The importance of family is considered one of the top priorities to most people this is the case of Enrique and his family. There are many themes in Enrique’s Journey written by Sonia Nazario about a young boys path to his mother but the most prominent theme is family is the most important thing. This is evident when Enrique crosses numerous borders daring death just to see his mother and, when Enrique’s mom leaves for America to give her kids a better life even though she will miss them everyday, and when Enrique forgives his mom for leaving so they can have a good relationship. Around 11.5 million immigrants come to America each year all for different reasons and they all have different stories with them. Enriques mother leaves him at the …show more content…
Enriques mother Lourdes has only one option if she wants her children to have a chance and that is to go to America. Even though she loves Enriques more than the world she leaves. The author writes “She cannot carry his picture. It would melt her resolve. She cannot hug him. He is five years old.” (Sonia Nazario, 40) Some would say if she truly cares for her family she would stay. No she cares about her family so much she is willing to risk everything for them she could be killed, raped, or beaten along this dangerous path the only thing keeping her on this path is her love for her kids which only grows as she goes along her path. Once Lourdes makes it to America she quickly finds a job and sends money so her kids can go to school which they wouldn't be able to because they were too poor when she lived in Honduras. Another source to back this up is when in the movie The Incredibles the father takes a job that is against the law and he begins to travel to an island even though he misses his family but he knows he must to do it for his family and himself. “Where have you been?... I’m sorry but it’s best I don’t say.) This is when the father is talking to his wife because they have been getting a lot of money and she wonders how he's doing it. Both these stories show how family is important and many ways it’s used for
In chapter two of the book Enrique’s Journey, Enrique has made a total of seven attempts trying to cross the borders. In the first attempt, la migra caught Enrique and his friend, Jose del Carmen Bustamante, while they were riding the train from Honduras and to Veracruz in Central Mexico. They got sent back to Guatemala on El Bus de Lagrimas, the Bus of Tears. In the second attempt, Enrique traveled alone and got caught by the police. They, once again, put him on the bus and sent him back to Guatemala.
Undocumented The Vargas family brought Jose to the US because the US had more opportunities. At first, their main goal for Jose was to get a regular job and one day make enough money to send to the Philippines. However, Lolo underestimated the potential Jose had. Jose was a bright student and at the age of 16, Jose had dreams of becoming a journalist.
While reading Enrique’s Journey, written by Sonia Nazario, a lot of themes were brought out throughout the book that served different meaning in Enrique’s story. The theme that stood out to me, was his journey because Enrique traveled all the way from Honduras to find his mom, who stayed in the United States. There are times in the book when he falls victim to his own shortcomings: doing drugs, tantalizing his mother, mismanaging his finances. He is ready to take yet another journey, this time marked by responsibility instead of adolescent rebellion and resentment. However, Enrique's journey is not only physical, but also mental as he grows from a boy to a man.
Age 7 In America Film Age 7 in America is a film narrated by Meryl Steep about detailed lives of 7-year olds from diverse social classes and ethnic backgrounds in the United States. They are fifteen kids in total. Each place of stay for the kid is mentioned and other details to do with the family status, family structure, and their different thoughts on issues such as drugs and crime, education, the opposite gender, on the future, on the world, and so on. Integrated into the film explanation is Bronfenbrenner’s theory as regards child development.
It appears as though his mother is the opposite of his father as his father likely encourages them to keep following their own path and working hand. While on the other hand, his mother reminisces about the past when her children didn’t have to worry or stress about any of that. Rodriguez shows how the idea of the American dream affected the quality family traditions. He does this by describing an experience while using language and details about different family members and even himself. Although different
Her mother then said “Ya te tengo, she said, jumping triumphantly to her feet. Te tengo Diaz page 19.” Which means in English her mother was happy to her back. By this time her mother had sent her to Santo Domingo to live with her grandmother and reasoning begin was she felt like it would be harder for Lola to run away from
In the book Breaking Through by Francisco Jimenez recalls his life story and personal history being raised, growing up in a family of migrant workers, in California. Born in Tlaquepaque, Mexico, in 1943, Francisco’s childhood, majority of the time, is spent working farm fields around California and various employments. However, regardless of the struggle of keeping the family household composed after being caught by border patrol, demanding labor, and facing poverty he was able to stay hopeful. Furthermore, he went on having an outstanding collegiate career. He went to Harvard University, but a graduate of Santa Clara University and acquired both a Master’s Degree and Doctorate from Columbia University.
Lourdes, Enrique’s mother, loved her children as every mother does and did anything in her power to provide for them even if it meant to travel 1,619 miles into a foreign country. Many parents like Lourdes have left their entire families for job opportunities and risk their lives through the dangerous journey but they have the hope and motivation because of love— love for their sons and daughters. Even Enrique found himself doing the same for his soon-to-be-born baby which was one of the components that made him persevere in his
Enrique’s Journey by Sonia Nazario is the story about a boy in Honduras whose mother left him to pursue a better life in America. This story encompasses the coming of age period of Enrique’s life and many of his experiences can be related to by other children, even in different situations. Nazario develops an interesting novel that both documents the journey of Enrique to the United States but also creates a dramatic tone like a fiction novel would have. Through her diverse use of rhetorical strategies, Nazario was able to explain the positive and negative effects of family relationships through the life of Enrique. She does this by utilizing different literary devices, most evidently, nomos, in which she relates with the story and also opens
The sacrifice of never seeing your own child again is a big sacrifice. This matters because they left their only child in Guatemala and moved to the USA and never saw her
As the story comes to a close i can see how this will continue to happen in future events. Enrique wants to believe that his family won’t be too hurt by his decision but he cycle of disappoint will most likely continue in my opinion. He tells mayor Carrasco that he does not think it is worth the time and money for doctors to save travelers like Enrique “This is what they get for doing this journey,” He says of migrants. Yor carrasco disagrees.
He later on moved to Peru and Ecuador and other various countries. Pedros dad died when Benilda, his mother, was three months pregnant with her son. Pedro was the seventh child out of his thirteen siblings. Benilda was physically abused by a sex worker and clients. At a young age Pedro was kicked out of the house by his mom after she
As a child, he is burdened with worry for his mother because she is not near him for many formidable years of his life. He is troubled by a perceived lack of love from his father, grandmother, and many members of his family still residing in Honduras. Enrique experiences the pressures of living within a low economic status when Lourdes is unable to send a sufficient amount of money for his livelihood. In later years, Enrique uses drug use as a coping mechanism and cannot release the stronghold that drugs have in his life so much so that he still uses drugs today. Enrique is also plagued with the increasing violence in his area.
It is not easy for an individual to watch their parents age, but it is even more challenging to see them age due to a job they never wanted to work. Furthermore, the narrator finds a great love for his father in his heart because it is “much braver to spend a life doing what you really do not want to do rather than selfishly following forever your own dreams” (233). Due to these realizations, the narrator decides to continue the family tradition to ease his mother's heart and spend time with his father to pay him back for all the sacrifices he had made for their
In a family there are many different roles; there's the role of the mother, the father, the child, the grandparents, then there’s the brothers and sisters. Every single one of those roles has different responsibilities. The father, according to most of society, is supposed to be the breadwinner for the family. However, nowadays the mother is actually quite capable of being the breadwinner just as much of as the father. As they work to show their children what it is to be an adult they are teaching them as well on how to be an active member of society.