Los Angeles Times

Campus namesake a ‘success story’

Bay Area site is named for journalist and immigrant activist Jose Antonio Vargas.

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th

When Jose Antonio Vargas first heard that an official wanted to name an elementary school after him, he thought he was being trolled.

“I get trolled a lot on Twitter because of what I do,” said the openly gay, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and immigratio­n rights activist, who revealed he was living in the country illegally in a New York Times essay eight years ago.

But the direct message from Mountain View Whisman School District Supt. Ayindé Rudolph was not a joke.

Vargas — together with Steve Jobs, former school board trustee Gail Urban Moore, and Michelle and Barack Obama — was on a shortlist of names under considerat­ion by the Board of Trustees for the district’s new school.

“We asked our community what characteri­stics they

were looking for out of a person who a school would be named after,” Rudolph said. “Some of the top ones that came up were someone who was local, who would be an inspiratio­n to the kids, and who had an impact on education.”

Parent groups ranked the choices. The list got shorter. The board voted.

On Monday, Jose Antonio Vargas Elementary School opened its doors.

Vargas was there, gifting supplies to teachers. At dismissal, he planned to hand out hundreds of lollipops to students.

“I came out as undocument­ed eight years ago in the New York Times, and ... I prepared for everything, every possible scenario — that I would be detained, deported, arrested — all of that I prepared for,” he said. “I did not prepare for this. This is the one scenario that never even entered my mind.”

Vargas, now 38, was born in the Philippine­s and moved to Mountain View at age 12, when his mother sent him there to live with his grandparen­ts. He didn’t realize he’d entered the United States with false documents until he tried to apply for a driver’s license years later.

But in the classroom — at Crittenden Middle School, then Mountain View High — he found a sense of security and belonging.

Vargas credits his teachers with instilling a lifelong love of reading and writing that led him to a career in journalism. At the Washington Post, he was part of a team that won the Pulitzer for breaking news reporting for its 2008 coverage of the Virginia Tech shooting.

His first “coming out” was in high school, when he disclosed that he was gay.

His second came in 2011, when he revealed his immigratio­n status in an essay for the New York Times Magazine. That same year, he founded Define American, a nonprofit that aims to use storytelli­ng to promote dialogue around immigratio­n issues.

“Our job, especially in this climate, is to ask people how they define ‘American,’ ” he said. “For some people, that may be a controvers­ial question, so I wasn’t sure that the community that I come from would answer that question in this way. But I guess, in many ways, the Mountain View School District decided to answer that question, and they decided I didn’t need papers or need to be born in this country to be considered in this way.”

The idea to name the school for Vargas originated with district Board of Trustees President Tamara Wilson, who first proposed it at a board meeting in 2017.

“I thought, why name a school — which is often done — after a long-gone administra­tor who people don’t often know or remember or connect to,” she said. “My thought was, let’s name it after a successful student, somebody kids can relate to as a success story, and just show that the foundation of our schools are our children.”

When she researched successful students, Vargas’ name “bubbled to the top,” she said.

In addition to her role on the school board, Wilson is also a parent. Her son, a fourth-grader, began classes at Jose Antonio Vargas on Monday.

She said the new school was sorely needed. After the closure of Moffett Field, which ceased operations as a Navy base in the mid-’90s, Mountain View lost residents. By 2006, both elementary schools in the Whisman Slater neighborho­od of the city had closed, citing declining enrollment.

Now, with Google and other tech employers, thousands of new housing units are being constructe­d and the area has seen a population boom.

In its first year, Jose Antonio Vargas Elementary will serve about 320 students in kindergart­en through fourth grade. It has a projected maximum enrollment of 465, Rudolph said.

He said the choice of name is in line with the values of the Mountain View Whisman School District, which was among the first in the state to pass a resolution declaring itself a “sanctuary” school district.

“Our board has been very cognizant of these kinds of issues across the board, especially because we have a very large Latino population within our community that at times can be undocument­ed,” he said. “So I think this decision was just reflective of their beliefs in educating every single student, and the power that education has.”

This week, Vargas was still grappling with the implicatio­ns of receiving such a high-profile honor from a community that, in strict legal terms, he was never supposed to be a part of.

“I’m a product of this community, and to this community, an openly gay, openly undocument­ed Filipino belongs,” he said.

“I think that’s a statement in and of itself.”

‘I didn’t need papers or need to be born in this country to be considered in this way.’ — JOSE ANTONIO VARGAS, journalist and activist

 ?? Define American ?? IN 2011, Vargas wrote an essay in the New York Times Magazine about being undocument­ed.
Define American IN 2011, Vargas wrote an essay in the New York Times Magazine about being undocument­ed.
 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ??
Susan Walsh Associated Press

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