Miami Herald

This 93-year-old just graduated with a degree in business administra­tion

- BY SOO YOUN

Oct. 18, María Josefina Cruz Blancas y García put on a black gown and mortarboar­d and graduated with a university degree in business education. She was 93.

“I was so happy and so proud, but I was afraid I would faint,” Blancas y García said. Her school, Consultore­s Educativos Saxum SC in Santiago de Querétaro in Mexico, threw a tiny reception for some of her family members to mark the occasion.

Blancas y García — a mother, grandmothe­r, great-grandmothe­r, greatgreat-grandmothe­r and lifelong student — went to secondary school and received a vocational education as an accounting assistant in her small hometown, Tulancingo Hidalgo. She worked as a teacher throughout her life.

After a lifetime of working and raising children, Blancas y García said she wants to focus on furthering her studies and is not looking for a job.

She spoke with The Lily over a Zoom video chat and sat next to her granddaugh­ter, Maricruz Rodríguez Silva, 27, who interprete­d the conversati­on.

When she was 60, Blancas y García moved to Querétaro after her husband died. She currently lives with another granddaugh­ter, she said, and with other family members, including two great-grandchild­ren. Once she settled in the city three decades ago, she looked for a high school that she could study at. But between helping care for grandchild­ren and teaching classes in typing and shorthand, it was hard to squeeze in time for a degree. Blancas y García is a mother of seven and a grandmothe­r of 14, a greatgrand­mother to nine and a great-great-grandmothe­r, or tatara abuela, to one.

In 2016, she started studying at a private high school at 88. Her principal encouraged her to apply to a university, and she received a full scholarshi­p. She matriculat­ed at Saxum SC in 2018.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, when school moved online, the everpunctu­al older student was still the first person to show up for class, her grandOn daughter said.

“She is so sweet,” added Rodríguez Silva, a nutritioni­st.

In addition to working toward her business degree, the nonagenari­an also studied theology, earning a diploma in August.

“More than the degree she just did, her dream is to get a degree in theology,” said her granddaugh­ter, who is researchin­g such programs. “She would love that.”

Blancas y García is a devout Catholic who has been an avid reader. She loves the Bible, she said.

She just started another course for a two-year diploma in pedagogy on Saturday, also on a full scholarshi­p.

She said she’s used to being the oldest person in her classes. “The younger students are very good to me,” she said. “Even if they are the same age as the son of my granddaugh­ter, they are super sweet and super cute with me. They are so young, but they are super cute.”

When she isn’t studying, she goes to church, volunteers or teaches, or watches religious programmin­g on television.

Her grandchild­ren often tell her she’s an amazing example and say she is “such a lovely person,” according to Rodríguez Silva. “She is always looking after everyone else. She is endlessly curious. If she doesn’t know the answer to something, she will search for an answer.”

And her grandchild­ren are still learning about her. Through the course of the interview, Rodríguez Silva discovered the reason Blancas y García married later — when she was 30, which was late for her generation.

It turns out she had a story of young love with a sad ending.

“She had another boyfriend when she was young — I didn’t know that,” Rodríguez Silva said, exhibiting surprise as she interprete­d for her grandmothe­r. “They wanted to get married but were waiting, but then the boyfriend died. Then she met my grandfathe­r and got married.”

Rodríguez Silva is also the reason her grandmothe­r’s story is getting internatio­nal attention: Last week,

she posted a graduation photo of her grandmothe­r on social media. The picture went viral, and Blancas y García has since done 13 interviews. “It’s like a dream,” the graduate said.

Asked what she thought people should take away from her story, Blancas y García said, “People need the will or volition to do what they want in life. There are so many great examples of what you can do with your life, you just really need the will to do it.”

 ?? Courtesy of Maricruz Rodríguez Silva ?? María Josefina Cruz Blancas y García says: ‘The younger students are very good to me. Even if they are the same age as the son of my granddaugh­ter, they are super sweet.’
Courtesy of Maricruz Rodríguez Silva María Josefina Cruz Blancas y García says: ‘The younger students are very good to me. Even if they are the same age as the son of my granddaugh­ter, they are super sweet.’

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