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Enrique's Journey Summary

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Enrique's Journey Summary
Sonia Nazario is an American journalist, born September 8, 1960 in Madison Wisconsin to Argentinian-American parents. Nazario has been one of the youngest writers to have worked for the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal. She primarily writes about social justice issues such as poverty, drugs, immigration, and Latino statistics. She has won many awards including the George Polk Award, a Pulitzer Prize Award, and the prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award. Nazario is also the recipient of the National Association of Hispanic Journalist Guillermo Martinez-Marquez Award for Overall Excellence. Nazaro’s connection to the narration that she voices, mirrors that of her family’s journey. They were immigrant.
Enrique’s Journey, is a national bestseller that has won more than a dozen awards thus far. I believe the author, Nazario, felt the need to tell this story because it was both a compelling story and it was also a way to bring light to the atrocities that immigrants face during their journey across and to unknown lands.
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Effects such as in or within: Family, Socioeconomic Status, alienation, distance, sentiments, residual sentiments after the reunions, and for many, secrets of the journey (resilience) and an agony in silence (pride). I believe that it is important for teachers of ELL and ESL students to be familiar with border issues, including immigration, English only schooling, contradictory belief or laws, identity, poverty, alienation, as well as resilience and pride because of the FOK and the “backpack” that marks us all as individuals. Think of the “backpack” as what we bring forward in it, or the “community memory” often mentioned as we Latinos (and human kid alike) unite with similar stories as we are all social beings. That is what the author Sonia Nazario does in her narrative of Enrique’s

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