Standing up against stereotypes
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Latino Youth Conference keynote speaker Pepe Serna
stood before an audience of about 200 teenagers Tuesday and told them
only a handful of them would go on to college, the majority of girls
present would end up becoming teen mothers and only one of them in the
room was really important.
His tongue-in-cheek speech drew defiant responses from the
enthusiastic crowd of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa youths.
“If you think you’re important, stand up,” said Serna, an actor and
artist from Balboa Island.
The teenagers, dressed identically in white Latino Youth Conference
T-shirts, stood in unison to demonstrate what Serna hoped they would:
that they were not bound by the stereotypes or statistics sometimes
dictated to them by society.
The intensive daylong conference was a collaborative effort between 25
school and civic organizations, including Save Our Youth, Families Costa
Mesa, Todos Hermanos, Project STOP, and the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District.
The teenagers, who were handpicked to participate in the event, spent
the day in a series of workshops, panel discussions and skits.
“I love coming to the conference,” said Claudia Flores, who has
attended all three of the annual conferences. “It motivates people. Your
self-esteem just goes up.”
Flores and other students had help from numerous members of the Latino
community. Author and professor Jack Lopez spoke in a workshop called
“Cholos and Surfers” about holding onto his culture and community while
growing up in Huntington Beach.
Alec Esparza from the Orange County Department of Education helped
students discover how to use signs of life and nature to visualize one’s
goals and dreams. And Kathryn Vroman of The Mediation Center guided those
gathered in a listening exercise in which the youths were required to
draw pictures from directions given to them by their peers.
Zuly Pineda and Esbeydy Belmontes were most interested in attending
the mediation workshop because, they said, they wanted to know how to
stop fights between friends.
The conference also included a success panelist discussion featuring
various community leaders and business people, including Frank Gutierrez,
owner of Muebleria Vallarta in Costa Mesa, and Superior Court Judge
Frances Munoz, who is also a member of St. Joaquim’s church.
All the panelists spoke about being the first in their families to
graduate from either high school or college. Gutierrez and Munoz both
spoke about working as grape pickers early in life, although Munoz said
she called herself a “crop harvesting engineer.”
Gutierrez later received a scholarship to USC and Munoz became a judge
after putting herself through 12 years of night school.
Munoz encouraged the teenagers to try to achieve their goals through
hard work and education.
“You have to be able to see when the doors open and rush in,” she
said. “You keep asking yourself ‘Why not?’ ‘Why not?’ and the answer is
there’s no reason it shouldn’t be.”
FYI: Roy Alvarado Leadership Awards were presented for the first time
Tuesday at the Latino Youth Conference. Alvarado, who died in 1996, was a
drug and gang counselor for Newport-Mesa Unified School District. He also
left a legacy as a tireless advocate for low-income, at-risk youths and
their families in Costa Mesa. This year’s recipients are:
* Hilario Arriaga, Estancia High School. Arriaga is involved in
soccer, the MECHA Club, which focuses on Mexican and Chicano culture, and
Save Our Youth.
* Zhaira Franco, Costa Mesa High School. Franco is a straight-A
student, tutors math, and was selected the best English as a Second
Language student in 1998.
* Claudia Flores, Newport Harbor High School. Flores is also a
straight-A student, is a member of the Da Vinci Academy, and president of
the Save Our Youth girls’ program.
The awards were sponsored by the Latino Business Council of the Costa
Mesa Chamber of Commerce and the Daily Pilot.
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