Houston Chronicle

Reject hate and celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month

- By Sylvia R. Garcia Garcia, D-Houston, represents Texas’ Congressio­nal District 29.

When Donald Trump announced his candidacy for presidency back in June 2015, he did so by calling Mexicans criminals and rapists and promising a Great Wall.

Hearing his words, I was overcome by fear for what his words would do to my community and how they would affect families like mine. I immediatel­y thought of my mother and father, both firstgener­ation Mexican Americans who always emphasized the importance of hard work, a good education and belief in God.

I then thought about my brothers and sisters, who like me were raised on a small farm in Palito Blanco, speaking Spanish with our parents and hearing stories about how their parents immigrated to the United States.

Lastly, I thought about the predominan­tly Hispanic and Latino community in Houston I was fortunate enough to represent at the time in the Texas Senate. It’s a vibrant community of compassion­ate people with a fighting spirit and a desire to help their families achieve the American Dream.

Worse than expected

Many did not take Trump seriously when he spoke so cruelly about Mexican immigrants, but I understood the significan­ce of what he was saying. The reality of a Trump presidency has turned out to be worse than what anyone honestly expected.

We have seen migrant children ripped from the arms of their mothers and fathers and subsequent­ly caged like animals.

We have seen children die in United States custody because they were not given adequate and timely medical care.

We have seen images of a father and daughter who drowned while trying to cross a river into the United States. They died because they would rather risk it all than go back to their home country.

We have seen ICE raids across the country, most recently in Mississipp­i where kids were left without parents on their first day of school.

And we have seen the president’s words incite hate and fear, out of which came a brutal act of domestic terrorism against the Latino community in El Paso.

All of this has been heartbreak­ing and frustratin­g. It often makes us feel like there is little we can do; but that’s not true, not for Latinos nor for our country.

As we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, I urge everyone to join me in lifting up the stories of Latino and immigrant communitie­s across the country. Let us celebrate the important contributi­ons they have made to our country.

We are lawyers, entreprene­urs, teachers, plumbers, electricia­ns, doctors, and even members of Congress.

Earning justice

While celebratin­g our community, we must also reflect on how they have been targeted and hurt by this administra­tion. We must honor our people with action by registerin­g Latinos to vote and getting them to the polls next November.

This is how we will start to heal from the harm inflicted on our communitie­s.

This is how we will get justice for our people.

This is how we will win!

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