The Guardian

As a child I was confused by my mixed identity. But mixedness will heal America | Jean Guerrero

Multiculturalism doesn’t threaten civilization; it threatens extremism. As the US grows more mixed, it will grow more empathetic
A Latino family, the Velasquezes, celebrates a baptism in Los Angeles. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Whenever I misbehaved as a child, my Puerto Rican abuela blamed the Mexican in me. My Mexican classmates called me gringa. My gringa came from my mom, who spoke English with a Puerto Rican accent. I did not know what I was. You’re American, my mother said. You’re not Mexican. You’re not Puerto Rican. You’re American.

We lived near the border in San Diego, California. She wanted me to feel I belonged in this country – a sense she’d been repeatedly denied. My mother faced discrimination as a physician after she came to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Guardian

The Guardian4 min read
The Golden Bachelor’s Older Singletons Have Saved A Franchise
Strange as it may sound, one of the hottest shows on TV this fall has been … an old dating series now catering, for once, to senior citizens. That would be The Golden Bachelor, a new spin-off of America’s pre-eminent dating series in which a 72-year-
The Guardian6 min read
From Kurt To Elvis, JFK And More, What Movies Did Stars See Just Before They Died?
Clad in black and wearing a cheeky-chappie grin, the artist and author Stanley Schtinter resembles Damon Albarn dressed as an undertaker. That suits his new book, Last Movies, which refracts cultural history through the prism of films watched by nota
The Guardian4 min read
Michael Bishop obituary
Michael Bishop, who has died aged 78, wrote many stories that inhabit the borderlands between science fiction and mainstream, drawing on influences as diverse as Ray Bradbury and Jorge Luis Borges, Thomas M Disch and Philip K Dick, Dylan Thomas and T

Related Books & Audiobooks