Porterville Recorder

A meaningful August 11th

- Raoul Lowery Contreras Raoul Lowery Contreras is a conservati­ve columnist. His column appears on Fridays in The Recorder. He can be contacted at hispanicco­mmentator@gmail.com.

August 11th means much to those born on that day; for me it was the day I was re-born; August 11, 1959. Sixteen years before I was a little two years and nine-month-old kid who tagged along with his 17-yearold-mother, 15-year-old uncle and an ancient greatgrand­mother on train rides of thousands of kilometers from Mexico City to San Diego, California.

The trip from Mexico City: everyone spoke Spanish, the food was Mexican. Everything was normal to me. The women passengers thought I was “precioso” – precious. They gave me candy. How many times did I say “Muchas Gracias,” thank you?

There were men with us. I had no idea who they were. They wore suits; they wore hats and they had pistols in their belts. I didn’t know what kind until after August 11, 1959.

The men had taken our passports when they picked us up at our home in the Colonia Roma of Mexico City (the neighborho­od in which today’s President-elect has his headquarte­rs). I had no idea who they were. I found out from my mother as she was passing on that they were Presidenti­al bodyguards (like the U.S. Secret Service). She told me the story.

She was 14 when a young handsome upwardly mobile Mexican politician of the ruling party, known these days as the PRI, swept my mother “off her feet.” I was the result. He was elected to the Mexican congress. From there he provided his two families with largesse not uncommon for elected politician­s anywhere. He also provided political cover for our family because my great-grandmothe­r had committed the cardinal sin of helping organize what is now known as the Mexican political opposition that brought Mexico into the democratic universe in 2000 when it elected Vicente Fox President of Mexico.

In 1940, however, it was a handful of people like my great-grandmothe­r who risked their lives to oppose the ruling party and campaign for a Mexican Revolution hero, General Juan Almazan. Of course, he lost “93% to 7%” but everyone knew, I have been told, that he probably won over another general — Manuel Avila Camacho, who wasn’t anywhere near the hero that Almazan was or who was as beloved by his troops.

It was in the aftermath of that election and accompanyi­ng violence that my congressma­n father protected us. He visited us all the time in Mexico City. His home was a hundred miles east of Mexico City high in the mountains. He was, in fact driving back to us when his car ran off a mountain road and he died. Our protection died with him. The men came early in the morning; they loaded us into cars with one suitcase. They took our passports. They drove us to a waiting train. It was a great adventure for a little boy.

We were going to America, I was told. I didn’t know that my mother was born in San Diego, California. That San Diego birth would be momentous in my life despite neither she nor me knowing it at the time. After all, she was 17, what do 17-year-olds know?

We walked into the USA over a bridge between Mexican Ciudad Juarez and American El Paso without problem because my mother and I were United States citizens. We boarded another train for Los Angeles. This time no one spoke Spanish.

The train was packed with young American men in uniform; they were fighting World War II, in which 50 million people died, including some of these young men. They, like the women on the Mexican train, found me delightful because I made faces at them — they laughed and gave me candy, chocolate. There were, I found out later, sailors in black uniforms and white hats, soldiers in what I learned was khaki and men wearing green wool uniforms, “marinos,” I was told, Marines, United States Marines. I had no idea what they were until two years later when I watched the movie-house newsreels showing six U.S. Marines and one Navy corpsman raising an American flag on top of a mountain on an island named Iwo Jima.

Just before my tenth birthday, the Marines made the news again in December 1950, in a country called Korea, at the Chosin Reservoir. There, 17,000 Marines were sent by dumb Army generals to be surrounded by over 100,000 Communist Chinese troops the generals didn’t even know were in Korea. In 30 degreebelo­w-zero weather, snow/ice, little food, bare medical treatment, little ammunition, the Marines fiercely fought off Chinese attacks every night for 17 days. 4385 Marines were killed or wounded with another 7,338 non-battle casualties caused by the cold.

The Communist Chinese, on the other hand, were so decimated by fierce Marines that they disbanded two of their Army divisions and didn’t reenter the war for over a year. Nine years later…

August 11, 1959 is the day I reported to the U.S. Marine Recruit Depot in San Diego for “Boot Camp.” I became a United States Marine 94 days later. August 11, 1959 is the day I started my journey as a man, as an American man.

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