Against All Odds: Five
Latinas obtain degrees in honor of their father
By Araceli Cardenas
This is an
open letter to my father, Lazaro Cardenas.
During
graduation, there’s always one story or personal
journey that encompasses the effort and sacrifice of
what graduating with a degree truly represents. It’s
never easy because earning a degree requires
discipline, courage, perseverance, hard-work,
determination and commitment. In some cases, it takes
one special person to go beyond the classroom and
inspire you to finish against all odds!
This is the
case of my father, whose love and guidance inspired
his five daughters to earn a degree. Here’s our story!
My youngest
sister Nancy graduated from the University of Texas at
Brownsville with a Bachelor’s degree in Human & Health
Performance on December 19th, 2009. Her
accomplishment fulfils my father’s desire and dream to
see her graduate in a small town where greater
importance was given to raising a family, service to
others and devotion to religion versus the pursuit of
personal accomplishment and higher education. All
equally important however prioritized differently
growing up in a traditional home where Eulalia, my
mother’s strong Mexican roots governed how her five
daughters would be raised.
What makes
Nancy’s accomplishment remarkable is that prior to
this day my father had witnessed the beginning of his
dream come true when he quietly cheered and encouraged
his four other daughters to do the same. He did so,
leading by example. My father was able to obtain his
own law degree from Texas Southern University Thurgood
Marshall School of Law when Latino students were few
and far between. He always felt that his own
accomplishment was in large part because of his
service in the U.S. Air Force, which in turn had given
him the financial assistance to attend; and his own
father, who felt that the only way out of seasonal
migrant work was a degree. So early on, my father
allowed my mother to do her part while he secretly
pushed and stressed the importance of higher education
by guiding each one of his daughters to attend and
cross the finish line with a degree.
My father
felt this was the only way to succeed in America! So
we did, even though there were times when each one of
us wanted to quit; we knew that the idea of "throwing
in the towel" would be unacceptable. This included my
older sisters who juggled their family and job
responsibilities in order to find the time to finish
what they had started.
Unfortunately, parents are never awarded for their
efforts nor are they recognized at any special
ceremony. Instead, they watch from a distance with
pride as their son or daughter is rewarded. And,
they’re hoping that along the way, they did everything
they could to help.
So today, on
Nancy’s graduation, I’d like to first congratulate my
little sister who has the honor to be the last one to
make my father’s dream come true. Congratulations
Nancy your hard work truly paid off! We’re extremely
proud of you. You went on to finish when most would
have abandoned the course due to the many times life
threw you off course! Not only did you finish, you
finished strong by making the Dean’s List! You can’t
imagine how proud we all are!
And secondly,
I’d like to applaud my father’s leadership who on
graduation day will be watching from up above and will
feel that his personal sacrifice to guide his family
to victory was well worth it!
Dad, you can
finally rest in peace, Nancy has carried your torch to
the finish line! She fulfilled your dream to have your
five daughters all have a degree! You’re the reason we
finished. You’re the person behind the degrees --
three Masters and two Bachelors. You’re the one whose
love and guidance helped each one of us! So on this
day, if we could find a way to thank you for the many
nights you kept us company while we studied or the
many times you helped us understand what we were
studying especially when it came to politics and
government, or when you bought us every possible book
and study aid to help us pass subjects like biology or
math.
On this very
special day, we the Cardenas Sisters proudly dedicate
our degrees that bear your last name in your loving
memory. Words only scratch the surface of how much we
love and miss you!
Love, your
daughters, Adelaida, Alma, Martha, Araceli and Nancy
