BanderasNews
Puerto Vallarta Weather Report
Welcome to Puerto Vallarta's liveliest website!
Contact UsSearch
Why Vallarta?Vallarta WeddingsRestaurantsWeatherPhoto GalleriesToday's EventsMaps
 NEWS/HOME
 EDITORIALS
 ENTERTAINMENT
 RESTAURANTS & DINING
 NIGHTLIFE
 MOVIES
 BOOKS
 MUSIC
 EVENT CALENDAR
 VALLARTA LIVING
 PV REAL ESTATE
 TRAVEL / OUTDOORS
 HEALTH / BEAUTY
 SPORTS
 DAZED & CONFUSED
 PHOTOGRAPHY
 CLASSIFIEDS
 READERS CORNER
 BANDERAS NEWS TEAM
Sign up NOW!

Free Newsletter!
Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEntertainment | Books | December 2007 

Book Review: From the Barrio to Washington (Via Sacramento)
email this pageprint this pageemail usKenneth C. Burt - California Progress Report
go to original



From the Barrio to Washington: An Educator's Journey

Check it out on Amazon.com
Looking for a good book to start the New Year? Armando Rodriguez’s From the Barrio to Washington: An Educator’s Journey, fulfills the stated goal - “to inspire” - while teaching us about a bygone era.

The trajectory of Rodriguez’s life is awe-inspiring. Born into a large family in Mexico where his mother neither spoke English nor wrote Spanish, he became the second Latino college president and an advisor to four U.S. presidents.

Rodriguez is the most prominent San Diegan of the Mexican American generation, the cohort shaped by the Depression and World War II. He was among the first large wave of Latinos to come to California’s state capitol during Governor Pat Brown’s tenure, reaching national influence in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.

Rodriguez grew up in the San Diego of the 1920s and 1930s, then a small city near the border. The Latino community was based in Barrio Logan; the largest employer was the tuna canneries, where young Armando worked and where his sister became a union organizer for the CIO. (It is the same neighborhood that two generations later produced Assemblymen Fabian Núñez and Kevin de León.)

Rodriguez experienced discrimination but always remained optimistic, confident that education provided the avenue to a better life. He also focused his efforts on opening doors for Latinos while embracing people from other ethnic and racial backgrounds.

His military service during World War II facilitated his becoming a U.S. citizen so that he could obtain the clearance to become a code breaker.

During the 1950s he helped organize the Community Services Organization (CSO), the dominant Mexican American civil rights organization in California. Through CSO he met César Chávez from San Jose, Dolores Huerta from Stockton, who went on to found the United Farm Workers, and other emerging Latino leaders who became Democratic Party activists and leaders in the Mexican American Political Association (MAPA), which was founded in 1960.

Rodriguez became the first Latino vice principal in the San Diego Unified School District in 1959, and the first principal in 1965.

This was also the time he emerged as a political leader. He hosted a Viva Kennedy fundraiser at his home in 1960, featuring Ted Kennedy. Two years later he won the Democratic nomination for the state Assembly (with future Assemblyman Phil Isenberg as campaign manager).

As a Lyndon B. Johnson delegate to the 1964 Democratic National Convention, Rodriguez was among the first set of Mexican American Californians outside Los Angeles to be so honored.

He was then hired by the state superintendent of public instruction to work on minority-related education issues along with Wilson Riles, an African American who would himself become superintendent of public instruction.

The politically connected school administrator then did something that - for many - might have seemed out of character. He led the walkout against the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that was meeting in Albuquerque, demanding the appointment of a Latino EEOC commissioner and insisting that the EEOC address Latino concerns.

President Johnson apparently did not bear a grudge because he soon hired Rodriguez to run a new Latino office at the Health, Education, and Welfare agency. In an ironic twist, Rodriguez got the Hearst family, whose newspapers had sensationalized the Zoot Suit Riots, to underwrite the development of federal bilingual education that Congress refused to fund.

In between service in the Nixon and Carter administrations, Rodriguez served as president of East Los Angeles City College.

This is a story both well told and worth telling. The narrative is straightforward and accessible, designed to capture the reader’s imagination; some parts will make you cry and some will make you laugh, while other sections are designed to transmit acquired wisdom.

The book is enriched by number a photographs: Rodriguez’s family, and Rodriguez with activists such as César Chávez and Corretta Scott King and with elected officials such Pat Brown, U.S. Senator Dennis Chávez, and President Jimmy Carter.

It is significant that Rodriguez, at age 87, decided to publish his autobiography. It fits well with the handful of books about other members of the Mexican American generation, most notably fellow Californians Bert Corona, Julian Nava, and Dionicio Morales. It also augments the academic literature, particularly Ignacio M. Garcia’s Viva Kennedy and Julie Leininger Pycior’s LBJ & Mexican Americans.

Still, some academics and political junkies will come away wishing Rodriguez had written more about the texture of political life in San Diego and the nation.

In this regard, I am fortunate to have interviewed Rodriguez for my own book, The Search for a Civic Voice: California Latino Politics.

From the Barrio to Washington would have benefited from mini bios of more of those individuals, such as Alfredo Salazar, who influenced Rodriguez’s life and the community in Barrio Logan.



In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and educational purposes • m3 © 2008 BanderasNews ® all rights reserved • carpe aestus