____________{Chapter
1}____________
“Our families are the bedrock of our lives.”
- HCJ
Gouverneur Hospital
New York City
11:59 p.m.
I |
t was April 13, 1955, when I made my entrance into the world. Not a
minute too late, as I was born for my father’s birthday. My mother Julia was
twenty-two years young, and my father Hermenegildo, for who I am named, was
twenty-seven.
Eleven months later,
on March 26, 1956, my brother Ivan, was born. My parents would try a third
and fourth time for another child, with both attempts sadly resulting in a
late-term miscarriage. Fate would intervene and cut their aspirations for a
larger family short as another pregnancy would put my mother’s health in
jeopardy.
As I learned, my mom’s
mother, Margarita, had also lost several pregnancies. I do not know if this
was a hereditary condition, coincidence, poor nutrition, or lack of medical
follow up. Those were different times, with lesser knowledge, technology,
and resources.
US citizens in
search of a better life, my parents migrated to the borough of Manhattan, in
New York City, from the small Caribbean city and island of San Sebastian,
Puerto Rico. They would find this the land of opportunity, along with their
fair share of heartaches and adversity, “Just life.”
They would make the
best of both the opportunities and tribulations they encountered. Through
their living examples, they would teach their sons to be diligent,
optimistic, self-motivated individuals.
My father, born in
1928, and mother in 1932, grew up during the Great Depression of 1929
through 1939. The surviving hardships experienced by the masses living
through this period in history is well documented. As the economic recovery
in Puerto Rico through the 1940s was slow and challenging, my father would
have to drop out of school after the eighth grade and go to work to help his
parents put food on the table for his six younger siblings.
When my father would
share with us in Spanish, “Coman, mis hijos, que yo sé lo que es pasar
hambre,” in English, “Eat my children for I know what it is like to go
hungry,” he was not joking. He was referring to the fact that his mother, my
paternal grandmother, would cry herself to sleep, due to the passing of
three of her infant children, Irene, Amelia and Ana, who died from hunger.
In the fourth grade,
my mom was withdrawn from school by her parents and taught to sew to help
her family survive. Those were truly difficult times. This kind of
predicament can make or break you. Like many having lived through this era,
my parents were remarkable people.
In 1948, at the
tender age of twenty, my father, for the first time, would leave his island
and migrate to Nebraska as an agricultural worker. During those times in
Puerto Rico, the core public elementary school grades curriculum was in
Spanish, with the distinct exception of English textbooks, and an English
class. Despite his limited English skills, he would tell us how during his
first job in America, he was able to become an unofficial translator for
some of his coworkers, thus begin his ascent up the progress ladder.
Reminiscing on his
youth, my dad would tell us how he would save most of the money he earned. And
when job conditions were unfavorable or coming to an end, he would pack his
scarce belongings in a duffle bag and catch the next Greyhound bus, often during
the middle of the night and in the dead of winter, to the next city or state,
wherever he could find employment. Always vigilant for a better opportunity and
most of the time by himself. What courage!
In 1950 my dad would
return to his native island where he would come to meet his bride, my mom Julia.
They would marry in 1951. Shortly afterward, the US Army would come calling and
take him away from his homeland, family, and wife.
After his stint in
the army, my father would return to New York City, still in pursuit of a better
life. Although, this time, it was not only for himself, as he would promptly
send for his wife and parents. My dad, one of the most resourceful and
intelligent persons I have known, with limited formal education, would work
during his lifetime at whatever it took to make sure that his family would lack
little.
Throughout his
employable lifetime, he worked as a farm picker, translator, truck driver,
machine operator, pharmaceutical drug aid, carpenter, bookkeeper and who knows
what else. Regardless of the job, he took pride in doing it well. He has also
possessed the innate ability to adjust to whatever life sent his way.
He is presently
ninety-one years of age, in relatively good health, and with a mind as sharp and
keen as ever. From him, I learned the “Never throw in the towel” attitude,
explore all possibilities, and never complain.
My mom worked all
her life as a seamstress. She was quiet and warm with a strong love and devotion
to her family and friends, and a beautiful smile to go with her wherever she
went. She was my father’s soul mate and pillar of strength. We lost her in 2013,
at the age of eighty, to cancer.
From mom, I learned
to listen, work hard, and love. My parents were married for sixty-two years. To
my brother and I, family and friends, they were a testament of love,
perseverance, devotion to each other, and the American dream.
I will not forget
the phrase they drilled my brother and me with during our formative years: “We
have worked all our lives to provide you with a better life than we were
afforded; it is your sole responsibility to study and become better than we ever
could.” It is in no short measure due to their youthful experience, why they
assigned such a high premium to education.
When all is said and
done, my parents’ proudest accomplishments have not only been their long-term
marriage, but most importantly to see both their sons grow up and acquire their
formal education, become productive members of society, marry excellent spouses,
and prosper.
* * * *
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Jr.
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