Enrique’s Journey by Sonia Nazario tells of a perseverant Honduran mother by the name of Lourdes. She comes to the United States in hopes of landing a job, so that she may send money home to her children in Honduras. Lourdes’s determination pays off and she is hired at many domestic jobs, such as babysitting and house cleaning. Although she is now able to send adequate support to her children, her absence consequently causes emotional turmoil. Enrique yearns for his mother, to the point where he is willing to risk his life to be with her. His quest to reunite with his mom is filled with a multitude of obstacles ; nevertheless through the kindness of strangers and smugglers, Enrique’s dream becomes a reality. Everyone needs someone to help them pick up their broken pieces at least one point in their life. …show more content…
“He dabs at the wounds on his face with a filthy sweater he has found on the tracks.”(53) If it wasn’t for the immediate care and advice Enrique received from Gomez, he could have died on one of his his first few attempts to get to the the U.S.A. “He opens the bag. Inside are a half dozen rolls of bread.”(96) If the people of Veracruz had not given him food, Enrique could have starved to death on top of the trains he hitched on. Enrique’s journey was far from easy but the the sympathy of generous people helped to ease his
Most people think that coming to the U.S is easy but it really it not. Enrique Journey By Sonia Nazario teaches the audience that the journey to the U.S is difficult for migrants. Enrique journey towards the U.S made him the man he is today, and Lourdes’ challenges in the new transition she had coming to the U.S reveals to us that coming to the U.S was a big challenge. Enrique journey, which lead to dangerous situations. When Enrique gets stopped by a gang, he cowers in fear.
Enrique’s Journey sheds light on the influx of single Latino mothers crossing the border in order to find work to support the family the left behind. Nazario seems to synthesize the effects of this kind of immigration when she says “separations almost always end badly” (Nazario xxv). What most commonly occurs is that once a child is abandoned they look to “find love and esteem elsewhere, by getting pregnant, marrying early, or joining gangs” (Nazario 191). As this type of resentment builds within the loved ones left behind, they begin to develop the viewpoint that reuniting with those who left them is the only way they could possibly get better. In Enrique’s case, he firmly believed “only his mother can help him” out of his drug issues and violent outbursts and to find his mother would be “deliverance itself” (Nazario 42,
Enrique’s Journey by Sonia Nazario contains an overarching theme of family. This theme is developed throughout the book through the author’s style of changing the focus of the book for the reader. By changing the focus of the book, the author is able to represent the feelings of many of the books characters, as well as the events that occur for different characters. Through the exploration of many different characters lives, the author is effectively able to show the reader the effects of separation upon different characters. As seen by the quote, Nazario is focusing on Maria Isabel’s life for a portion of the last section of the book.
Given the rough and life-threatening patches throughout his life, Luis eventually attempts to maintain hope, insight, and make difference in the world
Chapter three of Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo begins with Antonio realizing that his innocence is fleeting, especially after having experienced the death of a man the night before. It’s Sunday which means the family will attend mass, but before heading out Antonio’s parents have a brief dispute about their son growing up. Antonio’s mother believes that it’s a sin “for a boy to grow into a man” because they will lose the pureness that was bestowed onto them from birth. Yet, Antonio’s father and Ultima disagree with that notion. That Sunday Antonio knew that town would be mourning the two deaths of Chavez’s brother and Lupito, along with the other sons and husbands that were directly caused by the war.
Enrique’s dilemma is that he can either stay in the U.S with his mother or go back to Honduras to be with his girlfriend and child. In the story it says “He gives her a hug. Then a kiss. ‘You’re here, mi hijo’ ‘I’m here ,’ he says”’ (Nazario 190).
Estevan and Esperanza are a married couple from Guatemala who came to the U.S. illegally. While they were in Guatemala, they suffered through a tragic loss, the stealing of their child Ismene. They were part of a union of 20 members and the Guatemalan government didn’t like that. Before Ismene was taken, three of the members had been killed, one of which was Esperanza’s brother, and Estevan and Esperanza were scared because they knew the names of the other 17 members.
Enrique’s Journey/ Rape in the fields It is time, at last, to speak the truth about Rape in the fields, and Enrique’s Journey. These two documents are more similar than people think. The first similarity between the book and he film. Is that the laws; as we see it are there but are corrupt.
Enrique is traumatized and feels abandoned. His mother left him when he was five years old. He is constantly relying on false hope when people around him say “‘She’ll be home soon… Don’t worry. She’ll be back’”(9).
What I found most striking about “The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao” by Junot Diaz, is that when you take away the Dominican mother, the Dominican abuelita, the fuku , the Spanglish, and the cultural references, Lola and Oscar, appear to suffer the trials and tribulations we all do as teenagers. As Junot Diaz immerses the reader in their tumultuous lives from the Dominican Republic to Paterson, New Jersey, you discover that Oscar and Lola are teenagers navigating the same physical and emotional roads we all did growing up. Oscar does not want to die a virgin and Lola wants to be independent. The mother clamors to provide for her children just like single mothers everywhere. Oscar was a “social introvert”, (Diaz, 2007, p. 22), finding
Confusingly, this contrasts a lot of Enrique’s decisions as he went on a dangerous journey in order to be with his mother again, but he is now unappreciative and wishes he was back in Honduras, making his trip completely useless. On the contrary, many immigrant children are happy to be with their parents again and understand they had to be left behind in order for them to have a better life. Enrique’s Journey unfortunately, doesn’t explain this and confuses readers by flipping back and forth with
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
He enjoyed it alone” (Berrios). His humbleness was so great that the media did not know of a Nicaraguan boy who was without legs and had parents who could not provide prosthetics for him due to the dictator of Nicaragua during that time, Anastasio Somoza. Clemente personally cared to him and his needs, but the boy tragically died later in the devastating earthquake. Such humbleness is a trait of a wonderful humanitarian who did not care about being glorified for doing such acts, but instead simply wanted to better the lives of others.
Instead of Enrique becoming discouraged about every setback, he was motivated more to cross the border. He believed he rightfully deserved to reunite with his mother, so he pushed himself until he made it to America. However when he arrived, it wasn’t what he had imagined. Instead of Enrique gaining the reward, he was given another hardship.
Miguel sacrificed his life in an illegal attempt to cross to the U.S. Lupe; Juana’s mother sacrificed her freedom to kill the man that kidnapped her son. Although Juana was young when her life took a turn she had already been instilled with values, morals and virtue. This is proven when she misses her bus to help the blind man collect the coins she caused him to drop. Again, when she uses the little money she has to by the woman, whose sun dies on the bus a ticket back home.