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From political matriarch Rosie Castro, the sons also rise [pull out your crying towel]
San Antonio-Express News ^ | September 30, 2012 | Josh Baugh

Posted on 09/30/2012 3:09:07 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife


The Castros, Julián, Rosie and Joaquín, pose for a portrait on Sunday, April 23, 2006. Photo: Helen L. Montoya, San Antonio Express-News / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS

The segregated barrios of the city's West Side a half-century ago were an unlikely inspiration for Maria del Rosario Castro, the daughter of an orphaned Mexican immigrant who as a girl picked ticks from white families' cocker spaniels.

She grew into a firebrand, the matriarch of a new political generation, from the broken streets of her youth that flooded when it rained.

The neighborhood starkly contrasted the picturesque Alamo Heights homes that her mother cleaned while “Rosie” tended to the dogs in the backyard.

Her neighbors lacked decent city services and a strong voice to say so. Blacks and Hispanics were missing from the clergy and the classrooms, from white-collar jobs and from City Hall.

In her growing awareness, Rosie noticed a dearth of politicians willing to advocate for the causes of her community.

“Very early on,” she said, “I just had to ask, ‘Why?'”

Empowered by an era of social change, she joined a then-“radical” political movement that would make her an unsuspecting lightning rod in the 2012 political landscape, where her twin sons, Mayor Julián Castro and state Rep. Joaquín Castro, are now charting their own path.

“We believed in trying to make a difference by getting involved politically,” Rosie, 65, said of her work with La Raza Unida, a third political party born of racial tensions in 1970s Southwest Texas, and of her City Council bid with a slate of candidates backed by the Committee for Barrio Betterment. She registered voters, identified candidates, block walked, ran campaigns and served as La Raza's Bexar County chairwoman.

“That wasn't radical — that was the promise of America,” she said.

She helped secure that promise for her sons, who after earning degrees from Stanford University and Harvard Law School were elected to the City Council and the Texas House of Representatives. Julián is a campaign co-chair for President Barack Obama's re-election bid, and Joaquín is expected to win a congressional seat this November. He introduced the mayor as the keynote speaker at this year's Democratic National Convention — a history-making moment for Latinos and one that wasn't possible for their parents: Rosie, a Palo Alto College administrator, and Jesse Guzman, a retired high school math teacher.

The couple's story is interwoven with the Chicano struggle of their generation.

Rosie advocated for better education, for voter registration, for political representation and for better city services on the West Side. Jesse was the head of Colegio Jacinto Treviño, a Chicano college in San Antonio and in the Rio Grande Valley. He also was active in the Committee For Barrio Betterment and locally helped manage Volunteers in Service to America, or VISTA.

Their paths crossed as both organized in the community.

“We were soul mates in a lot of ways because we were both in the movement,” Rosie said. “We had a lot in common — the struggles of our people, the idea of self-determination.”

Jesse already was married with five children when he moved in with Rosie and her mother before the twins were born. Never married, the two separated when the boys were 8. Their sons, now 38, have their mother's last name.

The mayor recognized “my father and my stepmother,” Jesse's second wife, for their support during a sendoff, ahead of the DNC in early September.

But it's their outspoken mother who has made them a target for critics. Rosie has been criticized for her involvement in La Raza Unida, and for her unsympathetic comments about the Alamo, born from a lifetime of being told mexicanos were “losers,” she says.

“We have a different perspective on it,” Julián explained. “I consider the Alamo a very special part of Texas history, and I'm glad that things worked out the way they did.” It reflects a generational difference, he said.

Political roots

The Chicano movement was born in the early 1960s, while Rosie attended the Catholic Little Flower High School.

San Antonio was for Latinos what Atlanta, Selma and Birmingham were for blacks, said Char Miller, a former Trinity University urban studies professor who's now director of the environmental analysis program at Pomona College in California.

“Like Atlanta, it had a lot of very engaged folks who understood that their long-term oppression in San Antonio — economic, educational, class and ethnicity — could only be broken if they were the active agents of change,” he said. “So what we're looking at is the civil rights movement for the Hispanic population of the United States, largely moving out of San Antonio.”

Rosie did more than just stand witness to the plight.

“I admire and respect Rosie for the activist positions she took at a time when things needed to be said, and positions needed to be taken because the levels of discrimination and injustice and unfairness were so blatant,” said former Mayor Henry Cisneros, a childhood classmate of hers. “One could go through the history of the West Side ... it's just case after case of gross unfairness that could only be addressed by people standing up.”

Her sons and other contemporary Latino politicians recognize their successes are predicated on the work of Rosie and others from the movement.

“Julián and I personally, and our generation, have benefited from the kind of work that they did,” Joaquín said. “San Antonio and the country have progressed incredibly since then, and we're all beneficiaries of that.”

Rosie's activism was a long time coming. She'd been an organizer in one way or another for most of her life.

She was born in 1947 to a single mother, Victoria Castro, who worked as a “maid, a cook and a babysitter,” Julián said.

Rosie often stayed home while her mother worked. She created a world inside her fenced yard, organizing play time with the neighborhood children.

Later, she helped organize a youth club to expand the reach of her high school class, which only numbered 26.

“The high school experience of the youth club was an incredible experience because it was the first time that I had to get up in front of large groups and make speeches, and talk about what we wanted to do, what we should do, all of these kind of things beyond just the dances,” she said.

At what was then Our Lady of the Lake College, Rosie wanted to establish a chapter of the Young Democrats, but college rules required that there be a chapter of Young Republicans as well. The minimum size was 10 students each. So she organized — for both groups.

“We got them the bare minimum,” she said. “We had quite a few more for the Young Democrats.”

In college, her political involvement grew.

“What I have always understood is that if you want to make a difference in this country ... You elect representatives who will create the policy that you feel needs to happen,” she said. Her college mentor, Margaret Kramer, introduced Rosie to progressive Democratic politicians, including Henry B. Gonzalez, Pete Torres, Albert Peña and Joe Bernal. On Fridays, the politicians and other factions — labor leaders, such as Henry “The Fox” Muñoz — would gather at Karam's restaurant.

“It was heady stuff. It was an incredible learning (experience) for me,” Rosie said.

Henry Muñoz III, son of “The Fox” and board chairman of VIA Metropolitan Transit, recalls his parents discussing Rosie as she was rising in the Chicano movement.

It was a “generational moment that wasn't completely smooth, but she stood out and was completely respected and strong,” Muñoz said.

Meeting Guzman

Rosie got to know the local politicos and other activists, including Jesse Guzman, as the young Democrats worked campaigns and immersed themselves in politics. “Really, that's where I cut my teeth on how to do door-to-door block walking,” she said. “They used to call us the bumper sticker queens.”

Seven years older than Rosie, Jesse also had grown up on the West Side. And like her, he remembers abhorrent conditions there. He had to walk about 10 blocks to the bus stop and struggled to keep his ROTC uniform clean because “the street was like soup, maybe an inch deep in mud,” he said.

“That's a pretty good incentive to try to change things.”

In a chapter scheduled to be published in a book about “ecological democracy,” Miller, the professor, chronicles the long history of West Side flooding. It was a problem exacerbated by inaction by the city, which worked to protect other parts of town.

After the infamous flood of 1921, “the greatest in the city's history,” San Antonio's newspapers called for controlling storm waters, Miller wrote.

But the city spent millions to protect the central business district while largely ignoring the destructive and deadly West Side flooding.

“What was built was the Olmos Dam, which did not a damn thing for the West Side, and the only thing the West Side received was some brush clearance in the ditches,” Miller said in an interview. “That's the kind of oppressive nature of this city, in which it basically defended white interests and paid no attention to brown.”

San Antonio at the time elected council members at-large, which often left the West Side without a voice on the City Council.

Rosie set out to bring equal representation to the council. She and Guzman helped run a slate of candidates in 1969 backed by the Committee for Barrio Betterment. Two years later, in '71, she ran on a four-candidate slate backed by the committee and La Raza. Their campaign poster hangs in Mayor Castro's City Hall office.

David Montejano, a University of California-Berkeley ethnic studies professor who grew up on the West Side and knew Rosie, said the activists had realized organizing high school students and picketing wasn't enough. They needed to take the fight to City Hall and beyond. He's chronicled the era in a book called “Quixote's Soldiers: A Local History of the Chicano Movement, 1966-1981.”

Women played a significant role in that period generally — and the '69 race, he said. Two years later, they demanded to run. “They were the first Chicanas, as far as I know, to run for City Council election,” Montejano said.

Spawning change

Luis Fraga, a political scientist at the University of Washington who directed the Castro brothers' undergraduate theses at Stanford, said the political movements in South Texas — including the founding of La Raza Unida Party — were the greatest expressions of seeking social change.

“The tag that this particular effort was ‘radical' is a bit of a misnomer in that the idea through elections and through political parties, you could effect social change is about as mainstream as you can get,” Fraga said.

After the council losses in '69 and '71, Rosie and others pivoted to La Raza and finding candidates to run for statewide offices. She served as the party's director in Bexar County.

In 1974, she refocused her efforts to raise her twins. Born a minute apart on Sept. 16, 1974, Julián and Joaquín would be named Castro, she said, as she was — and her mother before her.

Julián said his father focused on his work as a mathematics teacher in the Edgewood school district.

They see each other regularly. Julián lives a couple blocks away, and Joaquín took Jesse on a winding 18-day road trip this summer to Washington, D.C., and back, interspersed with some sightseeing. While Jesse continued to see his boys as they were growing up, it's clear Rosie was their foundation. When Julián, now in his second term as mayor, presented the keynote address at the Democratic National Convention earlier this month, he thanked his mother, his grandmother, and his wife Erica, also a teacher.

He told the nation about “the unlikely journey” that brought him to that stage. The opportunities afforded to him were because of the hard work and sacrifices of Rosie and Victoria, he said.

Muñoz sees the progression, a torch handed from mother to sons. The new political era — and the rise of the Latino population across the country — demands a Latino voice, he said.

“In the same way she attempted to give voice to Chicanos in South Texas, her sons are now in the position to give voice to Latinos living in the United States,” he said.

In his keynote address, Julián captured the journey that goes back generations for his family.

“In the end, the American dream is not a sprint, or even a marathon, but a relay. Our families don't always cross the finish line in the span of one generation. But each generation passes on to the next the fruits of their labor,” he said.

“My grandmother never owned a house. She cleaned other people's houses so she could afford to rent her own. But she saw her daughter become the first in her family to graduate from college. And my mother fought hard for civil rights so that instead of a mop, I could hold this microphone.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: democraticparty; joaquincastro; juliancastro; progressive
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

And all these baby-killers claim to be “Catholic”?


21 posted on 09/30/2012 9:19:56 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan (In Edward Kennedy's America, federal funding of brothels is a right, not a privilege.)
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To: adorno
.....Thus, mother and sons will continue creating victims, and the vicious cycle will repeat endlessly.

They got theirs. They will keep people dependent to keep power. They're scum.

22 posted on 09/30/2012 11:31:51 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: VeniVidiVici

Does picking ticks pay by the pound or by the hour?


23 posted on 09/30/2012 3:07:48 PM PDT by Dr. Pritchett
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To: Dr. Pritchett

Brilliant! Powerful stuff, thanks for posting it.


24 posted on 09/30/2012 4:24:48 PM PDT by jmacusa (Political correctness is cultural Marxism. I'm not a Marxist.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
SURPRISE!!! (regarding an icon of Democratic Golden Boy Julian Castro’s Mother)

By Humberto Fontova, on September 6, 2012,

http://babalublog.com/2012/09/06/surprise-regarding-an-icon-of-democratic-golden-boy-julian-castros-mother/

You will never!!! In a million GAZILLION years!!! Guess who's an icon!!! Of La Raza Unida!!! The Chicano group who Democratic Golden Boy Julian Castro's mother helped found!!!

posted on ‎4‎/‎16‎/‎2014‎ ‎6‎:‎59‎:‎44‎ ‎PM by Liz:

BEWARE THE CASTROS US Cong Julian Castro, San Antonio, his identical twin brother -- San Diego Mayor Julian Castro (now making the rounds of presidential primary states)....and Mamsita Castro---Maria “Rosie” Castro--hardline La Raza activist.

Freshman Cong Joaquín Castro warned last year that if Speaker Boehner adhered to his promise to invoke the so-called Hastert rule, the House will not pass comprehensive immigration reform last year.

So I guess that will put the kibosh to the ambitious Castro family's plans for America, thank God. God only knows how much San Diego tax money and Congressional tax money----from her sons----is going into furthering mamasita's La Raza activities.

San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro---2012 Democrat convention keynoter---genially introduced the twins' mother, Maria “Rosie” Castro to the convention-goers. Mamasita Castro is a radical ethnocentric, anti-assimilationist....a key figure in the activities of the blood-thirsty, tax-funded “La Raza."

AMERICANS ARE ALREADY FUNDING MAMASITA'S HATE-FILLED ORGANIZATION BIGTIME: In 2005 alone, $7.9 million in taxpayer funding was given to La Raza charter schools in the form of US Dept of Education grants.

LA RAZA schools stress Latino culture, the Spanish language, the re-conquest of the American Southwest, the establishment of the mythical Atzlan on US soil, and even Aztec math.

In addition to using taxpayer funds to enforce the teaching of murder and violence in US public schools, the federally-funded La Raza organization operates 100 charter schools across America.

LA RAZA TEACHES HATE-AMERICA WITH OUR TAX DOLLARS La Raza Studies do not even try to sugar-coat its anti-America agenda and its bloodthirsty plans to kill off Americans: Raza Studies textbook “Occupied America,” by Rodolfo Acuña, includes a violent and blood-curdling speech given by university professor Jose Angel Gutierrez: “We have got to eliminate the gringo, and what I mean by that is, if the worst comes to the worst, we have got to kill him,” (pg. 323). The following is taken directly from La Raza's Occupied America: “.......execute all white males over age 16,” (p 167--AKA the Plan of San Diego).

25 posted on 05/19/2014 9:00:13 PM PDT by Dqban22
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