YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    From ‘dreamer’ to teacher: Maria Hernandez

    By Liz Goodwin

    Maria Hernandez is one of six people Yahoo News has interviewed for our series on Americans who gained green cards under Ronald Reagan’s 1986 law that legalized 2.7 million illegal immigrants. On Wednesday, we profile Hector Ramirez, who co-founded a steel supply company with his four brothers.

    When Maria Hernandez was 8 years old and living with her family in Santa Ana, Calif., her father went missing. Rumors flew that immigration authorities had raided his workplace and that he may have been among the many who were arrested and subsequently deported.

    “When I heard, my heart just dropped,” Hernandez recalled. When her father didn’t come home that night, her mother realized the rumors were true.

    At the time, said Hernandez, she didn’t know she also lacked legal immigration status. While her younger siblings were born in America and were citizens, she joked that she was the only one “made in Mexico.” Her parents had crossed over first, seeking a better life, and she followed six months later—still just a baby—with a relative. (By that point, the young Hernandez didn’t recognize her own mother, who, she says was crushed.)

    It was while she was in junior high school that Hernandez realized she was also undocumented. “I remember worrying about it when it was registration time [at school], because I was always afraid they would ask for documentation and I wouldn’t have it,” she said.

    A few years after her father managed to re-enter the country and rejoin his family, immigration reform passed Congress. Hernandez, at that time 12 years old, and her parents were among the 2.7 million people eventually granted legal status under the 1986 program.

    It was then, said Hernandez, that she finally felt safe. “I felt a huge relief, because … I was [always] afraid that I wasn’t going to be able to go to school.”

    Hernandez not only stayed in school, she also became an elementary school reading teacher in Santa Ana, where she lives with her husband and three children in a home, filled with family photos, that they own. She became a U.S. citizen in 1995.

    But Hernandez didn’t take the straightest path to her career. She was young when she married and had her first child, so she waited about eight years after graduating high school to begin college. She enrolled at a local community college and then won a scholarship to get her bachelor’s in education at Chapman University. She’s been teaching for 14 years.

    Santa Ana, in Orange County, is nearly 80 percent Hispanic, and some of Hernandez’s students are the children of illegal immigrants or are undocumented themselves. She said she tries to use her own experience as a way to inspire them to work hard.

    “I say, ‘Look, you’re here to help your parents, better your life. If I did it, you can do it,’” she said.

    Hernandez said she hopes the nation’s politicians will pass immigration reform. She empathizes especially with the children of illegal immigrants who lack status—often called “dreamers”—because she was in the same position as a child.

    “Now it seems like whoever is out there making all these laws, it seems like they don’t want us here no matter what,” Hernandez said, referencing the many failed immigration reform proposals of the past 10 years.

    “I understand that with every culture or country there’s people who are here to do well and be productive members of society, and there’s people who lose focus of that and seek the easy way out and cause trouble, and that’s terrible,” she added. “But most of us are here to work hard.”

    Hernandez said she’s grateful that her parents made sure she was legalized under the '86 law, which allowed her to do what she loves—teach.

    “I’m very blessed,” she said, “I really am.”
     

    • Bieber behind wheel as car hits man in Hollywood

      LOS ANGELES (AP) — Video shows Justin Bieber running into a photographer with his white Ferrari in Hollywood, but police say there was no crime and the injuries aren't life-threatening.

    • Kim and Kanye's Baby Name Is Not That Strange

      It's being reported that rapper Kanye West and his reality star girlfriend Kim Kardashian have named their brand-new baby, born this weekend, Kaidence Donda West. Donda was Kanye's late mother's name, so that makes sense, but, um, Kaidence? What's going on with Kaidence?

    • Tennis-McEnroe calls for Nadal to be seeded four at Wimbledon

      By Martyn Herman LONDON, June 18 (Reuters) - Wimbledon's seeding committee should use its power to promote 11-times grand slam champion Rafa Nadal into the top four, according to three-times former champion John McEnroe. Speaking the day before the seeds are announced for the grasscourt slam which starts on Monday, the American said it would be "totally wrong" if Nadal had to play world number one Novak Djokovic, defending champion Roger Federer or home favourite Andy Murray in the quarter-finals. ...

    • Man charged with tossing wife off cruise ship

      SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A California grand jury has indicted a Florida man on charges he strangled his ex-wife and tossed her off a cruise ship in Italy.

    • Massachusetts police search NFL player's home in homicide probe: report

      (Reuters) - Massachusetts State Police searched the home of New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez on Tuesday as part of a probe into a suspected homicide, according to ABC News. Hernandez was initially uncooperative with police after the body of a 27-year-old man was found in an industrial park near his home in North Attleborough on Monday, ABC News said, citing unnamed law enforcement sources. A police spokesman confirmed there was a homicide investigation under way in North Attleborough, but declined to give further details. ...

    • Yankees' Youkilis needs surgery, Teixeira to DL

      NEW YORK (AP) — Kevin Youkilis needs back surgery and Mark Teixeira returned to the 15-day disabled list Tuesday with an aching right wrist, the latest injury setbacks for the depleted New York Yankees.

    • When car rental reservations aren't honored

      We're sorry, sir, but we don't have any cars left. That was my unpleasant welcome to Michigan by Hertz. I had a reservation. They saw the reservation. The problem: Hertz hadn't actually saved me a car. ...

    • Miss Utah's Pageant Answer Is the Worst You've Ever Seen

      The only time normal people seem to care about national beauty pageants is when one of the contestants messes up the question-and-answer round in the worst way possible. Well, it happened again last night at the Miss USA pageant, with Miss Utah giving an answer so bad that it eclipsed all other terrible pageant answers before her. Meet 21-year-old Marissa Powell. She is from Salt Lake City. And this is the full, cringe-worthy sequence you will be seeing a lot of this week:

    Follow Yahoo! News

    Loading...