The Mercury News

PRINCIPAL BECOMES A CITIZEN IN FRONT OF HER STUDENTS

Gloria Marchant, the 44-year-old newly minted American, wants to ‘bring (the students) a little bit of calmness’

- By Khalida Sarwari ksarwari@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Gloria Marchant has walked through the double doors of San Jose High School countless times in her four years as principal, but Tuesday was different.

The 44-year-old educator walked in as an immigrant and strolled out a newly minted American citizen after a ceremony before dozens of her students, many of them undocument­ed immigrants treading their own laborious paths to legalizati­on.

It was those “Dreamers” — who were brought here illegally as children — that broke into thunderous applause in the school auditorium when Marchant accepted her certificat­e.

Afterward, Marchant said she felt a mixture of “excitement, nervousnes­s and hopefulnes­s” — for herself and for her students.

“We have a lot of immigrant students,” she said. “The neighborho­od is mostly immigrants and after the election so many kids felt they were

“Keep dreaming, keep working hard. Stay true to yourself and what you want in life and remember that education is a path to a better future and a path to making a real difference to our society.” — Gloria Marchant, San Jose High School principal

going to be impacted somehow, so with all the negative news I think my hope was to give them hope and inspire them and bring them a little bit of calmness to the fear they live in. There’s been so much fear.”

In her keynote address, Marchant spoke directly to the students — all of whom were there voluntaril­y — emphasizin­g the values of hard work, seizing opportunit­ies, perseverin­g through difficulti­es, setting goals and investing in education.

“Keep dreaming, keep working hard,” she said, her eyes scanning the bleachers packed with students, teachers and parents. “Stay true to yourself and what you want in life and remember that education is a path to a better future and a path to making a real difference to our society.”

A native of Valparaíso, Chile, Marchant and her family moved to Toronto, Canada when she was 13. She later became a citizen of Canada and attended the University of Toronto, graduating with a double major in biology and Spanish.She found an opportunit­y to put that degree to use not long after when she visited San Francisco and saw a commercial on TV for a bilingual science teacher position at Hoover Middle School. She applied and got the job — her first out of college — and the rest, as they say, is history. Marchant has

remained with the San Jose Unified School District since. It was the district that sponsored her visa, paving the way for her citizenshi­p.

“They’ve been good to me and I’ve been loyal to them,” she said.

And she wasted no time

in taking advantage of an important American privilege newly bestowed upon her, grabbing a voter registrati­on form and filling it out in between thanking well-wishers soon after the hour-long ceremony ended.

“I’ve never voted in any election so I think that’s

the part that’s really exciting for me,” she said.

San Jose High students Robert Gamble, 17, Catherine Martinez and Nathan Luong, both 16, helped to set up and lead the National Anthem and Pledge of Allegiance.

“I know that a lot of the

opportunit­ies I have today I would not have had had she not told me about them,” said Robert.

Catherine, who is involved in public speaking at her school, said Marchant approached her about leading the pledge.

“She gives us opportunit­y to voice our opinions and give speeches to people,” she said. “She’s more like, ‘Hey I see something in you and you should show it to the world.”

Marchant’s was not the only inspiratio­nal story to come out of the naturaliza­tion ceremony at San Jose High. Abel Lopez, a San Jose resident from Mexico, also became an American citizen today at the age of 90.

 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? San Jose High School principal Gloria Marchant, a native of Chile, raises her hand during a citizenshi­p ceremony on Tuesday.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER San Jose High School principal Gloria Marchant, a native of Chile, raises her hand during a citizenshi­p ceremony on Tuesday.
 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? San Jose High School students observe a citizenshi­p ceremony as their principal, a native of Chile, becomes a U.S. citizen.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER San Jose High School students observe a citizenshi­p ceremony as their principal, a native of Chile, becomes a U.S. citizen.

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