-solvers in a global society, equipping them for the 21st-century workforce. The Innovation Center is also home to Engineering courses and Robotics teams.
The Catholic Entrepreneurship Program focuses on shaping the whole person and interconnecting business principles with Catholic values.
Each year, Belen sends 100% of its graduates to colleges all over the United States and abroad. Universities such as Penn, Yale, Princeton, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Georgetown, Fordham, and many others have Belen alumni walking their hallways and gracing their classrooms.
The various clubs at Belen Jesuit foster the intellectual and moral growth of the student, further allowing them to meet the profile of a Jesuit Graduate at Graduation. Furthermore, all clubs have a mission statement aligned with our school's mission and promote the Jesuit ideal ofMen for Others.
Belen students have earned local, national, and international recognition through their accomplishments in the band program, Model United Nations, speech and debate,Mu Alpha Theta, robotics, chess, and various other clubs and honor societies.[citation needed]
The Ignatian Center for the Arts, inaugurated in October 2003, is the hub of the Humanities Department. The department includes the following academic areas: art, art history, drama, music, band, speech and debate and philosophy. Facilities include the 665-seat Ophelia & Juan Js. Roca Theater; the Olga & Carlos Saladrigas Art Gallery; the Leopoldo Nuñez Rehearsal Hall; seven classrooms and the theater's administrative office. The Saladrigas Gallery displays several professionally curated exhibits, which include an Archdiocesan high school young artists exhibit, a Belen community art show, and numerous other projects.
The Belen bands program has over 200 student musicians and was established in January 2005. There are three major band units in the school: the jazz band, the concert band and the drum line. The Belen jazz band has won first and second place awards in competitions at Disney World, the Miami-Dade Youth Fair and the Festival of Music in Washington, D.C., and Chicago. The bands have three annual concerts at the Roca Theater, while the drum line is a source of "mood and spirit" at pep rallies and athletic competitions. Sections of the bands do charity work during the Christmas season, performing in malls, assisted living facilities, and hospitals.
Drama classes use the Roca Theater for their performances. Belen presents two high school productions annually and a one production annually from the middle school. Student productions include classics like Death of a Salesman, Fuenteovejuna, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Godspell, A Few Good Men, West Side Story, Sound of Music, Little Shop of Horrors, Beauty and the Beast, The Outsiders, Moon Over Buffalo, Hunchback of Notre Dame and others. The Saladrigas Gallery, which is located adjacent to the theater, hosts both professional and student exhibits throughout the year.
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Belen Jesuit competes in 17 sports and has 55 teams. Sports offered at Belen include baseball, basketball, bowling, crew, cross country, fencing, flag football, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, volleyball, water polo, and wrestling. Typically over 1,000 athletes participate annually.
State championshipshttps://www.belenjesuit.org/athletics/hall-of-champions:
•Boys soccer: 2016, 2021, 2022
•Boys crew: 2013, 2025
•Boys water polo: 2009, 2015, 2016, 2022
•Boys cross country: 1995, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
•Boys tennis: 2017
•Boys track and field: 2007, 2025
•Boys swimming and diving: 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013
•Boys basketball: 2023
The Ramón Guiteras Memorial Library is located on campus and serves the student body and faculty of Belen as well as the local community. The library houses La Colección Cubana (The Cuban Collection), a special collection of Cuban books. La Colección Cubana consists of over 8,000 volumes written either on the subject of Cuba or penned by Cubans and Cuban-Americans. La Colección Cubana is open to the public and is the second-largest collection of Cuban books and other media outside of Cuba.[12]
The following three Latin phrases are common mottos for theSociety of Jesus and are reflected in the teachings of the school's curriculum and community service.
500 SW 127th Avenue, Miami, FL 33184- The address states "Miami, FL" but it is actually in the unincorporated Tamiami CDP.