San Francisco Chronicle

School named after prize-winning immigrant

- By Sophie Haigney Sophie Haigney is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: sophie.haigney@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @SophieHaig­ney

In a historic decision, a new public elementary school in Mountain View will be named after an undocument­ed immigrant Jose Antonio Vargas, an award-winning journalist, documentar­y filmmaker and activist.

The Mountain View Whisman School District board voted to name the new school after Vargas at its meeting Thursday following recent immigratio­n enforcemen­t decisions made by the Trump administra­tion.

In just the past few weeks, thousands of immigrant children have been separated from their families in domestic raids and at the border, and this week U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that asylum protection­s will no longer be offered to victims of domestic violence and gang violence.

Vargas emigrated with his family from the Philippine­s to the U.S. when he was 12 years old. He attended Crittenden Middle School and Mountain View High School before going on to become a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng journalist and, ultimately, an immigratio­n activist.

Vargas also worked for The Chronicle early in his career.

“As a proud product of the Bay Area’s public school system, I am overwhelme­d by this totally unexpected and deeply meaningful honor,” he said in a statement.

Vargas went on to work for the Washington Post, where he was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for the newspaper’s coverage of the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007. He revealed his undocument­ed status in a New York Times Magazine essay in 2011.

The school named in his honor will open in August 2019, said Laura Blakely, the president of the district’s school board.

She said Vargas’ name was first floated about a year ago, and the board signed off after a series of community input sessions and meetings.

“He’s a product of our school district,” Blakely said. “He’s been the face of the American dream for so many students who came here as children, and really grew up as Americans without having citizenshi­p. We have so many students in our community who are ‘Dreamers,’ and he’s such an inspiratio­n.”

Dreamers is a term in reference to children who were undocument­ed when their parents brought them to this country.

“We are living through an ugly and hateful time in our country when immigrant families are under constant attack, even at schools,” said Patricia Hyland, who chairs Define American’s board of trustees and was Vargas’ former principal at Mountain View High School. “The district’s decision is an affirmatio­n of American values and our belief in opening our doors of opportunit­ies to all kinds of dreamers.”

Blakely said the decision was motivated in part by current news about immigratio­n, but more so the achievemen­ts of Vargas.

“Immigratio­n happens to be the flash point, as it has been for decades, but I think even if that weren’t going on, he would be an inspiratio­nal leader,” she said.

The district also considered naming the school after Steve Jobs or other tech leaders because of the school’s location in Silicon Valley.

“But we didn’t want to do that,” Blakely said. “We wanted to pick someone who embodied the values of what you can do with an education, as Jose does.”

Vargas founded and runs a nonprofit media organizati­on called Define America, which “fights injustice and anti-immigrant hate through the power of storytelli­ng.”

He has made two documentar­ies and designed a school curriculum aimed at teachers. His first book is forthcomin­g in September 2018.

 ?? Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle ?? A new school has been named for undocument­ed immigrant Jose Antonio Vargas.
Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle A new school has been named for undocument­ed immigrant Jose Antonio Vargas.

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