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More handpicked essays just for you.
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Vidal is a 13 year old, Hispanic male, from Guatemala. Vidal arrived at Leake and Watts on 08/11/2017 after being detained by Immigration Costume Enforcement (ICE) in Texas together with his alleged father Cristian Alvarado Alvarado. Both were separated during the time of apprehension. Vidal traveled from Guatemala to the United States illegally with his alleged father and a different identification due to extreme poverty and the lack of educational opportunities in Guatemala. Due to continuous assessment with Vidal, he disclosed the idea of journeying to the USA come from Cristian Alvarado Alvarado and Berta Maribel Funes both related to the family.
Bobrow-Strain deftly highlights the structural inequities that prevent Latinx people from moving ahead in society. The author emphasizes the enormous discrepancies encountered by Latinx communities and provides attention to the structural constraints they meet via Aida's experiences, such as her mother's low-wage employment and her own restricted access to decent education The growth of Aida's character serves as an example of the tenacity and power typical of Latino cultural settings. Aida refuses to let her surroundings alone define who she is despite the difficulties she endures. Her pursuit of education and her participation in activism to bring about change in her community demonstrate her drive to overcome her circumstances.
This Chapter is basically about how people discriminate immigrants for being different and making connection between the past and the present. Miguel de la Torre, a Hispanic man, compares the typical immigrant life, including his, with Jesus Christ. He claims most Hispanics/Latinos/as whom came to “el Norte” and suffered some type of racism for being “illegal” happen to have a similar life as the one the son of God had. According to Miguel, Jesus today is an immigrant whom escaped his origin land, like most Hispanics, with the only difference that Jesus and his earthly parents left their land for protection, and Hispanics, now a days, leave their origin country for economic/political purposes. Miguel also points out how God decided to place
This essay is going to describe focus on the work of the Central American Resource Center (CARECEN), a nonprofit organization that offers inexpensive legal, educational, and advocacy services to Central American immigrants. Created in 1983 in San Fernando Valley, CARECEN was originally known as the Central American Refugee Center. The founder was a Salvadoran refugee who was determined to attain legal status for the many Central Americans who were running away from their country 's civil war. Throughout the past three decades, the organization has worked with movements such as “ICE Out of L.A.,” “TPS to Residency Campaign,” “Restore Day Labor Center Funding Campaign,” among many others. For this reason, in this essay I will argue that CARECEN
Poverty, drugs, prostitution, and theft may not be a common occurrence seen by the average person, but for those individuals who live in housing projects, it is second hand nature. A housing project is a government-subsidized housing development that provides low rent for low income households. These developments are usually considered as ghettos; in Spanish they are referred to as “barrios”. Spanish film director and screenwriter, Fernando Leon de Aranoa, gives audiences a better understanding of the hardships that are faced in his film “Barrio”. Living in such tough conditions, it would be hard for anyone to prosper, but it becomes even more difficult for teenagers to resist the evils that surround them everyday, the future is bleak and to escape it is almost impossible.
After reading Chapter eleven I learned how race is looked at culturally among different places and what race and ethinicty is looked at. For example in Latin America where the Spanish and Portuguese colonized, many Afrcians and Native Americans were more free to have sexual contact with other races/people, so their were more mix races and caused more people in Latin America to be more accepting, even though attitudes remained about "Whiteness" and "Blackness". Another example I learned was how American culture views race, they equated race with lower socioeconomic status and intelligence and whats interesting is that how race and ethinicty in one culture shows social status and where you belong, just because of how you look. Ethinicity in cultures
Pedro Lopez , also known as “The Monster of the Andes”, was born on October 8, 1949 in Tolima, Colombia. He was known for being a serial killer for murdering about one hundred ten to three hundred young girls, and a rapist for raping about three hundred young girls in South America. He was also in the Guinness World Records for being the "most prolific serial killer". His mother, Benilda López De Casteneda, was a prostitute at about the age of twelve and his father, Midardo Reyes, was a member of the Colombian Conservative Party (something dealing with politics) where they lived in poverty and political violence. Lopez was the seventh child out of thirteen children.
She also uses allusion to show that this is an ongoing issue and that it needs to continue to be addressed and enforced in order for change to happen. Menchu talks about the, “growing concern is comforting, even though it comes 500 years later, to the suffering, the discrimination, the oppression and the exploitation that our peoples have been exposed to”. This allusion allows her to draw connections between different historical events and allow her to draw parallels between them and the issues going on in Guatemala and Central America. This allows her to deepen her message and show the importance and significance of this topic. Menchu also says, “It is also a tribute to the Central American people who are still searching for their stability, for the structuring of their future, and the path for their development and integration, based on civil democracy and mutual respect.”
When you think of Guatemala, you might think of all the bad stuff the media only covers, like the violence or drug cartels. It is more than that, and I’m here today to share more information about the old country and inform you guys on Guatemala’s history, culture, and it’s natural beauty. BODY 1. History - Let’s
The united states has always had and still does have issues that contain to race and cultural conflicts and you can trace the roots of these inequalities back in the history of our nation. One of the major minority groups that has been marginalized over the years is the latino community. The ending of the mexican american war with the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo started a rise of conflicts on the southern border. At the end of the Mexican american war the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was signed.
The Virgin Mary is a primordial icon in the Roman Catholic Church, she has been giving various different titles but a couple of the most important ones are “Queen of Mexico and Empress of the Americas” and “Virgin Patroness of Latin America” (Fastiggi 509). Although she been given these unbelievable prestigious titles and the fact that she has affected various countries in Latin America. It is undoubtedly well known that the Virgin Mary has had the most influence in Mexico were she is called Our Lady of Guadalupe/Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe/La Virgen de Guadalupe. In this essay which will be discussing Our Lady of Guadalupe and how she impacted colonial Mexico. This will go in depth into the transversal historical context and the longitudinal historical context, which will be separated into sections.
The cities in the highlands were the first to be abandoned. This was an area where for over 16 centuries, the Itza Maya farmers were able to produce an abundance of food on mountainside terraces. It was from their ability to produce an abundance of agricultural surpluses that the great cities in the Maya Lowlands and in the Yucatan Peninsula were able to grow so large and prosperous. With the combination of natural disasters, such as volcanic eruptions and hurricanes, the addition of wars and then drought eradicated the abundance of food.
Guatemala is located in Central America and was once heavily populated with the Mayan population. Ever since the Spaniards took over the land that the Mayans called theirs, the Mayans became enslaved in their home country and have been struggling to regain power ever since. For many years the people of Guatemala have been poorly treated and have been constantly fighting to keep their land against the government. Guatemala has been at civil war for a very long time due to economic and political inequalities which in turn lead to the Mayans protesting against the governments that were causing damage to their land. Although the Mayans believed that these protests would solve the issues that they were facing but in reality the government just invested
Many kids on Mango Street are not expected to go to college, not only because of the low expectations, but also because their families do not have enough money. In a community where the main issue present is poverty, the kids are not expected to be successful in certain aspects and are not expected to achieve great things in life. The Vargas kids, who live on Esperanza’s street, “bend trees and bounce between cars and dangle upside down from knees and almost break like fancy museum vases you can’t replace. They are without respect for all living things, including themselves” (Cisneros 29). As one can see, when a family is deeply involved with poverty, the parents often tend to forget about the children and their success.
As a young child, after being told of how poor her houseboy Fido was, Adichie did not believe his family could also be hardworking. “Their poverty was my single story of them. ”(Adichie) She also details how later, on a trip to Guadalajara she was overwhelmed with shame because her only image of Mexicans was the “abject immigrant” due to the “…endless stories of Mexicans as people who were fleecing the healthcare system, sneaking across the border, being arrested at the border, that sort of thing.” (Adichie)a She was caught by surprise when she saw Mexicans happy and at work in the marketplace.